Dealer Authority
Telling the Dealership Story: Why Most "About Us" Pages are Terrible
When I worked for a website provider, the hardest page to get good content on was the "About Us" page. It's been over three years since I worked in that space and things have improved in the interim, but one thing is certain: finding a properly built and maintained dealership story is still extremely rare.
With all of the data that's available to dealers and vendors, it's a wonder that this has never truly been addressed. You can look at your analytics today and see just how many visitors hit these pages. Are you satisfied with the message you're delivering to them?
Before we get into the proper way to build and maintain one of these pages, let's take a look at why it's so important.
When do people visit these pages?
It's natural for dealers and vendors to see these pages as relatively unimportant. We've been hammered over the years with the concept that the only important pages we need to track involve inventory and specials, so putting little effort into maximizing the quality of About Us pages is quite common.
Before we dismiss them, we have to remember the two times that people will visit this page. Based on analytics data, people visit the About Us page when they first get to the website or when they've already finished. It's either the first or the last page they check. Why? Because that's when people make decisions about their sentiment towards a dealership.
Some people like to know more about the dealership before they even look at inventory. These are the people who've probably had a bad experience in the past when buying a car. They could also be one of the emerging buyer types: millennials. They want to have a good feeling before even considering a dealership.
Others will check out a dealership after they've already landed on a vehicle. These are often the types of people who like to make lists of four or five dealerships they plan on visiting in their shopping adventure. Why are they checking up on the dealership at this point? They're likely choosing the order. Many people use maps and proximity to make their plans, but others like to prioritize dealerships they think they'll like the most.
Regardless of why they're visiting the About Us page, it's important to make sure you're making the right impression.
What should they be about?
This is a question whose answer eludes nearly everyone. By everyone, I mean dealers, marketers, vendors, and even your customers. What do they really want the page to be about?
The standard (and incorrect) answer can be found on nearly every About Us page in existence. Everyone likes to make the About Us page talk about the dealership's history. Some go so far as to make it talk about some of the people at the dealership. The advanced dealers will put in welcome videos and lots of pictures of the dealership to make it seem happy and inviting.
These are fine, but they're not the best answer.
The About Us page should be about your customers. Seriously.
This topic requires a blog post of its own to fully explain, but when an About Us page talks about how the customer benefits from shopping at the dealership, it's ideal. They couldn't care less that you've broken sales records or been in business for a century. They're not impressed by your Blahblah Certification or your President's Honor Club Award. They want to know what you'll do for them.
Translate any accolade into a benefit to the customer. Be humble and appreciative. If you've broken sales records, the credit should go to THEM, your customers, for being more discerning and selective than others in the local area. If you've been in business for a hundred years, talk about how humbled you are live and work side-by-side with them in your wonderful community for all that time.
Again, there's way too much to talk about to try to fit it all in here, but you get the general idea. Next, let's discuss page maintenance.
What does it take to "maintain" them?
Your About Us page should be a living page. It should get updated at least monthly. This can be done with links to recent blog posts. You can set up a feed (if you must, though manual is better) to items of particular interest to your customers such as upcoming events or new product launches.
Create an image stream with dates of those images. It would be great if you could have a collage of the month (or week) that shows your happy customers front and center on your page.
The important thing to remember is that if you're going to go down this road, do so with a commitment to always keep it updated. If you're going to have a _____ of the month image on your about us page that's six months old, it's better if you never put it up there at all. Commit to 20 minutes a month or more. Put it on your calendar. Make it happen.
Is this the only place to tell our story?
As is often the case, this post has given me more assignments to add future posts on specific subjects within it. One such new assignment is to describe why most of your pages should be, to some extent, an About Us page. At Dealer Authority, we've invoked a strategy to do just that.
If you have a page about Camaros, don't just tell them about horsepower and MPGs. Tell them why your dealership and your dealership's customers are the best Camaro people in the area. Make it personal. Remember, most of your website visitors have already done their research. By the time they're looking at product pages on your website, they already know just about everything they need to know about the car. What you should be really telling them at this point is why they should buy YOUR Camaros.
Remember the people who plan on visiting four or five dealerships? Do they? In most cases, no. At the first or second place they visit, they end up meeting a real salesperson. This is why it's so important to make your dealership stand out as the first place to call or visit.
If you're a Roush dealership, for example, don't try to tell people how awesome the Roush Mustang is. Tell them why your dealership is the best Roush dealership available to them. This Roush dealer page is a good example of how it works.
Putting the time and effort necessary to make an incredible About Us page is likely at the bottom of your priority list. Chances are your website vendor put up a good page and called it a day. It's time to make your dealership stand out. These important pages are a great place to start.
Dealer Authority
The Most Valuable Lesson I Ever Learned Selling Cars
A friend (who happens to also be a client) called me today hoping to pick my brain about his presentation at a conference. He's an experienced General Manager who has seen it all. Sometimes, seeing it all means it's difficult to pick out the gems that you've come across in your career.
In talking about customer retention, it's easy to see the importance of having a single customer type, of building true ambassadors rather than customers, and of establishing a company culture that permeates noticeably across the entire organization. However, the best presentations are ones that have true stories attached to them. One that I will always remember has guided my career for a couple of decades.
There was a customer in service that nobody liked. I was relatively new to selling cars and didn't really know not to talk to them. After all, they were our customers. They had purchased a new F-150 a few months before from someone else and they quickly became a problem in service. They were the type of customers who would come in demanding new tires if they ran over a nail.
The wife approached me and wanted to know if I could check on their truck. It had been in for more than two hours for an oil change. I had already heard of them and had no doubt that the service department was pushing their ticket back out of spite. They weren't very nice and were completely unreasonable with their expectations.
She mentioned that she needed to hurry because her husband was diabetic and needed food. I happened to have a sandwich that I hadn't even opened out of the vending machine and offered it to her. She latched onto me instantly and the next thing I knew I was showing them other vehicles on the lot while he ate my sandwich.
I came in for some keys to a used F-150. The manager gave me a look, rolled his eyes, stuck his finger in his mouth and made the "hooked" sign. I knew. It didn't matter. They wanted to look at trucks and I didn't have an appointment so I took them on a test drive.
Things went swimmingly. I learned about their laundry business. That's why they needed a truck. They pickup up laundry from the elderly and disabled and washed it for them for a minimal fee. As it turned out, they weren't unreasonable but really just needed a softer hand to guide them through the various processes. By the end of the test drive, they loved the truck and acknowledged that running over a nail wasn't grounds for making demands of the dealership.
We wrote up the deal. The manager was annoyed. Then, he pulled their credit report. As it turned out, they had recently mortgaged their home, paid off all of their bills, and had a $17,000 ACV on a free and clear trade. The truck I showed them was older but was a Lariat crew, better than their XLT supercab.
Over the next six months, I made seven referral sales and sold them another vehicle.
More importantly (for the dealership), they found a service writer they adored and brought cookies every time they had service. They literally brought cookies.
The story won't be used in the presentation for my friend but it did remind him of a similar incident at his dealership. That's the point. We aren't in the car business just for the money even if that's the primary motivation. There are very few professions that give us the opportunity to change someone's life every day that we work it.
One might read this and think that the lesson is to not prejudge or to treat everyone like they can buy. That's the business lesson. The real lesson that will always stick with me is that every car deal is a paycheck to us but it has a much bigger impact on the buyer. We must always remember that our daily activities. whether in sales or service, make a real difference.
It might just be a sale to someone on the floor. It's a unit to the bosses. It's a statistic to the manufacturer. To the customer, it's a profound moment that will be a part of their lives every day for years to come.
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Dealer Authority
3 Things Dealers Should Ask Every Potential Vendor (and the surprising answers to seek)
There are currently hundreds of major digital marketing companies in the automotive industry calling, emailing, and sending smoke signals to influencers and decision-makers at dealerships across the country. I say "hundreds" because I don't want to count them up, but it could actually be thousands. The point is that there are a ton.
It can be challenging to make a decision about who to use for this, that, or the other because a few things are universal. They all claim to be the best at what they do. They all claim to help you sell more cars. They all claim to have X years of automotive experience.
How do dealers get through it all and make sense of the rhetoric? To answer this, we should pretend like the rhetoric is secondary and cut to the chase. Here are three questions you should ask. Some of the questions are obvious, but the desired answers may surprise you.
1. "Do you have binding contracts and if so, why?"
The first thing you'll notice is that you aren't asking how long the contracts are. This is important because at the end of the day you'll be able to negotiate any contract to an acceptable level with most companies. The reason you want to know "why" they have contracts is to gain an understanding of how their products operate. The standard answer is that there are upfront costs that need to be protected or that there's no way to get a full picture of the product in a short period of time. Both of these answers are garbage.
The only valid answer (other than, "no contracts") is that their business model requires a certain level of guaranteed profit per client. This is an answer for investors, but it's the real reason for holding the vast majority of contracts. If they have investors to cater to or future investors to impress, I can understand the need for contracts. Otherwise, "not enough time" or "too much upfront cost" are copouts.
I'm a big fan of having enough confidence in your product that you're willing to live or die by the results. Vendors shouldn't have to ask dealers to take the risk if it doesn't work as expected. Vendors should be the ones taking the risk if it doesn't deliver as promised.
2. "What is your policy on future upgrades?"
This is a question that's asked in a particular way for an important reason. By using the word "upgrades" you're really asking about add-on products or products in development. There are certain products that should incur additional cost, especially if they're truly add-ons. However, a vendor shouldn't charge a client to improve on what they're buying today.
The point of this question (and you'll probably be asked to elaborate once you ask it) is to establish that you want the latest and greatest advancements when they are developed. Unofficial standard operating procedures at most vendors will be to build improvements and then sell them to new clients. Later, they're rolled out to existing ones... if they're lucky. In some cases, they're either never rolled out or they are charged a fee to get on the latest and greatest. This is crap. If you're a client and they build something better than what you currently have, you should be the first to get it, not the last.
3. "Who are your biggest competitors?"
For some products, the answers are obvious. There are plenty of website providers out there, for example, so asking any of them about their competitors should yield a decent list. For other products, there are only a handful of players and asking this question will likely make the salesperson squirm.
The answer you definitely don't want to hear is "nobody." That's not true in most cases. Even something as obscure as gift card appointment programs have three or four players. If they tell you they don't have any competitors, they really just don't want to tip you off about who to call next and that's understandable. However, they should still be willing to tell you.
There is no "right" answer to the question. You're wanting to hear how they handle it. Are they extremely confident about what they're offering? Do they truly believe in their product above any of the competitors? Those are the real questions but you can't ask them directly. You'll need to ask them who they compete against and judge through their response if they're really worried about them. Just because they sound worried isn't necessarily bad because sometimes vendors worry about their competitors' pitch rather than their product. However, you're looking for one thing in this line of questioning: passion. If they're passionate about what they're selling, it will show when you bring up the competition.
A bonus answer to this particular question would be, "Our biggest competitors are your competitors. That's how we roll."
5 Comments
AutoStride
Yes, those are good ones. I can think of a few others: How are you going to help us convert, BE VERY SPECIFIC? Additionally, what benchmark numbers are used? What are your biggest frustrations with dealers? What have been your successes? Have you been doing competitive analyses for other dealerships? Which parts of the job will you handle in-house and which will you farm out? Our vital data lives in several departments and on a variety of platforms – how will you centralize it? What do you think of our current platforms? Will our non-technical staff be able to manage the relationship? What happens if something goes wrong? How will you estimate and bill?
Autofusion Inc.
Another good question: Why are you better or what are your differentiators? And why would I care?
Dealer Authority
Complacency Kills: How to Fight the Demon within a Surging Sales Environment
Sales are down... for many vendors. That's the scuttlebutt on the street and it usually means one thing: sales are up at dealerships. Looking at the headlines on automotive journals, it's clear to see that we are indeed in a general upswing in the industry.
As a result, this is the most dangerous time to be running a marketing department in the car business. It's also the most crucial time for dealers and general managers to act.
It's dangerous for the marketing/internet manager because it's very hard to tell what's working and what's not. You can look at the numbers for your SEO company, for example, and see upticks in traffic. Are their efforts making the difference or does it simply mean that more people are searching?
It's crucial for dealers and general managers because you have to keep the wave of enthusiasm high while looking towards the future with bold determination. There's a saying that goes, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." This is incorrect in our industry. The reality is this:
- If it's broken, fix it.
- If it isn't broken, make it even better to prevent it from breaking in the future.
To quote the fictional Don Draper from Mad Men, "You don't want some of it. You want all of it and I won't stop until you get all of it."
Success can breed complacency. While few would classify themselves in the category of foolishly letting their guard down when things are good, it happens to most. With the incredible month that the industry just had, I can already see dealers letting their guard down. Requests for consultation calls are getting replies to the effect of "keep up the great work and we'll meet next month." Fewer leads came in over the last two weeks for us. Virtual high fives are being flung all across Facebook groups. This is a bad thing.
The demon that everyone in this industry must fight is the lingering joy of success. When we feel like we're on top of the world setting records and busting quotas, it's easy to think that everything is running on all 12 cylinders. This is the time more than any that you, as savvy DrivingSales-reading dealers and marketing managers, must fight the demon by recognizing that now is the perfect time to make things better. You don't wait for the holes to become obvious. You need to seek them out and quash them before they become more evident.
Here are a few reasons that you should start looking at changes now despite the good series of months:
- Vendors are Hungry: We were on the phone with a dealership who had been paying an insane percentage to one of their advertising firms. After attempting to cancel several times during a single call, the agency relented to drop their service charge by over 70%. It begs the question: are they desperate to keep clients or are they really making that much extra on their services? My guess is both.
- Good isn't Good Enough: So, you beat your quota. I've spoken to five clients in the last few days who broke company records. If you didn't do the same, you're not taking full advantage of this buying trend.
- Gas is Dropping Again: Consumers are predictable. With gas down, higher-profit trucks and SUVs are in play once again. This probably won't last long. Can you afford to miss out?
- The Money is There: Over the last year and a half, I've heard many dealers tell me they want to work with us or other premium vendors but they need to wait until they can increase their budget. Now's the time to increase the budget. Some of your competitors are. Again, just because it's working doesn't mean that it can't be made better.
Those are the reasons off the top of my head. There are others, of course, but you get the picture. Fight this demon. Complacency kills. Take something great and make it spectacular. Some will ride the wave all the way through. Others will drown just trying to stay on it. The few who beat their demon will rise above the wave to make a new source of success that only they can ride.
No matter how big the wave is, it eventually crashes down.
Legends and fools are both born more often during times of prosperity than times of despair. The difference is in how they handle the good times, never settling for "good enough."
1 Comment
Nextup
Excellent read, JD! Someone said, "Fear is OK, it's complacency that will kill you!" Remaining successful requires the fear of being unsuccessful.
Dealer Authority
The Last Piece of the Digital Marketing Puzzle: Inter-Vendor Communication
Pointing fingers. It's something that everyone at the dealership who has dealt with vendors over the years has experienced from time to time. The website provider to the inventory provider. The Inventory provider points to the pricing tool. The pricing tool points to the DMS. The DMS points to the website provider. Can't someone just fix it?
I'm going to keep this short so my day doesn't start off in anger. Vendors need to stop pointing fingers and start fixing things. That doesn't mean pointing fingers at the perceived source of the problem. That means making calls, sending emails, and using smoke signals if necessary to bring everything together the way it should be rather than waiting for the dealer to call these guys so those other guys can do something that allows this guy to help that guy.
It means communication.
We require communication directly with other vendors that service our clients. It's the way it should be. We can often get things done much more quickly. There's no reason why anyone at the dealership should be the middleman for all communications. Copied on the communication - yes. There's a difference.
With so many amazing marketing products out there, it's amazing that vendors aren't talking to each other on behalf of their shared clients rather than pointing fingers to assign blame and check off a box.
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Dealer Authority
The Best Web Presence is the One that Represents Your Dealership Properly
One of the things that I do now more than ever is listen to other vendors pitch their products. I hope this post doesn't scare any of them from reaching out to us; don't worry, I'm not naming names. I'm focused on a particular practice, not the practitioners.
The practice I'm talking about has many faces. Some present it with fear by telling dealers that if they're not participating in the latest fad or growing trend that they're missing out on business. Others put on the face of trickiness and present their products as a way of getting around this system or that roadblock in a slick manner. The most common face they put on their product is one of simplicity as they demonstrate how their service magically gets them in front of billions of local car shoppers.
They're all talking about presence. Being present on a network, website, device type, ad platform, or vertical search property is great, but the one thing that I don't hear nearly enough is about how the dealership is portrayed. A dealer shouldn't strive to be present on any particular platform. They need to know how to stand out on these platforms.
The thing that's missing from the vast majority of products and services I see every week is representation. Don't just show me that a dealer is present. Show me how our dealers will be presented. The messaging is often more important than the presence itself.
We've seen this in its simplest form through search and social. I have seen dealers improve their performance for particular search terms without having to move up in the rankings (though moving up is obviously important as well). If the messaging is unique and speaks about the dealership to the searchers, they're much more likely to click the link even if they're not at the very top. The same holds true for social. Reaching more people is fine. Getting them to click to the website isn't a matter of mastering an algorithm or adjusting the ad spend as much as it's about putting the right message in front of the right people.
A dealership's web presence is, by its very nature, one that needs to be bigger, but don't let size be the primary focus. You can have the loudest bullhorn in the world but if your message isn't interesting, the audience will still ignore you.
1 Comment
Kelley Buick Gmc
we tend to focus to much o n the sales side on our dealerships website. we need to think more about the whole dealership(parts, service etc.)
Dealer Authority
Dealers, It's Time to Get 'Touchy-Feely' with Your Website Content
The year was 2009. We were working on building out website content for a client and we wanted to get to know the different departments in order to personalize the content to make the visitors more likely to do business with them. A savvy General Manager taught me a lesson that stuck with me throughout my career.
"We don't need to sell the dealership. We need to sell our website to Google," she said. "There may come a time when people read the crap we put on the pages, but that's not today."
I didn't fully agree then, but I understood the point. It wasn't until very recently that I realized how right she was, particularly the last line. I was aware that website visitors do tend to go straight to inventory or specials, but I was always aware from testing that 14% of the visitors lingered on videos or read through content before moving on from or to the inventory.
This 14% was why I didn't fully agree. Now, I realize how right she was. 14% is a drop in the bucket. Today, that number is much higher. People are lingering. They're watching videos. They're investigating the dealership as much as they're researching the vehicles. In essence, they want to buy from a dealership they can trust for one reason (which I'll get to in a moment).
Content today must be compelling and personal. There is no longer a need for "SEO content" the way that most understand it. No generic boilerplate content. No keyword stuffing. Content in written or video formats should be more than just discussing indivdual models. There needs to be a reason for people to want to buy from you.
In other words, the most effective dealership marketing and advertising includes messaging that separates you from competitors. It's no longer just about price and selection. They are making buying decisions before they ever meet you.
Earlier I mentioned there's a reason that people are investigating dealerships as much as they're investigating cars. The reason is because trust is returning. The trust factor that the industry lost since the 70s has finally started shifting. Our industry has been much more transparent and forthright with customers for some time. Now, the customers are starting to believe in it since this is their second or third car they've purchased during the new age "good experience" era of the industry.
Personally, I'm not the most touchy-feely person, but from a marketing perspective I realize how important it is to be exceptional to your customers. Today, this is more important than it's ever been.
2 Comments
Autofusion Inc.
100% agree with you JD. Especially about the part on messaging that separates you from competitors. Do you have free car washes, free oil changes, roadside assistance programs? Then it should be on your landing pages, home page, SRP and VDP. Do you donate to certain causes? List that too.
Dealer Authority
The Growing Plague of Google Analytics Spam and How to Filter It
If you're one who checks Google Analytics often to see how your traffic is doing, you've problem seen a lot of sites popping up in analytics over the last year or so that don't make sense. It would seem like these you're getting traffic from strange sites, particularly those selling SEO or other marketing services.
It's spam. That's the bad news. The good news is that it's not really hurting you. The better news is that you can get rid of it. You may have checked out some of these sites to find your link. Wait, where is it? There's no link to your website there. How did... what the... wait a second. You just did what they intended you to do. They got you to their website in hopes that you'll think, "Hey, I need SEO. Let's see what these guys can offer."
Unfortunately, it works. They spoof traffic through a key sending requests from their website to yours, making it look as if they're visiting your website when they're not. This is how they get business. This is how they market their services. Let's let the annoyance or anger (it infuriates me) die down a bit. Now, let's offer a solution. Filtering. It's the only thing we've found to work. One by one, site by site, you have to plug them into a Google Analytics filter and eliminate them from your numbers. Here's how, courtesy of SomethingIDidNotKnow:
To add a filter:The filter pattern is a regular expression, so every time you find a new source of spam, simply add another “|spammersite\.com” (remember to escape dots with a backslash, as they mean “any character”).
- go to your Administration page (last tab on your home page)
- All filters (on the leftmost column)
- New filter
- Choose Filter type “Custom” > “Exclude”
- Choose “Referral” from the Filter Field menu
- Set this as Filter pattern:
semalt\.com|ilovevitaly\.co|priceg\.com|forum\..*darodar\.com|blackhatworth\.com|hulfingtonpost\.com|buttons-for-website\.com- Select the views that you want to be filtered (I chose “All web site data”)
- Save
Now you know how to fix it. To stop it from continuing, don't support these companies. If you see them doing it, do not buy from them. In fact, we canceled a service (Semalt) once we started seeing that they were doing this. It's a plague that needs to be eradicated.
6 Comments
Launch Digital Marketing
Good stuff here JD, the only other piece of advice I'd offer is to make a separate view of your property in GA to set up your filters in so your not messing with your main view. Oh and don't forget to turn on Google's built in bot-filters, I believe they're turned off by default.
CBG Buick GMC, Inc.
JD, Great read and something that I was just looking at a few weeks ago. Though I haven't gotten around to placing filters just yet. The other option that someone suggest was to give the links to the website provider for them to block them. Don't know if that will really work or not, however it seems like the filters are just about the easiest way to get rid of them from your view.
Dealer Authority
Absolutely, Jason. Lauren, the "traffic" is a direct ping to Google so the website provider can't block them.
CBG Buick GMC, Inc.
Oh well that's good to know. In the group on facebook that I was asking about one person could not comprehend why on earth I would want to filter those out. He didn't comprehend that to car dealers 50 website visits from Russia does us ABSOLUTELY no good. He was dumbfound and swore up and down that I was looking at it the wrong way. That traffic is traffic, not someone from Russia is looking to purchase a new 2015 GMC Sierra from a dealership in Podunk Louisiana.
Sunnyside Acura
JD - Will this filter out past traffic or traffic from the date the filter was implemented?
CBG Buick GMC, Inc.
Robert, I can answer this one for you. The filter will start from the day you implement. What I love about the filter is that it shows how well your site is actually performing with people that you actually want to see it! Which in turn I can show to our website provider to get better results.
Dealer Authority
5 Things Every Dealer Should Do with Their Websites that Most Aren't Doing Today
The consolidation of website vendors and OEM mandates makes it challenging for dealers to feel like they can get an edge over their competitors. With the right best practices, you can take what you have and make it amazing.
Here are five things we recommend to our clients that are pretty much universal. Some might be doing one or two of these. There may be some of you savvy DrivingSales folks who are doing three or four. If anyone is doing all five, we should take. I know a great place that could use your services.
Go All Out with Analytics
Many dealers wish they had a tool that could tell them how their different advertising sources were really working, what results they were delivering, what buttons people were clicking on... the list of desires is huge. The problem with these desires is that the tool is available to everyone free of charge. Google Analytics, when used properly, is extremely powerful. It's not the best tool in the world. In fact, the data can be misleading. However, if you set up goals, tags, and custom dashboards, it can be a great way to get a clearer picture about all of your advertising and marketing investments.
Focus on Landing Pages
At some point, a correlation was made between SRP/VDP views and sales. The more that people saw inventory, the more likely they were to buy. This is correct and is completely logical if you think about it. If they're on your website and they're going to buy a car, chances are they're going to want to look at inventory. However, the correlation was somehow translated into causation and everyone started focusing on driving as much of their traffic directly to inventory as possible. The right approach is much more detailed than what can be communicated in a bullet point on a blog post, but proper use of landing pages and messaging that allows for easy access to inventory will yield better overall results. I'll elaborate in the future.
Reduce Calls to Action
More is not always better. If you give them too many choices, they're less likely to make one. You can't force someone to fill out a form for a vehicle they don't want and you can't prevent someone from filling out a form on a vehicle they do want.
There are all sorts of quotes and idioms that we can apply to the concept of calls to action, but at the end of the day it comes down to keeping it simple. You don't need 17 calls to action on a page. Instead, you need a few at most. One is actually best. Again, not enough space here to elaborate, but I'll go into more detail about this in a future DrivingSales blog post.
Build (and support) Content
The good news is that more dealers and vendors are building unique content pages and blog posts on their web site. The bad news is that since more dealers are doing it, they're not working as effectively as they once did. Dealers who want to achieve great success particularly on search with their content must support it with offsite signals such as links and social shares.
Simplify and Reduce Banners
The first banner gets the monster share of the clicks. The second gets some. The third might get a few. Beyond that, the numbers get down into the single digits, even going down so far as none.
I have no illusion that I'll be able to convince dealers that the best way to position messaging on a homepage is to take the absolutely most important and compelling message today and make that the only banner. I'll start with baby steps. At the very least, reduce your banners down to a few. Eventually, I should be able to show you through data that you'll get more by giving less in the form of banner messaging, but it's hard to break a paradigm like banner overload. We'll start small.
There are plenty of things that dealers should be doing with their websites. These five might not even be the top five, but we have to start somewhere if we're going to improve the industry.
2 Comments
AutoStride
It's good advice and can be broken down many ways. You can go even further than Google Analytics. I've always said tagging is not the purest form of website performance measurement, passive analytics is, but most dealers aren't aware.
AutoStride
Landing pages must contain the following elements: Headline - Sub-Headline - CTA Form - Image - Description - Proof Elements Centered, single-column (single-column landing pages convert best) Remove or limit extra navigation Keep the objective simple and clear Match the content to a visitor’s previous source Reduce friction (caused by objects or missing objects on a page that inhibits a visitor from taking action) Focus on value Only ask for what you need (form) Create a variety of landing pages (test which work)
Dealer Authority
Straight to Inventory versus Landing Pages for PPC
There have been several studies in the automotive industry that have conclusively answered this question with hard data and compelling reasons why it is the way it is. Unfortunately, these "conclusive" studies often point in opposite directions and always seem to be conducted by companies that lean in one direction or the other.
Which is better for search PPC, banner ads, and other forms of advertising? Should you point your ads to take prospects directly into vehicle details pages or search results pages or should you send visitors to landing pages with messaging first? The reason that the studies seem to take the same data and yield different conclusions is based on two things: intent of the company doing the study and ways through which the data is collected and analyzed.
Our perspective on the issue adds a third factor that has helped us to come to our own conclusion for clients: visitor intent. The beauty of modern digital advertising is that it allows us to make determinations about website visitors before they even click based upon their source, keywords, and past activity. The key to all of this is following Google's lead based upon their ultimate data set for automotive.
Last year, Google started making the shift from "visits and unique visitors" to "sessions and users". This wasn't just a cosmetic change nor was it the only thing they've been changing. They understand that intent is much more easily defined once you parse out the data correctly. They realize that at different stages in the research and buying cycle, car shoppers will be searching for different things and expecting different results to appeal to their real-time needs.
We went into some detail about this concept in a blog post but for now, let's look at the basic concepts to see if we can answer the straightforward question of inventory versus landing pages.
The New Paradigm
While I would hate to make it sound as if Google is revising the zero moment of truth concept, there is a great deal of shifting happening in their mentality towards what really works for driving the sale in the automotive industry. Whether it's a new reality or an old reality that's just now being recognized doesn't matter. What's important is that they see the shift.
To break it down, let's look at direct examples. If someone does a search for "best family sedans" they are likely in consideration mode. They're at the top of the funnel. In fact, they might not even be certain whether or not they're currently in the market. They're exploring. This would be a bad time to send them into inventory. Instead, they should be given a very specific and useful message to help them but that also has the opportunity to push them further down in the funnel. Think of these people like service customers waiting for their cars by walking the lot. Most of them are just passing time, but everyone has a story about the vehicle in service that turned into a trade in before it ever left the shop. It happens and these visitors need the proper messaging. Sending them to inventory would be like leaving a service customer to walk the lot on their own.
Let's look at another search. If someone types in "new Hyundai Sonata in High Point" then they have a different intent. They could be in the middle of the funnel. They might be at the bottom of the funnel. In this situation, one message might be designed to lead them to a landing page with information about current specials and sales while giving them an easy button to take them to inventory. Another message could be about the cars directly with a straight path to the Sonata VDPs. In this situation, both options are viable and testing of both will yield the proper path for each individual dealership.
Final keyword: "2015 Ford Focus for sale in Indianapolis". If you have a nice selection, send them straight to the SRP. They know what they want, they know where they want it, and they're ready to look at cars in stock.
All three examples present different users with specific messages. More importantly, they present the same users with different messaging and destinations as they work their way down the funnel. It's a win-win methodology that serves the customers' needs and the dealership's needs simultaneously.
The different perspectives can point to one side or the other. It's within the data to make the determination based upon intent. Which is a better destination, inventory or landing pages? Our answer is, "Yes."
1 Comment
AutoStride
I think both of these options do work, but they had better be usable. I see far too many landing pages and SRPs that function poorly (lack of clear calls-to-action and cleanliness) and shambolic looks. Ranging from broken pages to lack of mobile adaption (both adaptive and responsive). Make sure to do research and analysis on which ads convert better, in the first place. To your point, there is conflicting data out there. It's not as if AdWords and the like restrict you from creating as many ads as you'd like. Let actual live data suffice for which works best. There are quite a few lovely mechanisms that drive inventory data (parse) the information to create the ad. Very handy!
6 Comments
Jason Unrau
Automotive Copywriter
Finally, someone addresses the issue! The 'About Us' page has always been placed on the page because it has to be there, but it never has valuable information. Dealers should use it as yet another opportunity to explain why the customer should choose them based on the value to the customer.
How often have you seen the about us page still have lorem ipsum or incomplete form info like [dealer address] or [location] still in the text? I've seen it a bunch and I can't stand it!!!
JD Rucker
Dealer Authority
Agreed, Jason. What's worse is when it appears that they tried and really put effort into the page, but then it says very little that would actually compel a customer to want to do business with them. The About Us page is an opportunity that is all too often viewed as a hassle.
Mark Handlon
Handlon Business Resources
Great article JD!
I have also found that a link or tab on the page mentioning what the dealership gives back to the community in the form of charities is valuable. Consumers look for causes they believe in to see if the dealership is a contributor. Even if that particular cause isn't mentioned those consumers will still look favorably at the dealers contributions.
Edward Cushing
Dealers United
Hey guys, great topic especially with the info available to all consumers today. Check out how we helped this dealer utilize video to tell their story in a more engaging and personal way! http://www.sarasotaford.com/videos/respect-for-your-time/
Mark Handlon
Handlon Business Resources
Great job Ed!
Brad Paschal
Fixed Ops Director
but we are family owned...