Timothy Martell

Company: Wikimotive

Timothy Martell Blog
Total Posts: 278    

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Dec 12, 2017

Are you leveraging digital spend for profitability in 2018?

When Wikimotive was in its infancy, there were still many dealers who “didn’t believe” in digital marketing. Today there is certainly widespread understanding and adoption of a “digital first” approach to most dealer’s advertising. But, often, I see dealers simply spending money as opposed to leveraging digital to win. 
 
There continues to be a pennywise and pound foolish approach to much of the advertising spend common among the dealer community. Every business has to make intelligent and cost efficient decisions about where they spend their ad dollars. However, much of the approach continues to be based on negotiating the cheapest service as opposed to analyzing the services that provide results vs those that do not (or do so at too high a cost).
 
Marketing isn’t magic. Its all about attention. Cost for that attention is the key to increasing profitability. Take search, for example. More than ever, dealers seem to understand the importance of search. And yet, more and more I see dealers spending more ad dollars in the most expensive places to capture that attention, instead of doubling down in the cost efficient areas.
 
Here is a real world example. Last 30 days (2017) compared to the same 30 days in 2016.
 
Dealer A received: 
 
-37,093 sessions in 2017 vs 35,328 in 2016  (+5%)
-27,341 from organic in 2017 vs 16,893 in 2016  (+62%)
-6,129 from Paid Search 2017 vs 7,558 in 2016  (-19%)
-72% of total leads from Organic Search 2017 vs 55% in 2016
-20% of total leads from Paid Search 2017 vs 35% in 2016
-61% of total phone calls from Organic Search 2017 (No DNI tracking 2016)
-19% of total phone calls from Paid Search 2017 (No DNI tracking 2016)
 
Organic spend: $9,720.00 in 2017 vs $12,415.50 in 2016
Paid spend: $40,880.43 in 2017 vs $42,929.44 in 2016
 
Organic CPC: $0.36 in 2017 vs $1.35 in 2016
SEM CPC: $6.67 in 2017 vs $5.68 in 2016
 
Dealer A went from number 2 in their competitive market to #1 and is a top 50 dealer nationally for their OEM. Their leads more than doubled YoY
 
Dealer B received:
 
-62,249 sessions in 2017 vs 55,776 in 2016  (+12%) (note about 30,000 sessions in 2016 came from email marketing click fraud over a 6 day period - see Brian Pasch article on this subject)
-54,084 from organic in 2017 vs 8,485 in 2016  (+537%)
-0 from paid search in 2017 vs 2,018 in 2016
-63% of total leads from Organic Search 2017 vs 86% in 2016  
-0% of total leads from Paid Search 2017 vs 2% in 2016
-93% of total phone calls from Organic Search 2017 vs 73% in 2016
-0% of total phone calls from Paid Search 2017 vs 11% in 2016
 
Organic spend: $15,300 in 2017 vs $7,195.50 in 2016 
Paid spend: $0 in 2017 vs $12,451 in 2016
 
Organic CPC: $0.28 in 2017 vs $0.85 in 2016
Paid CPC: $0 in 2017 vs $6.17 in 2016
 
Dealer B went from a top 100 dealer for their OEM to a top 15 dealer from this change in time period. Their leads more than tripled. 
 
Dealer B took a very drastic action based on their own data. To some extent this is contrary to what we would normally recommend. Paid search certainly still has a place in your digital marketing strategy. But when is the last time a decision maker in your store actually sat through and 60-90 minute meeting with your SEM provider? What metrics are you demanding from your SEM provider? I sit through hundreds of these meetings with our clients. Are they breaking down conversion metrics by campaigns? Are they highlighting ad quality? How many leads or phone calls did your dynamic new or dynamic used campaigns produce last month? At what cost? How does that contrast with names and locations campaigns? What is the basis for the recommendations of your SEM provider?... What Google recommends?... Or is it driven by your data? At present I’ve observed that 65% of SEM campaigns in adwords show below average performance. Google actually provides that information. Have you asked your SEM provider why they allow such a high percentage of your campaigns to under perform?
 
Quite often the focus is on “industry standard” percentages and what Google recommends. How many vendors are you in the habit of mailing blank checks to every month?
 
I used the search example because I have extensive data that supports this example as being the rule (not the exception), but the same process can (and should) be applied to all marketing spend. Are you looking at AutoTrader, cars.com and Car Gurus the same way? What about 3rd party lead providers? How about email campaigns, direct mail and TV? Is someone annotating your TV spots, email campaigns, and mail drops in your Google Analytics? If not, someone should. You should see a direct result in your website traffic anytime a direct action campaign runs. Are your monthly meetings with vendors simply focused on what happened last month? Do your monthly meetings include all marketing vendors on a single conference to ensure strategy?... Or is each vendor off doing their own thing without collaborative communication? 
 
TV still shows very high value in metro markets and for high volume dealers. This is particularly true when combined with a strong search presence. Targeting direct mail/email shows very promising when done in conjunction with social media campaigns. The approach here is designed to substantially lower cost per sale and increase profitability. If I were being paid on variable net, this might be where I begin looking for my 2018 marketing strategy.

 

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

CEO

If you're not sleeping or dead, leave it all on the field. Every minute, every day. Period.

859

No Comments

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Oct 10, 2017

What if CDK Websites Didn't Suck?

Many of us, particularly those of us working in digital marketing, agree that CDK websites are... not good. In fact, CDK does not stand alone in this regard. Many of the OEM recommended website providers produce products that can hardly be described as professional grade. They are rife with structured data errors, are often slow to load, many 3rd party integrations cause issues and there is a complete lack of best practice standards when it comes to compliance with analytics or search engines. Whats more, often service requests to correct problems, when they do (often) arise, can go weeks and even months without resolution. 

For many years now, Wikimotive's general recommendation to newly onboarded clients is a change in website provider or we strongly recommend the need to pay for a non-compliant website built on a Wordpress platform. As a digital marketing company built on the foundation of SEO, this is almost always an essential move for dealers. Think of how flawed a business model it is to have to tell a potential client that they have to spend more money with someone else before they even consider spending money with you. Surely, no one would make such a recommendation unless there were a substantial need. And we are not alone in this thinking. Many dealers (maybe even yours) routinely have more than one website. Worst of all, most dealers in the know have no faith that this will change any time soon. But, what if it did change? What if CDK didn't suck?

Recently, I met with Chris Cunningham, product manager, earned media, of CDK Global. Unlike the decade and half I have experienced with CDK prior to this meeting, I found Chris to be not just competent, but incredibly impressive. Having just had a terrible meeting with CDK the week prior with one of our clients, I expected the meeting to be another veiled PR stunt. However, nothing could be further from the truth. Both myself and my chief digital office challenged Chris with a laundry list of highly technical issues which we believe make CDK a terrible choice for dealers. Chris didn't just have an understanding of the issues we were covering, he shared many action plans already in the works that address many of our concerns. More importantly, he shared his understanding of why the issues we were pointing to were so critical for dealers. 

Now don't misunderstand me. One exceptional employee at a company with an $8.7 billion market cap cannot effect change in an organization. But the fact that he exists and that others like him surely exist combined with the enormous resources a company like CDK can bring to bear once a course is set is more than just a little encouraging. Time will tell. We're committed to keeping an open mind to work with all vendors in this space toward improvement for the benefit of the dealer body. But this poses some obvious questions... What would it mean for other vendors in this space if CDK went from one of the worst in class vendors to one of the best in class vendors in a 2 year period? How many dealers have multiple websites now? What would it mean to dealers to reclaim advertising money on extra websites that would no longer be needed and what would it mean to the dealer community if they could actually rely on their OEM recommended site not because they have to have one, but because it quickly became the benchmark against which all other providers are measured?

Again, its really important to stress that CDK is nowhere near this place... yet. But what if they were? Let me know what you think in the comments. Do you think CDK could make such a big pivot? If you have a second website, how would you reallocate spend if you didn't need it? Do you think CDK should invest the time and effort in creating a product that follows Google's best practices? What else does CDK need to do to win you over?

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

CEO

If you're not sleeping or dead, leave it all on the field. Every minute, every day. Period.

2504

1 Comment

C L

Automotive Group

Oct 10, 2017  

Very well said Tim. They have done some awesome things in the past couple of years and the team working on all this is pretty awesome too. 

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Sep 9, 2017

Is Dealer.com corrupting your data?

Sep 22, 8:24AM, UPDATE: James Grace has contacted Wikimotive and shared findings with us: "We've tracked down the source of this issue to a 3rd Party Integration with Edmunds.com that was active on approximately 16% of our sites.  Edmunds pushed tracking code to these sites that was causing the Google session-ID to be overwritten with every "event" on the website, ultimately creating a new session for each event.  This dramatically increased direct traffic in these clients' GA accounts.  We've deactivated these integrations across the Dealer.com platform and the issue has been resolved.  We will be communicating with Edmunds to discuss whether or not to reactivate the integrations.  Dealers with questions or concerns should reach out to their Dealer.com Digital Advisor."

Thanks to James and his team for their efforts to bring transparency to the dealer community. The dialogue I've had with James gives me hope that there will be more transparency to come and that digital agency's like Wikimotive will have better access to staff in a position to take action for the benefit of their dealer clients. Wikimotive will be meeting with James and his team next week to discuss other areas of concern regarding data integrity and 3rd party integration.

BREAKING Sep 21, 2:16pm: James Grace, Sr. Director of Analytics at Dealer.com has contacted Wikimotive and is looking in to this issue as well as original potential causes. We have a tentative meeting scheduled to discuss this as well as other data concerns for improving analytics data quality at dealer.com. See future article to follow. 

FINAL UPDATE, SEP 21, 10:23AM: AT THIS TIME WE CAN CONFIRM THE ISSUE HAS BEEN RESOLVED. DDC IS NOT ACKNOWLEDGING THAT THIS AFFECTED MULTIPLE WEBSITES. WE ATTRIBUTE THE ISSUE AS A SERVER/PERFORMANCE ISSUE. 

Yesterday we were measuring site load times in excess of 50 seconds. Today we are measuring them at just above 10 seconds fully loaded. At this time we consider this resolved, however you should check for this issue if you are observing slower than normal site load times.

IMPORTANT: DDC IS NOT ACKNOWLEDGING THAT THIS ISSUE IS AFFECTING THE PLATFORM GLOBALLY OR TO ANY DEGREE OUTSIDE INDIVIDUAL INSTANCES. THEY ARE NOT TAKING ACTION TO TROUBLE SHOOT THIS ON OTHER WEBSITES. IF YOU BELIEVE YOU HAVE AN ISSUE YOU WILL NEED TO CONTACT DEALER.COM DIRECTLY!

SEP 21, 9:19AM, UPDATE:DEALER.COM CLAIMS THIS ONLY AFFECTED A SINGLE SITE AND WAS DUE TO A ABD IMPLEMENTATION OF GOOGLE ANALYTICS. THEY CLAIMED THE ISSUE IS RESOLVED, HOWEVER WE STILL SEE THIS ISSUE OCCURRING.  IT APPEARS THAT DDC HAS REBOOTED ONE OR SEVERAL SERVERS. THIS IS UNCONFIRMED. WE STILL SEE THIS ISSUE AFFECT SOME SITES WITH INTER-MITTEN REGULARITY - MORE NOTICEABLE WHEN WE OBSERVE WEBSITE FUNCTIONING SLOWER THAN NORMAL (IF YOU NOTICE YOUR WEBSITE LAGGING OR LOADING SLOWLY, YOU SHOULD CHECK FOR THIS ISSUE). OTHER SITES ARE STILL TRIGGERING THIS ISSUE ON EVERY SESSION REGARDLESS OF SPEED - THIS SEEMS LESS REGULAR.

12:23PM EDT, LATEST UPDATE: THIS ISSUE DOES AFFECT CHROME BROWSERS BUT IT IS LESS CONSISTENT WHEREAS IT CONSISTENTLY HAPPENS ON ALL OTHER WEB BROWSERS INCLUDING CHROME AND SAFARI IN MOBILE. THIS WILL LIKELY DIRECTLY AFFECT YOU AND YOU SHOULD TAKE ACTION IMMEDIATELY.

UPDATE: THIS MAY ONLY AFFECT SAFARI & INTERNET EXPLORER BROWSERS. MORE UPDATES TO FOLLOW.

Today at Wikimotive, we found an interesting development regarding analytics on Dealer.com websites while reviewing a client's data. We noticed a 767.32% increase in their direct traffic, seemingly, overnight. At first we thought maybe a rogue email campaign was generating bot traffic, but instead we found something a bit more surprising. 

You can see this happen for yourself using the realtime tool in Google Analytics. Search your dealership name and click the result which will take you to your homepage. From there, navigate to new (or used) inventory. Next, filter your results by make, model, body style or any available filter option. Once your filter is applied you will notice that your organic session has ended and you are now listed as a new direct session. 

If you continue to refine filter options your direct session will bounce and a new direct session will be created. This is very concerning as the level of data corruption can be significant depending on user behavior. If your store's IP is not filtered from your view and your sales people use your website to show different vehicles to customers in the showroom this will create substantial additional traffic that never really existed. In the most extreme case we found, one dealer went from 921 new (direct) users for 3,309 (direct) sessions  to 7,988 new (direct) users and 10,435 (direct) sessions in just 30 days. 

Worse still, this will impact all session data from other sources. If your referral traffic filters inventory that session data is lost form that point forward. If they visit multiple VDPs or other pages and submit a lead it will be sourced as direct instead of the true originating source - same for Organic, or any other traffic source. This has far reaching consequences and should be corrected swiftly. 

I have confirmed that this was not a one off by testing this on multiple brands across multiple dealers. I would strongly urge that if your website is provided by dealer.com, that you reach out immediately and find out what they are doing to correct this. We have contacted dealer.com about this issue for our clients, but have not yet received a response.

Tell us what you find! Are you seeing the same thing? Did you have different findings? Be sure to check multiple browsers and check mobile vs desktop!

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

CEO

If you're not sleeping or dead, leave it all on the field. Every minute, every day. Period.

4169

4 Comments

James Grace

Cox Automotive

Sep 9, 2017  

Hi Tim.  I'm the Sr. Director of Analytics Products for Dealer.com.  We just became aware of this issue last night and we're currently looking into it.  It's for sure important to us to get this right for our clients using GA.  Please reach out to me directly (james.grace@coxautoinc.com) and I'll make sure to update you regularly.  I apologize for the somewhat confusing communication on the subject so far from our company - but we're working through it in real time :-) 

James Grace

Cox Automotive

Sep 9, 2017  

Hi everyone.  I wanted to provide an update on this.  We've tracked down the source of this issue to a 3rd Party Integration with Edmunds.com that was active on approximately 16% of our sites.  Edmunds pushed tracking code to these sites that was causing the Google session-ID to be overwritten with every "event" on the website, ultimately creating a new session for each event.  This dramatically increased direct traffic in these clients' GA accounts.  We've deactivated these integrations across the Dealer.com platform and the issue has been resolved.  We will be communicating with Edmunds to discuss whether or not to reactivate the integrations.  Dealers with questions or concerns should reach out to their Dealer.com Digital Advisor.  Thanks to Tim and the team for pointing out this issue for us, and our apologies to our clients that were effected. 

James Grace

Cox Automotive

Sep 9, 2017  

Also, I wrote a bit more about what lessons dealers should take away from this situation here : https://www.drivingsales.com/james-grace/blog/3rd-party-integrations-can-have-bad-impacts-on-your-website

James Grace

Cox Automotive

Sep 9, 2017  

Final update from me on this subject ;-)

As I mentioned last week, Dealer.com made a decision to deactivate a partner Javascript Deployment on our sites that was causing clients’ Google Analytics data to be incorrect.  

We spent the past week working with the partner involved to ensure that changes are made that will allow Dealer.com to maintain the exceptional technical and service quality our clients expect from us.   

We're pleased to announce that we've worked through the issues and reactivated the partner in question.

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Aug 8, 2017

An Inconvenient Truth - SOLVED

The Difficult Truth We Ignore

After spending 22 years in auto retail and coming up on a decade as a vendor to the automotive community, I’ve learned that there is a glaring misconception about success in automotive that must be addressed. Our community operates under the false presumption that “selling a lot of cars” (arbitrarily) equals success. As you read this, I’m sure right now you know that there is a certain number of cars, both new and used, that your dealership wants to sell this month. It might be based on how many you sold last month or last year or the incentives provided by the manufacturer. But rarely (if ever) is efficiency part of the equation. Sure, there are stair-steps and trunk money and CSI and many other ways dealers forecast profitability, but this process leads to a constant chase where “HOPE” is the fundamental basis for goal setting and achievement. There is a sweet spot for selling the most amount of cars for the least amount of expense and many dealers are falsely operating under the presumption that this is happening. This needs to change.

We often discuss that a car is the biggest single purchase a person will ever make (after a home). For car dealers, the biggest single expense most dealers face is their marketing (after personnel). Why then, with so many industry experts talking about data and metrics; creating new acronyms all the time, has our ability to forecast and make solid decisions on where to invest (or cut) spend not evolved further than it has? 

The Truth About Data

There are no shortage of articles written by industry experts about data. Sales attribution (multi-funnel vs last click, etc) is the hot topic of the moment. But what if the problem isn’t your vendor? How do we even know where to begin to make an assessment of what is or isn’t working? Think about how many metrics we “experts” have told you that you need to understand over the years? SRP’s, VDPs, sessions, visits, bounce rates, conversion rates, time on site, behavior flow, assisted conversions - and lets not forget you need to be Google Analytics certified just to understand where to find it all and understand what it means. Its information overload. And even once you understand it, there are no landmarks. There’s an automatic understanding that a huge amount of time will need to be dedicated to truly understanding it. 

Whats worse, is that there is a lack of standards between vendors in even collecting your data in the first place. Improper installations and use of Google Tag Manager, event tracking, mismanaged UTM parameters, etc can make your data virtually meaningless. Understand, this is not an occasional problem. MOST dealers that are using OEM recommended website providers are likely to have glaring issues with the quality of their data largely due to the incompetence of those providers and/or your 3rd party providers due to multiple tags firing, improperly installed GTM or 3rd party incompetence modifying your website with their containers. This is particularly troubling as this compromise of your data integrity creates a lasting problem both in assessing your historical performance as well as properly assessing future performance of new vendors. 

A Truth You Can Rely On

In 2004 I posited a theory that there was a direct correlation between the number of visits a website received and the total number of cars a dealership would sell in a given month. There’s a good chance one of your vendors may have recited some version of this metric but things have changed and there is more information can be derived from this correlation.

1%-2% of your total website sessions should represent the total number of cars sold (Sessions to Sales - STS). This is important because it doesn’t matter if your store is more focused on new volume or used volume. It doesn’t matter if you focus on subprime or not, buy-here-pay-here or not. The only outliers to this correlation are exotics and ultra highlines — lifestyle vehicles. Don’t worry, your Lexus, Range Rover and BMW dealer will fall in this range too.

Why a range? The range IS your landmark: 

The closer you are to 1% the more you need to look at the following: BDC performance, closing ratios, website conversion

The closer you are to 2% the more you need to look at your marketing spend and consider increasing that spend to sell more cars or… the more you need to evaluate wether that marketing spend is generating enough traffic relative to that spend.

The Irony of the Truth

What I have found most often is that dealers that don’t know this information tend to act contrary to their best interest. Dealers who are close to 1% tend to think they are over spending their marketing and are averse to looking internally at hiring and training the personnel they need to properly close the amount of consumer interest they are getting. Generally, their marketing spend will indicate a high cost per sale, but their cost of personnel relative to their volume will likely be low or that personnel will be low performing. 

Dealers close to the 2% number tend to think they are rock stars because their people are “over performing.” Generally, their marketing budget will indicate a very low cost per sale, but the cost of personnel will be higher than industry average. In reality, there is a substantial opportunity for growth. 

Even the stores you may look to for inspiration are often missing out on existing opportunities. Just this past July, I saw a very good Chevy dealer that sold 812 vehicles in July. Their GM boasted about the 85,000 sessions and 812 cars sold (2:1 Used to New). Now understand this is a great organization. They do many, many things right. And yet, I would bet the farm that they left about 300 cars on the table. And this is the irony of the problem. A top 20 Chevy dealer that sells nearly 300 new cars and over 500 used cars - by far the leader in their market - would never know to even look for this missed opportunity. 

Who’s Job Is it?

Many marketing companies focus on “their analytics.” Since marketing can only provide you with the opportunity to do more business and cannot complete the transaction for you this tends to be where reporting ends. But how often have you taken a meeting with a marketing company to find that their numbers show everything should be great but you’re not sure you even sold one more car as a result of the spend?

It has always been my philosophy that it's our job as vendors to provide the value; to not just do what is easy, but get in to the dirt and do the hard work. I believe it is the vendor’s responsibility to figure out the problem especially when my reporting shows success and the client’s sales do not reflect that success.

That said, empowerment is a great equalizer. Dealer’s should have personnel that routinely examine their own data: leads, website conversion, BDC performance. You should know how to spot BDC associates that are marking leads unresolved to move them outside of a process to inflate their ratios for the benefit of their pay plans. You should know how to normalize lead sourcing. Where to look for things like website changes when lead sourcing changes in your CRM. How to build a pivot table to understand your data. 

Walk the Talk

Bear in mind this is a very brief summary of the opportunity that exists. If you find that when you compare total monthly sales in your store that that number is 1% or lower or 2% or higher, I would welcome a call. No agenda or sales pitch. I’d be happy to walk you through the data and find what is missing. It's time to walk the talk. Success at the end of the month should be more than an arbitrary number based on the past. It's time to win and know it. 

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

CEO

If you're not sleeping or dead, leave it all on the field. Every minute, every day. Period.

901

No Comments

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Jul 7, 2016

CDK Global/Cobalt Websites CRASHED

Its 4pm (EDT) before a major weekend event. Do you know where your website is? Not if you're a CDK Global customer because all websites are down!

 

UPDATE: While CDK/Cobalt does not have an official ETA all websites should be back up today, "at some point..."

This is why dealer's need exceptional vendor partner's help to guide their digital presence. 
 

Pro Tip: OEM recommended website providers are recommended because they pay huge kickbacks to the OEM, NOT because they are providing leading edge technology. 

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

CEO

If you're not sleeping or dead, leave it all on the field. Every minute, every day. Period.

2294

No Comments

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Jun 6, 2016

The Digital Wool that has Been Pulled Over the Eyes of The Car Business

Digital Wool

For too long I’ve stayed silent. For too long I’ve watched as the industry experts have talked about socially engaging and response times and show ratios and acronyms. For too long I’ve watched as dealer ad budgets have gone up and up and up as the buy-in on vendor reliance taken hold. Enough is enough.

Process is important. No question. And yes, vendor partners can serve a useful purpose. But I can’t remember the last article I’ve read on an automotive centric site that talks about dealer managed content or the merchandising of the dealer’s products and services. Everything seems to rely on this false dependence on AutoTrader, or cars.com or Edmunds, or (insert billion dollar vendor here).

Consumers want to connect to the products and services and, wait for it… PEOPLE they buy from more now than ever. The writing has been on the wall forever too. Thats why you see sales reps leaving these big companies in droves. Why do you think the Tesla model continues to baffle auto experts? Its no surprise when people can pull up a YouTube video of the keys to their tesla being handed to them by Elon Musk.

I’ve still listened to dealer principals talk about bill boards and seeing their name on the side of public busses and try to convince themselves that “not all of our consumers are using the internet!”

Taking the last insane statement out of the mix, why am I so pissed off about this? Because we still spend so much damn time talking about the peas when we should be focussing on the the steak. And no one seems to want to do it. Spend more than 5 minutes outside of automotive and every expert in the world talks about content and context. And lets face it, in the world of automotive retail we suck at it. We’ve allowed all of that voice to come from someone other than the dealer. And its just plain wrong. We’ve become convinced that the dealership voice will become drowned out by the big names and it just isn’t true. I see it again and again even when I bring on a store in the biggest markets with the toughest competition. The dealer’s voice is unique in a sea of the same regurgitated copied crap that exists all over the web.

I know I’m going to lose either way I go here. Because how do I substantiate what I’m saying without some stats. So I’m going to include a random 30 day look YoY that I just pulled off the cuff. Some will say Its self serving. Yep. I’m in business to make money. But truthfully, I don’t care if a single person calls me up about this. I really just hope more than anything else I make some of you think. Because you’ve been sold a lie for so long that you can’t make it without these big vendors and its going to be the demise of dealer profitability.

Positive Analytics

  1. 99% of the OEM approved website vendors are making it impossible for you to have a voice and merchandise your products because they are blatantly violating Google’s Webmaster Guidelines. And they don’t care and the OEM doesn’t care because the web providers pay a huge percentage of the website monthly fee back to the OEM. It has no basis in meritocracy.
  2. Because of #1, all the great content you might try to use to get your voice out there in the web is shut down by the fact that Google just took a giant crap on your website that is primarily filled with duplicate content and in direct violation of Google’s guidelines. And you’ll never even know about it anymore because all of this happens automatically without notification of a manual penalty.

This is the steak! This is your website! This is YOUR voice as the dealer to YOUR consumers. And somewhere along the line we’ve subscribed to the idea that the middlemen deserve the right to sell your consumers to you. And the OEM makes it almost impossible for you to even try to make your own money when they hit you over the head with co-op.

If I told you I’d pay you $50,000/month guaranteed to do something thats going to lose you $500,000/month in gross profit how quick would you be to take me up on that offer? But that’s exactly what has happened to our industry.

I could rant on, but I’m just going to leave it here. Hit me with your critique. Tell me I’m a mad man if you must, but maybe, just maybe do a little soul searching and tell me it wouldn’t be worth just trying to make more money on more cars by connecting to your customers directly instead of through 5 other middlemen who take a piece of the action first.

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

CEO

4354

6 Comments

A. J. Maida

Papa's Dodge Chrysler Jeep Ram

Jun 6, 2016  

Preach brother!!!!

C L

Automotive Group

Jun 6, 2016  

I've always wondered why more people dont ask these questions.

I remember back in my first week here I was on the phone with our CDK rep at the time and I said "How can you sell the exact same thing to 2 competing chevy dealerships across town and tell them they have any sort of advantage over the other? It's the exact same thing!"

If you don't belive Tim then believe me because he is exactly right on this topic. 

The rate of innovation for large web vendors rivals the snails pace of DMS companies. Why? because if it is good enough does it need to be any better? 

I hope no one out there takes Tim's advice so I can steal all your traffic. 

Joe Tareen

Callsavvy

Jun 6, 2016  

Awesome! Well said and needed to be said. Low interest rate and Wall Street bubble is enabling big boys in the automotive industry to rig the game in their favor. However I don't think it is some sort of cabalistic consipracy, just the nature of the beast. I  also like what Chris K Leslie said "The rate of innovation for large web vendors rivals the snails pace of DMS companies. Why? because if it is good enough does it need to be any better? ". He hits the nail on the head with his analysis. Large vendors just don't seem to have the incentive to think outside the box, because the box has become too large and deep and they can't see the opening to get out and do the thinking. History is littered with these kind of examples. All Dealers and OEMs should be aware that third party vendors are a fertile ground for innovation and more the players the merrier the creativity, but also if you look beyond the payroll expense concerns and get an in-house digital marketing expert you can get plenty more mileage out of your third party vendors . Unfortunately we seem to be going in the opposite direction with certified vendor shenanigans and shoving one size fits all solutions down dealer throats. This sort of mindset is bringing the entire industry down and there will be people who would make the counter argument that look at sales for the past few years. Why are you complaining? Well all I got to say things were pretty rosy for the housing market  as well untill the bottom fell out in 2008, the tide receded and well the emperor(s) had not clothes! What I am trying to say is that US auto sales are in a bubble mode right now fueled by subprime derivitives and record number of lease transaction. Cheap money won't always be around and the tightening will come and once it does the industry will be looking for real solutions and they wont come from giant behemoths who move at a 'snail's pace'.  But we don't need to wait for a crash or a downturn ask these hard questions. So my take away from Timothy Martel's written words is that dealers should not  drown out their own voices just because the OEMs have bigger loudspeakers. Doubt and question everything you hear. Dig deeper into facts and do not undervalue your own opinion which is derived from hard facts on the ground,  not some biased market study. Be self sufficient in all aspects of your business.

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Jun 6, 2016  

Awesome feedback all. Thanks very much. 

Google actualy favors smaller companies and websites over the "big box." We see it all the time in other verticals. Why? Because the smaller, more nible, can focus on their niche. Their vaule proposition - what actually DOES make them different. The goal isn't to be the chevy dealer that shows up in position one in organic results nationally when someone searches "chevy." The "bragging right" rankings don't make you money. 

You want to be the sink whole that no one even knows is there until it swallows the town whole. Use a strategic agency that helps you make money for your store NOT just hit the OEM agenda KPIs. With the right tools you can analyzie all of your competitors weaknesses and exploit them. There are literally a hundred weaknesses every dealer can exploit to completely shift the game in thier favor. 

Takes 90 days to know if you're doing anything right. Takes a year to accomplish the goal. If you're not taking action now, watch out, because there's a sink hole underneath you coming and you'll never see it until its on the 6 o'clock news!

Jun 6, 2016  

Amen!

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Sep 9, 2015

Navigating SEO: Why You Should Create Content for Social and How to Do It

Why You Should Create Content for Social

Navigating SEO is a DrivingSales.com exclusive series by Timothy Martell, CEO of Wikimotive. In this series, Tim breaks down ways dealers can improve their SEO and offers insight into how it will benefit business.

 

While an extremely critical component to modern SEO, content is also a critical part of a balanced social media strategy.

 

That's great and all, but you're probably asking: "What does creating content for social media have to do with SEO?"

 

Let's find out!

 

Why Content Matters on Social Media (and its effect on SEO)

 

Helps Diversify Social Media Posts

 

Facebook's algorithm loves diversity, so by switching up the type of post (between status, image, link) you're giving the social network what it wants. This will help your posts perform better in order to reach the most people.

 

Boosts Social Results Through Engagement

 

Increasing engagement on your social profiles should be the goal of every business. By creating content people want to click through to and share, you're not only helping your drive traffic to your website, you're reaching local people who might have otherwise never found your business.

 

(You do this by promoting content only to users in your local area. Shares from paid views will be supplemented by organic views from those original shares. As long as you're creating great content, you should receive a ton of free organic social traffic.)

 

Social Signals Correlate High Rankings

 

Searchmetrics ranking factors data for 2015 shows that the amount of engagement correlates with high rankings on Google. The average number of Facebook likes and shares (combined) among the top 10 results in the SERPs is 6,504. In the top 30, this drops to 2,869.

 

Moz, in its 2015 ranking factors survey, also found experts believe that engagement with content on social media sites influences rankings.

 

Google has stated it does not use data from social media sites in its algorithm, but more social engagement around pages could have indirect effects that help highly-shared pages' search engine rankings.

 

Whether directly or indirectly affecting rankings, its clear that social engagement has an impact on SEO. You can choose to ignore it, but that only opens the door for your competitors to gain an edge.

 

How to Create Content for Social

 

Research Popular Topics Related to Your Brands

 

In order to effectively use content to enhance your social media strategy, you need to understand what your audience is most interested in reading. You can do this a number of different ways, but the most accurate path is researching keywords using the Adwords Keyword Planner.

 

Start by changing your target area to your local metro or state, depending on the sample audience you'd like to draw on. I recommend this be close to your actual customer base, as this will paint the clearest picture of popular brand searches among people in your area.

 

As an example, I searched "2015 Chevrolet" targeting New Hampshire searchers. After filtering the results to show the highest volume keywords first, I was able to get a list of the most popular new 2015 Chevy models in my local area:

 

  • Colorado
  • Silverado
  • Tahoe
  • Cruze
  • Impala

 

Doing the same search for upcoming 2016 models, the Volt, Cruze, Malibu, and Camaro were among the most popular.

 

While this information is valuable in getting to know our local audience, we'll need to dig deeper into each model to get unique ideas that our social media audience will love.

 

Creating Social Media-Friendly Content

 

What is Social Media-Friendly Content?

 

Unlike search engine users, social media users aren't coming to you for information based on a query they provided Google. They're browsing Facebook, Twitter, and other sites looking for interesting content and updates from their friends.

 

This means you have to understand what they want to read beforehand in order to gain clickthroughs and other engagement. But how do you do that?

 

You have to catch their attention. For instance, "2016 Chevrolet Volt Overview" isn't really going to jump out and grab the reader. It might be a good title if you're looking to target that keyword in search, but it's likely going to be scanned over by most social media users without a second thought.

 

So how do we make this idea social media friendly? Let's think about the original content.

 

A vehicle overview page tends to just state a lot of facts about a model, so why not include "facts" in our new title. People love to be informed, so this is a good start.

 

And because we're dealing with specific items (facts), we can narrow that down to a numbered list. Social media users are drawn to lists because they're simple and easy to digest. For this piece of content, let's settle for five items.

 

"5 Facts About the 2016 Chevy Volt."

 

While not a bad title, it's not something that stands out as much as we'd like. This is why we need an adjective to describe these facts. It needs to be something that both catches attention and relates to the Volt.  How about "electrifying?"

 

We're on the right track. Now, let's think of a hook for the end. Here's what I ended up with:

 

"5 Electrifying Facts That Make the 2016 Chevy Volt a Must-Buy."

 

With this content, you're taking an otherwise boring format, cleaning it up for accessibility and making it stand out. This is the essence of social media-friendly content.

 

At the end of the day, you'll have content that is not only ready for action on social, but a valuable page that will help you gain more authority and search traffic over time.

 

Have any questions about content and how it affects SEO and social? Let's talk in the comments below!

 

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

CEO

3998

4 Comments

Kevin B Leigh

Dealer Simplified LLC

Sep 9, 2015  

Well researched and well written, Thanks for the article.

Alex Lau

AutoStride

Sep 9, 2015  

Should I lease or finance my new car? Will I get more money selling my car private or trading it in at the dealership? Is it safe to do a credit application on a dealership’s website? What isn’t covered in the manufacturer’s warranty? Where in (your town) can I get my car detailed? Where in (your town) can I get an oil change? Looking for a new Honda Civic? Try a Chevy Cruze (comparison article) Should I buy a new car or a used car? What kind of down payment do I need to finance a car? Do I need to take my car to the dealership I purchased it from for service? How can I terminate my car lease early? Here are some new ways to – Wax Your Own Car (How to do stuff posts) Top 5 questions to ask yourself before you buy a new car? (used vs. new) Who qualifies for the Honda (your make) graduate program? Towing specs for the GMC Yukon (enter your make/model) ABC Motors review of the new 2012 Chevy Volt (every model you sell should have a dealer produced review) What is an admin fee and what does it cover? Top 3 places to get your car washed in ENTER YOUR CITY Winter tires vs. All season tires? Top 5 myths about buying a new car (get your hit list from staff)

Alex Lau

AutoStride

Sep 9, 2015  

Pertains to measuring Social, just as well as other factors. I wrote the following article (as a nom de plume) for the WorldDealer owner, http://www.worlddealer.net/2013/06/employing-white-hat-seo-methods-and-search-content-marketing which ended up being published at AutoSuccess Magazine. Much of this holds true. gShift SEO CRM (which can be white labeled for reporting) http://www.gshiftlabs.com/web-presence-analytics/software/seo Essentially, their tool allows you to add keywords and Google Analytics goals (via API) and measures conversions. Additionally, gShift measures the effectiveness of on-site & off-site content, backlinks, social (signals and referring sources) and how competition ranks against those same metrics. Not just homepage conversions, but inner page conversion as well, which is why it's so important to optimize all pages (organically, SRPs tend to be ignored by platforms and most dealers). Dealers tend to confuse rankings and conversions. They are mutually exclusive, in that keyword rankings don't always equate to a lot of conversions. Most dealer sites have usability issues (lack user-testing) and just plain fail to convert well, regardless of where pages rank against keywords. Global / National, Local, Mobile keyword rankings can be measured = there are three indexes out there (albeit quite a few overlaps). For dealerships, local obviously, but mobile measurement as well. One of the reasons why their decisions to go with Responsive / RWD is so important. One site with one set of code to be measured, not two with adaptive / m.dealership.com mobile sites. This isn't an easy way to do SEO. It does place a ton of pressure on making sure valuable keywords (high search traffic) are ranked and sustained over time, but also conversions for the right pages. It requires accountability for keyword rankings.

Mark Rask

Kelley Buick Gmc

Sep 9, 2015  

This has given me some great ideas for social engagement!

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

Sep 9, 2015

Navigating SEO: Why You Should Create Content for Social and How to Do It

Why You Should Create Content for Social

Navigating SEO is a DrivingSales.com exclusive series by Timothy Martell, CEO of Wikimotive. In this series, Tim breaks down ways dealers can improve their SEO and offers insight into how it will benefit business.

 

While an extremely critical component to modern SEO, content is also a critical part of a balanced social media strategy.

 

That's great and all, but you're probably asking: "What does creating content for social media have to do with SEO?"

 

Let's find out!

 

Why Content Matters on Social Media (and its effect on SEO)

 

Helps Diversify Social Media Posts

 

Facebook's algorithm loves diversity, so by switching up the type of post (between status, image, link) you're giving the social network what it wants. This will help your posts perform better in order to reach the most people.

 

Boosts Social Results Through Engagement

 

Increasing engagement on your social profiles should be the goal of every business. By creating content people want to click through to and share, you're not only helping your drive traffic to your website, you're reaching local people who might have otherwise never found your business.

 

(You do this by promoting content only to users in your local area. Shares from paid views will be supplemented by organic views from those original shares. As long as you're creating great content, you should receive a ton of free organic social traffic.)

 

Social Signals Correlate High Rankings

 

Searchmetrics ranking factors data for 2015 shows that the amount of engagement correlates with high rankings on Google. The average number of Facebook likes and shares (combined) among the top 10 results in the SERPs is 6,504. In the top 30, this drops to 2,869.

 

Moz, in its 2015 ranking factors survey, also found experts believe that engagement with content on social media sites influences rankings.

 

Google has stated it does not use data from social media sites in its algorithm, but more social engagement around pages could have indirect effects that help highly-shared pages' search engine rankings.

 

Whether directly or indirectly affecting rankings, its clear that social engagement has an impact on SEO. You can choose to ignore it, but that only opens the door for your competitors to gain an edge.

 

How to Create Content for Social

 

Research Popular Topics Related to Your Brands

 

In order to effectively use content to enhance your social media strategy, you need to understand what your audience is most interested in reading. You can do this a number of different ways, but the most accurate path is researching keywords using the Adwords Keyword Planner.

 

Start by changing your target area to your local metro or state, depending on the sample audience you'd like to draw on. I recommend this be close to your actual customer base, as this will paint the clearest picture of popular brand searches among people in your area.

 

As an example, I searched "2015 Chevrolet" targeting New Hampshire searchers. After filtering the results to show the highest volume keywords first, I was able to get a list of the most popular new 2015 Chevy models in my local area:

 

  • Colorado
  • Silverado
  • Tahoe
  • Cruze
  • Impala

 

Doing the same search for upcoming 2016 models, the Volt, Cruze, Malibu, and Camaro were among the most popular.

 

While this information is valuable in getting to know our local audience, we'll need to dig deeper into each model to get unique ideas that our social media audience will love.

 

Creating Social Media-Friendly Content

 

What is Social Media-Friendly Content?

 

Unlike search engine users, social media users aren't coming to you for information based on a query they provided Google. They're browsing Facebook, Twitter, and other sites looking for interesting content and updates from their friends.

 

This means you have to understand what they want to read beforehand in order to gain clickthroughs and other engagement. But how do you do that?

 

You have to catch their attention. For instance, "2016 Chevrolet Volt Overview" isn't really going to jump out and grab the reader. It might be a good title if you're looking to target that keyword in search, but it's likely going to be scanned over by most social media users without a second thought.

 

So how do we make this idea social media friendly? Let's think about the original content.

 

A vehicle overview page tends to just state a lot of facts about a model, so why not include "facts" in our new title. People love to be informed, so this is a good start.

 

And because we're dealing with specific items (facts), we can narrow that down to a numbered list. Social media users are drawn to lists because they're simple and easy to digest. For this piece of content, let's settle for five items.

 

"5 Facts About the 2016 Chevy Volt."

 

While not a bad title, it's not something that stands out as much as we'd like. This is why we need an adjective to describe these facts. It needs to be something that both catches attention and relates to the Volt.  How about "electrifying?"

 

We're on the right track. Now, let's think of a hook for the end. Here's what I ended up with:

 

"5 Electrifying Facts That Make the 2016 Chevy Volt a Must-Buy."

 

With this content, you're taking an otherwise boring format, cleaning it up for accessibility and making it stand out. This is the essence of social media-friendly content.

 

At the end of the day, you'll have content that is not only ready for action on social, but a valuable page that will help you gain more authority and search traffic over time.

 

Have any questions about content and how it affects SEO and social? Let's talk in the comments below!

 

Timothy Martell

Wikimotive

CEO

3998

4 Comments

Kevin B Leigh

Dealer Simplified LLC

Sep 9, 2015  

Well researched and well written, Thanks for the article.

Alex Lau

AutoStride

Sep 9, 2015  

Should I lease or finance my new car? Will I get more money selling my car private or trading it in at the dealership? Is it safe to do a credit application on a dealership’s website? What isn’t covered in the manufacturer’s warranty? Where in (your town) can I get my car detailed? Where in (your town) can I get an oil change? Looking for a new Honda Civic? Try a Chevy Cruze (comparison article) Should I buy a new car or a used car? What kind of down payment do I need to finance a car? Do I need to take my car to the dealership I purchased it from for service? How can I terminate my car lease early? Here are some new ways to – Wax Your Own Car (How to do stuff posts) Top 5 questions to ask yourself before you buy a new car? (used vs. new) Who qualifies for the Honda (your make) graduate program? Towing specs for the GMC Yukon (enter your make/model) ABC Motors review of the new 2012 Chevy Volt (every model you sell should have a dealer produced review) What is an admin fee and what does it cover? Top 3 places to get your car washed in ENTER YOUR CITY Winter tires vs. All season tires? Top 5 myths about buying a new car (get your hit list from staff)

Alex Lau

AutoStride

Sep 9, 2015  

Pertains to measuring Social, just as well as other factors. I wrote the following article (as a nom de plume) for the WorldDealer owner, http://www.worlddealer.net/2013/06/employing-white-hat-seo-methods-and-search-content-marketing which ended up being published at AutoSuccess Magazine. Much of this holds true. gShift SEO CRM (which can be white labeled for reporting) http://www.gshiftlabs.com/web-presence-analytics/software/seo Essentially, their tool allows you to add keywords and Google Analytics goals (via API) and measures conversions. Additionally, gShift measures the effectiveness of on-site & off-site content, backlinks, social (signals and referring sources) and how competition ranks against those same metrics. Not just homepage conversions, but inner page conversion as well, which is why it's so important to optimize all pages (organically, SRPs tend to be ignored by platforms and most dealers). Dealers tend to confuse rankings and conversions. They are mutually exclusive, in that keyword rankings don't always equate to a lot of conversions. Most dealer sites have usability issues (lack user-testing) and just plain fail to convert well, regardless of where pages rank against keywords. Global / National, Local, Mobile keyword rankings can be measured = there are three indexes out there (albeit quite a few overlaps). For dealerships, local obviously, but mobile measurement as well. One of the reasons why their decisions to go with Responsive / RWD is so important. One site with one set of code to be measured, not two with adaptive / m.dealership.com mobile sites. This isn't an easy way to do SEO. It does place a ton of pressure on making sure valuable keywords (high search traffic) are ranked and sustained over time, but also conversions for the right pages. It requires accountability for keyword rankings.

Mark Rask

Kelley Buick Gmc

Sep 9, 2015  

This has given me some great ideas for social engagement!

Mark Frost

Inbound Automotive

Jun 6, 2015

How to Boost Twitter Engagement and Build a Real Audience

While Twitter never grew to truly rival Facebook, it has affected our communication and our culture in the same way. People use Twitter for marketing, to connect with like-minded individuals, network professionally, broadcast news, and discuss anything and everything going on in the world.


The most powerful part of this is that everything is public. Meaning anyone has the potential to reach millions of people and grow an audience, if their content is worthy.

In this post, I'll give you the starter guide you need to use Twitter as a platform to grow in your industry through simply following and engaging with the right people.

Discover and Implement Industry Hashtags

One of the greatest things about Twitter is that, despite being a single giant community, it can be used as a way to connect with individuals with similar professional and personal interests.


The way this is achieved on a site with billions of public messages each day is through hashtags.

Hashtags are words (or an unspaced phrases) used to group or categorize messages on Twitter. (Other sites have since adopted the features. It was originally inspired by IRC networks, which used the hash symbol (#) to organize chats by topic.)

Let’s say you wanted to get involved in the SEO community on Twitter. The easiest way to do so would be to use the "#SEO" hashtag, but you might get lost in the noise, as it's a popular hashtag.

Using Twitter analysis tool, Hashtagify, we can find hashtags that are related to #SEO to stand out a bit more. A few examples might be #ContentMarketing, #Blogging, or #Content.

You can also explore these hashtags directly on Twitter to discover others that people are using. The more hashtags you integrate into your tweets, the more people you'll reach.

Once you've got a good list put together, start implementing them. If you tweet a post of blogging tips, be sure to add the hashtag #Blogging so the community can better discover your content. A user with zero followers can build from nothing by simply utilizing hashtags properly.

Start Following and Engaging with Related Users

Now that you've got an idea of how to get more involved in industry discussion on Twitter, it's time to start following influential and active users in your industry.

If you know a few of the most influential people in your industry, you obviously want to follow them first. But the next step is to see who they follow, and also who follows them. By doing this, you'll discover more influential people, and perhaps users who are looking to break into the scene.

Not every single person will follow back, but you can follow 1,000 people a day. The issue here is, if you don't have 2000 followers, Twitter won't let you follow more than 2000 people until you get to 2000 followers.

You have to follow the right people, engage, and get noticed.

Your goal should be to reach out to all types of users, not just the most influential. Those who get hundreds of messages each week aren't likely to notice you, but someone with only a few hundred or thousand followers will.

Make separate Twitter lists for influential and active industry users to ensure you're getting tweets from both sides. This also ensures their messages don't get lost in the noise of Twitter.

So go out and retweet their best links, reply to their questions, and generally make people notice you!

Take Time to Personalize, But Work on Automation

Twitter can suck up a lot of your spare time, if you let it. You could easily find yourself spending hours each day searching for great content to post and replying to other users.

Instead of spending a ton of time overthinking Twitter, work on automating as much of the process as possible. This means using a tool like HootSuite or Buffer to schedule tweets out in advance.

Whether that means articles you've read, tips, quotes, or questions, it saves you the time and effort of having to interrupt your daily routine to tweet.

Of course, you should set time aside to retweet, reply, and follow new users each day. This should take less than 15 minutes of your time, so you can accomplish it consistently during a mid-day break.

Final Thoughts

Anyone can build a follower base on Twitter. But numbers mean nothing without engagement behind it. Don't let follower counts distract you from your true mission: networking.

You can build a name for yourself and rub shoulders with people you would have otherwise never been able to meet in person. It's a powerful tool when used correctly, and can open up opportunities you didn't know existed!

 

This post originally appeared on Wikimotive's blog on March 2, 2015.

Mark Frost

Inbound Automotive

Owner and CEO

1467

No Comments

Mark Frost

Inbound Automotive

Jun 6, 2015

How to Boost Twitter Engagement and Build a Real Audience

While Twitter never grew to truly rival Facebook, it has affected our communication and our culture in the same way. People use Twitter for marketing, to connect with like-minded individuals, network professionally, broadcast news, and discuss anything and everything going on in the world.


The most powerful part of this is that everything is public. Meaning anyone has the potential to reach millions of people and grow an audience, if their content is worthy.

In this post, I'll give you the starter guide you need to use Twitter as a platform to grow in your industry through simply following and engaging with the right people.

Discover and Implement Industry Hashtags

One of the greatest things about Twitter is that, despite being a single giant community, it can be used as a way to connect with individuals with similar professional and personal interests.


The way this is achieved on a site with billions of public messages each day is through hashtags.

Hashtags are words (or an unspaced phrases) used to group or categorize messages on Twitter. (Other sites have since adopted the features. It was originally inspired by IRC networks, which used the hash symbol (#) to organize chats by topic.)

Let’s say you wanted to get involved in the SEO community on Twitter. The easiest way to do so would be to use the "#SEO" hashtag, but you might get lost in the noise, as it's a popular hashtag.

Using Twitter analysis tool, Hashtagify, we can find hashtags that are related to #SEO to stand out a bit more. A few examples might be #ContentMarketing, #Blogging, or #Content.

You can also explore these hashtags directly on Twitter to discover others that people are using. The more hashtags you integrate into your tweets, the more people you'll reach.

Once you've got a good list put together, start implementing them. If you tweet a post of blogging tips, be sure to add the hashtag #Blogging so the community can better discover your content. A user with zero followers can build from nothing by simply utilizing hashtags properly.

Start Following and Engaging with Related Users

Now that you've got an idea of how to get more involved in industry discussion on Twitter, it's time to start following influential and active users in your industry.

If you know a few of the most influential people in your industry, you obviously want to follow them first. But the next step is to see who they follow, and also who follows them. By doing this, you'll discover more influential people, and perhaps users who are looking to break into the scene.

Not every single person will follow back, but you can follow 1,000 people a day. The issue here is, if you don't have 2000 followers, Twitter won't let you follow more than 2000 people until you get to 2000 followers.

You have to follow the right people, engage, and get noticed.

Your goal should be to reach out to all types of users, not just the most influential. Those who get hundreds of messages each week aren't likely to notice you, but someone with only a few hundred or thousand followers will.

Make separate Twitter lists for influential and active industry users to ensure you're getting tweets from both sides. This also ensures their messages don't get lost in the noise of Twitter.

So go out and retweet their best links, reply to their questions, and generally make people notice you!

Take Time to Personalize, But Work on Automation

Twitter can suck up a lot of your spare time, if you let it. You could easily find yourself spending hours each day searching for great content to post and replying to other users.

Instead of spending a ton of time overthinking Twitter, work on automating as much of the process as possible. This means using a tool like HootSuite or Buffer to schedule tweets out in advance.

Whether that means articles you've read, tips, quotes, or questions, it saves you the time and effort of having to interrupt your daily routine to tweet.

Of course, you should set time aside to retweet, reply, and follow new users each day. This should take less than 15 minutes of your time, so you can accomplish it consistently during a mid-day break.

Final Thoughts

Anyone can build a follower base on Twitter. But numbers mean nothing without engagement behind it. Don't let follower counts distract you from your true mission: networking.

You can build a name for yourself and rub shoulders with people you would have otherwise never been able to meet in person. It's a powerful tool when used correctly, and can open up opportunities you didn't know existed!

 

This post originally appeared on Wikimotive's blog on March 2, 2015.

Mark Frost

Inbound Automotive

Owner and CEO

1467

No Comments

  Per Page: