utomotive update - THE MEDIACENTER
Transcription
utomotive update - THE MEDIACENTER
January 2011 UTOMOTIVE UPDATE brought to you by THE MEDIACENTER IT’S NOT SPYING . IT’S ADVERTISING RESEARCH! E very auto dealer wants to be number one in their market. While you can still be profitable being in second or third place in the sales race, there’s definitely something special about having that top-spot bragging right. If your dealership is tired of being the first loser, there are ways you can narrow the gap or even pass the top dog. One of the most effective ways to gain ground is to look at you competitor’s advertising. Aside from location and convenience, not much differentiates your dealership from any other. Customers will have good and bad shopping experiences at every dealership, and every dealership will have amazing and lousy salespeople. Many times, however, it is the marketing message that is delivered to the potential customers that takes them to one places versus the other. Take a good look at your competition’s advertising messages across all marketing medium, including TV, print, radio and online. There’s a good chance that the messages in all of these ads are consistent with each other, with a similar look, message, and incentive across the board. What are they saying that your dealership is not? What are they promising that appeals to more people than your ads? What incentives or offers to they promote, and how do they promote them? Really sit down and look at every aspect of the ad, down to the verbiage and images they use. When you have a side-by-side comparison of a successful ad versus a not-so-successful ad, sometimes the difference will become quite apparent. Now that you’ve seen what the others are doing, it’s time to beat them at their own game. One easy trap you can fall into is by simply copying the message verbatim and sticking your logo on the ad instead of theirs. While this is not a terrible strategy, you may be pulling the chute a little too early. Imitation is the most sincere form of flattery, but you don’t want to flatter your competition, you want to flatten them! Use their successful strategy and turn it against them. If they are offering $500 off MSRP for a specific vehicle, you should offer $1000 off MSRP. If they are advertising a free oil change with every test drive, you should give away a free iPod. This “anything you can do, I can do better” strategy will help draw more attention to your dealership and take those leads away from the competition. This tactic is especially effective on your search engine marketing campaigns, where you can instantly change your ad copy to beat any other advertised price on the search engine results page. Imagine how powerful it could be to post the lowest price on a search term in a matter of seconds, sending more clicks to your website. Keep an eye on your competition. You don’t have to send undercover employees over to their dealership or set up phone taps in order to find out their sales secrets. All you have to do is keep a close eye on their advertising messages, and use your tools to beat them at their own game. UTOMOTIVE UPDATE January 2011 brought to you by THE MEDIACENTER Poll: U.S. car firms to gain market share Global auto execs say innovation, quality advances spur change U.S. auto companies will boost market share during the next five years, according to a survey of global automobile executives released today. The 12th annual global automotive survey by KPMG LLP, the U.S. audit, tax, and advisory firm, predicted growth among U.S. automakers would be spurred by product innovation, restructuring and continued improvement in product quality. The outlook marks a dramatic turnaround in their expectations from a year ago, according to the polling of 200 senior executives in the global auto industry. When asked to predict global market share winners over the next five years, the executives picked Ford. About 43 percent saw Ford gaining market share, compared with 29 percent in 2010 and 13 percent in 2009. That was above the 40 percent that predicted Toyota Motor Corp. would gain market share. Ford’s market share grew to 16.7 percent in 2010 from 15.5 percent in 2009. General Motors Co. saw the most significant climb among the respondents in this year’s survey. Forty percent of executives expect its market share to increase over the next five years, up from 13 percent in 2010 and 15 percent in 2009. GM’s market share declined last year to 19.1 percent from 19.8 percent in 2009. Chrysler Group LLC also saw a double-digit increase in the percentage of executives predicting improvement — finishing at 24 percent compared with 7.5 percent in 2010. Chrysler’s share of the market increased to 9.4 percent in 2010, up from 8.9 percent in 2009. “It was quite astounding,” said Gary Silberg, national automotive industry leader for KPMG. “The reality is the data is starting to support that.” The results “demonstrate that the restructuring efforts of the past several years have helped U.S. auto manufacturers emerge more efficient and more competitive,” he said. About half of the executives polled were from Europe, while a quarter each came from Asia and North America. Silberg noted that auto executives are predicting a bigger rebound for the U.S. auto market of as much as 13.3 million vehicles sales in 2011 after sales jumped to 11.6 million vehicles in 2010 from 10.4 million vehicles in 2009. UTOMOTIVE UPDATE January 2011 brought to you by THE MEDIACENTER USED CAR PRICES STAY STRONG When hit by the new-car sales decline, dealers began placing greater emphasis on their used-car operations, particularly certified pre-owned programs. Those offer cars that are inspected and reconditioned when necessary. They come with auto-maker warranties. Used-car prices are expected to stay strong this year for two time-tested reasons: low supply and high demand. “We’ll see a good used-car market in 2011 and possibly three years from now,” says Ricky Beggs, managing editor of the Black Book, a pre-owned vehicle price guide. There is a shortage of late-model used vehicles, “and it is going to stay that way,” says Bob Graham, vice president-asset marketing for ARI, an auto remarketing firm. Supplies are low in part because of the drop in new-car sales. Those deliveries declined from 16.1 million units in 2007 to 13.2 million in 2008 to 10.4 million in 2009. The new- and usedcar markets are inextricably linked. A saying in the pre-owned business is that all used cars start out as new cars. “When we are not producing a lot of new cars, we are not producing a lot of used cars for the future,” says Linda Silverstein, Ford Motor Co.’s manager-remarketing and rental operations. That will change as new-car sales rebound, but it won’t change immediately, says Eric Lyman, OEM practice director for ALG Inc., a forecaster of vehicle residual prices. “As used-car supply continues to be an issue, we’ll see used prices stay strong going forward,” he says. “When we see a significant increase in used-car supplies around 2015, we’ll see a decline in used-car strength.” Another reason he cites for today’s relatively low used-car supplies is that car rental companies are keeping their fleet units longer – up to 18 months as opposed to six months previously. Consumer frugality spurred by the recession has led many former new-car buyers to switch over to less-costly used vehicles. “Many consumers are stepping down from new to used,” Lyman says. “We’ve heard from dealers that CPO is the last frontier where they can make money,” Juan Flores, Kelley Blue Book’s director-vehicle valuation, says at the National Remarketing Conference here. “Customers in our market are coming in and asking for certified cars,” says Craig Martinez, general sales manager at JM Lexus in Margate, FL. “But it is getting harder to stock these vehicles.” Certified cars sell at a premium. But buyers are willing to pay only so much, says James O’Brien, general manager of TrueCar.com, a research firm. “Consumers see CPOs as $600 to $1,000 higher than a car that’s not certified. If the CPO is more than $1,000, you won’t get the phone call.” Success in selling used cars requires a firm knowledge of values for individual makes and models in particular markets, says James O’Brien, general manager of TrueCar.com, a research firm. Dealers buying vehicles wholesale and selling them retail “need to make decisions on individual cars, not on aggregate prices,” he says. Adds Beggs: “Every used car is unique and every dealer market is unique, with different overheads and different customers.” UTOMOTIVE UPDATE January 2011 brought to you by THE MEDIACENTER Correct pricing reigns supreme, says Chuck Yaeger, CPO manager for Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A.’s Lexus luxury brand. “Dealers do an amazing job in researching used cars that are cream of the crop,” he says. “But most important is whether you have the car priced right. That’s what the customer is interested in.” Although used-car values will remain strong this year, there probably won’t be the pricing volatility seen in some vehicle segments at various times during 2010, experts say. 2010 will be forever known as the year after that really bad year. 2009 was a horrible string of days for just about everyone who had two pennies to rub together, but automakers were hit particularly hard. The only good thing for automakers about such a bad 2009 is that it made every month in 2010 look good in comparison. And so it is that those green bills earned from all those extra car sales are represented on our Yearly Automobile Sales Chart, where most brands posted yearend results in the black. “We’ll see more normality in prices,” O’Brien says. “We saw an overreaction.” ■ The four remaining “Core” brands of General Motors sold more in 2010 than the eight brands of Old GM sold in 2009: 2,202,927 to 2,084,492. If consumers think used-car prices are high on the retail lots, dealers likewise beef about wholesale-auction prices. ■ Ford Motor Company outsold Toyota Motor Company to regain its No. 2 sales position by General Motors. “Dealers complain the price of used cars is bumping into the price of new,” says Dan Kennedy, General Motors Co.’s general manager-remarketing. ■ But a natural barrier separates used- and new-car prices. If they get too close to one another, consumers typically opt for the new vehicle. If Hyundai and Kia were counted together in the U.S., their combined sales of 894,496 units would make them the seventh-largest automaker. Separately they are the seventh- and eighth-largest and the largest single-brand automakers in the U.S. ■ Used-car prices are expected to come in at 37 million units for 2010, says Tom Webb, chief economist for Manheim Consulting. That compares with expected new-car sales of about 11.5 million units. Subaru, one of the best performing brands of the past two years, sold more vehicles in 2010 than Volkswagen, Europe’s largest automaker: 263,820 to 256,830. ■ Buick sales increased the most in 2010 with a 51.89-percent increase, while Smart sales fell the farthest with a 59.39-percent decline. ■ The three best performing brands of 2010 are from General Motors (Buick, Cadillac and GMC) ■ Audi sold over 100,000 vehicles in the U.S. for the first time ever. Graham adds: “With the shortage of inventory, buyers were out there trying to get any vehicle they could.” The vibrant and sometimes-volatile used-car market is not for the faint-hearted. “This is about the most complex business I’ve ever seen,” O’Brien says. “It’s a hard business to understand and to perfect.” Dealers must work at it, says Greg Miller, CEO of Larry H. Miller Group of Companies, a Sandy, UT-based firm with 41 dealerships. “It takes skill, knowledge and effort to profitably run a used-car operation,” he says. “You can win and lose there faster than any other part of a dealership. You need to be good to survive.” Yet, survivors abound, says Jack Fitzgerald, a multi-franchise dealer based in Bethesda, MD. “The used-car business keeps on humming.” UTOMOTIVE UPDATE January 2011 brought to you by THE MEDIACENTER YEARLY AUTOMOBILE SALES CHART Volume % Volume 2010 DSR 2010 DSR 2009 Buick 51.89 155,389 102,306 Cadillac 34.68 146,925 109,092 52.88 508 332 35.56 480 GMC 28.95 334,981 354 259,779 29.79 1,095 Porsche 28.55 843 25,320 19,696 29.39 83 Infiniti 64 27.53 103,411 81,089 28.36 338 263 Acura 26.37 133,606 105,723 27.20 437 343 Jeep 25.65 291,138 231,701 26.47 951 752 Hyundai 23.71 538,228 435,064 24.52 1,759 1,413 Audi 22.86 101,629 82,716 23.67 332 269 Subaru 21.77 263,820 216,652 22.57 862 703 Ford 21.49 1,756,439 1,445,742 22.28 5,740 4,694 Land Rover 21.13 31,864 26,306 21.92 104 85 Volkswagen 20.32 256,830 213,454 21.11 839 693 Kia 18.73 356,268 300,063 19.51 1,164 974 Mercedes-Benz 18.05 225,007 190,604 18.82 735 619 Dodge 17.13 383,675 327,574 17.89 1,254 1,064 Nissan 16.86 805,159 689,014 17.62 2,631 2,237 Chevrolet 16.44 1,565,632 1,344,629 17.20 5,116 4,366 BMW 12.02 220,113 196,502 12.75 719 638 Jaguar 11.59 13,340 11,955 12.31 44 39 Chrysler 11.54 197,446 177,015 12.27 645 575 Mazda 10.49 229,566 207,767 11.21 750 675 Ram 9.14 212,952 195,112 9.86 696 633 Lexus 6.18 229,329 215,975 6.88 749 701 Honda 4.96 1,096,874 1,045,061 5.64 3,585 3,393 Mitsubishi 3.82 55,683 53,636 4.50 182 174 Lincoln 3.60 85,828 82,847 4.28 280 269 Mercury 0.97 93,195 92,299 1.63 305 300 Mini 0.93 45,644 45,225 1.59 149 147 Toyota -1.28 1,534,266 1,554,174 -0.64 5,014 5,046 Volvo -12.19 53,948 61,435 -11.61 176 199 Saab -37.26 5,446 8,680 -36.85 18 28 Suzuki -37.98 23,994 38,689 -37.58 78 126 (Hummer) -57.86 3,812 9,046 -57.58 12 29 Smart -59.39 5,927 14,595 -59.12 19 47 (Saturn) -95.42 12,300 268,686 -95.39 40 872 (Pontiac) -99.34 1,182 178,300 -99.33 4 579 GM (Core) 21.32 2,202,927 1,815,806 22.11 7,199 5,895 Ford Mo Co 19.41 1,935,462 1,620,888 20.19 6,325 5,263 Jaguar Land Rover 18.15 45,204 38,261 18.92 148 124 Nissan NA 17.98 908,570 770,103 18.75 2,969 2,500 Chrysler Group 16.51 1,085,211 931,402 17.28 3,546 3,024 BMW Group 9.94 265,757 241,727 10.66 868 785 American Honda 6.93 1,230,480 1,150,784 7.62 4,021 3,736 GM 6.27 2,215,227 2,084,492 6.97 7,239 6,768 Toyota Mo Co -0.37 1,763,595 1,770,149 0.28 5,763 5,747 Brand Volume DSR*% 2009 Companies THE MEDIACENTER THE TV AUTHORITY www.mediacenteronline.com *Brands and companies are displayed in descending order according to their percentage change in volume sales. There were 306 selling days in 2010 versus 308 selling days in 2009, so the change in monthly sales volume will be different than the change in average daily sales rate (DSR) for each brand/company. Also, brands are combined and reported as companies only if their sales figures are released jointly. SOURCES: WARDS, DETROIT FREE PRESS, DEALER MARKETING MAGAZINE, AUTOBLOG