AutoUSA Introduces Shop-By-Payment for Payment Pro, A New Way to Shop on Auto Dealer Websites

by Admin 20. May 2013 07:52

Fort Lauderdale, FL – May 20th, 2013 — AutoUSA Internet Sales Solutions (www.autousadealers.com) today introduced Shop-By-Payment for Payment ProSM, powered by DriveItNow, a patent-pending next generation payment marketing tool that offers consumers a new way to shop on auto dealer websites. When a customer visits a dealer website with Shop-By-Payment, they are given the option to search inventory based on their desired monthly payment. The customer is prompted to enter in their name and a few details—no SSN or DOB required. Shop-By-Payment searches the available inventory based on their actual credit, the dealers’ current finance programs and returns a list of new and used vehicles that match the desired payment.

 

“Shop-By-Payment for Payment Pro revolutionizes the online auto shopping experience,” said Phil DuPree, President of AutoUSA. “Instead of searching for vehicles based on make, model or price, customers can now view and choose from all the vehicles they know they can afford based on the monthly payment.”

 

After displaying a list of vehicles that match the customer’s payment range, Shop-By-Payment allows the customer to change criteria such as monthly payment, down payment or the bottom line price they are willing to pay. The inventory displayed instantly adjusts to the new criteria selected by the customer. When the customer narrows the selection of vehicles, they click on a button with the desired monthly payment. That information then becomes a credit analyzed website lead and is sent to that dealership.

 

Shop-By-Payment for Payment Pro offers dealers the following benefits:

 

·      For the majority of car buyers, it is all about the payment. According to CNW Research, 70.5 percent of car buyers finance their vehicles. Shop-By-Payment instantly engages these customers by offering an easy, interactive and immediate way to view the vehicles they can afford, instead of viewing the vehicles they want and not knowing if they can afford them.

 

·      Because no Social Security Number or date of birth is required, Shop-By-Payment protects consumers’ privacy and credit reports. Payment Pro delivers payment quotes based on the customer’s credit without negatively impacting the credit score.

 

·      Payment Pro delivers accurate monthly payment quotes based on the customer’s credit, the dealership’s finance programs and the specific inventory available, producing high-quality, credit analyzed leads. With customers this far down the sales funnel, the next step is for the customer to visit the dealership and take delivery of the vehicle.

 

Shop-By-Payment is initially available to car dealers who are currently using AutoUSA’s Payment Pro. To see a demonstration of Shop-By-Payment for Payment Pro, visit www.AnywhereMotors.com.

 

Dealers interested in learning more about Shop-By-Payment for Payment Pro can call AutoUSA at 800-509-8714.

 

About AutoUSA Internet Sales Solutions (www.AutoUSADealers.com)

AutoUSA Internet Sales Solutions brings the best-in-class tools to increase Internet sales and lower costs for automotive dealerships. Leading products include Payment ProSM, a payment-based pre-qualification tool for dealer websites; ShowProSM incentive program, proven to turn more leads into shows; Leads&ListingsSM, providing the highest quality, new and used car email and phone leads from 100+ sites; PowerListingsSM 2.0, helping dealers increase traffic to—and leads from—their social media sites; and AVA Virtual Sales Assistant, helping dealerships manage more leads at a reduced cost. AutoUSA products are currently benefiting thousands of active dealers all across the U.S.

 

For more information, visit AutoUSA’s web site, subscribe to our blog at http://blog.autousadealers.com, follow us on Twitter @AutoUSALeads and “Like” us on Facebook at /AutoUSADealers

 

About DriveItNow® (http://www.DriveItNow.com)

DriveItNow® is a patent-pending monthly payment marketing technology service of Automobile Consumer Services, Inc. (ACS). ACS is a leader in developing innovative online shopping technology with the initial launch of LeaseCompare.com in 2000. LeaseCompare.com continues to be one of the top destinations for auto financing and leasing in the industry.

Top Ten Tips From “The Best” at Digital Dealer

by Josh Vajda, Director of Inside Sales 4. December 2012 05:54

 

In October, we facilitated a panel called “The Five Things in Common That Successful Internet Departments Share” at the 13th Digital Dealer Conference & Exposition in Las Vegas. We were thrilled to have over 200 attendees and want to thank our panelists for doing a great job. We decided to share some tips from our panelists for the benefit of all who couldn’t make it to the conference in hopes that you’ll find it as helpful as the attendees did.

 

Our panelists included:

- Greg Coleman, Director of Business Development & E-Commerce Director, Lexus Store of Lexington & Toyota of Nicholasville

- Justin Brun, E-Commerce Manager, Acton Toyota of Littleton

- Richard Tolsma, Internet Manager, Dan Wiebold Ford, Idaho

- Ray Fenster, President & CEO, RayFenster.com, LLC

- Dennis Colome, Vice President Sales & Marketing, eXteres Auto

 

Here’s a summary of some tips from their discussion:

 

1)      Boost your phone call volume without paying additional money: “Make your phone number prominent on every website page. In addition, include your phone number in the website page title and description.” – Ray Fenster

 

2)    Relevance is content, not just keywords. “Don’t ‘keyword stuff’ your website search terms, i.e. don’t go after every city in the state. Google is onto this and no longer allows it.”  – Dennis Colome

 

3)    All leads are created equal. “Our dealership uses a strict 180-day process for follow up. Once a lead reaches 60 days with no contact, then the process becomes automated.” – Richard Tolsma

 

4)    Turn your “dead” leads into service opportunities. “If a customer isn’t ready to buy a car, give the lead to fixed ops to market and see if they can get that customer in for service. Something like 80% of service customers will buy a new car from that dealership. The closing percentage goes way up.” – Ray Fenster

 

5)    Don’t be afraid to share pricing, just be smart about it. “Be up front in your pricing, but be sure to give the customer several pricing options. Give them the price for the vehicle they inquired about, then follow up with second and third pricing options that are lower.” – Dennis Colome

 

6)    Generic responses don’t add value to the conversation. “Respond to specific questions and concerns in the customers’ initial e-mails. Also acknowledge the source from where the lead came; for example, if you get a lead from ZAG American Express, mention something about the program and how exclusive it is and how happy you are to be working with them.” – Justin Brun

 

 

7)    Have a pricing strategy. “When responding to pricing questions, use a “we start as low as” strategy and show the customer the option, i.e. a Toyota-Corolla. Giving them the lowest price on the lowest model will set their expectations and they usually upsell themselves. The vast majority of our customers buy a different vehicle than they originally inquired about.”  – Greg Coleman

 

8)    Be patient. “Third party leads typically research five to six vehicles on the third-party sites because they are looking for unbiased info. When they submit leads they are often three to four months out, so work with them for a while. True ROI has to be measured over time.” – Dennis Colome

 

9)    Know Your Market. “We perform a competitive analysis via e-mails and mystery shopping websites and third-party sites, and build a pricing matrix based upon the information gathered. On new vehicles we found our competitors are just showing the MSRP; so by displaying that number minus any available rebates, we automatically show a lower price than what’s in the market.” – Greg Coleman

 

10)Trends are worth more than ‘snapshots’. “When you report to management, they want to see results. Whatever program or product you are reviewing, show 30-day, 60-day and 90-day snapshots so they can see trends as to what’s working and what isn’t. Don’t be afraid to get rid of what’s not working. Not all products work for all dealerships.”  - Ray Fenster

 

Which is your favorite “top tip?” What are you doing in your department that works? What’s your “top tip” to share with other Internet sales personnel? 

 

Three Tips for Effective Internet Lead Response

by Holly Forsberg 15. November 2012 07:59
Justin Brun, E-Commerce Manager with Acton Toyota of Littleton, shares three tips for effective Internet lead response.

Leads Are People Too

by Admin 10. October 2012 09:21
Are Internet customers all that different than showroom customers? Josh Vajda analyzes the sales processes used with Internet leads and with showroom customers, and gives recommendations on how to ensure that both groups of customers are being treated the same, for maximum closing rates and profitability.

3 Tips for Improving Your 'Contact Made' Rate

by Admin 12. September 2012 08:37
Is your dealership's 'contact made' rate for Internet leads in the 65-75% range? If not, here are three things to focus on that will help. Josh Vajda, Director of Inside Sales at AutoUSA Internet Sales Solutions, gives a tutorial on how to improve auto dealers' 'contact made' rates.

How Do You Measure Internet Lead ROI?

by Josh Vajda, Director of Inside Sales 23. August 2012 13:35

We recently conducted a survey in which we asked Internet department personnel to share some key metrics. In one question, we asked:

How much total gross does your Internet department generate for every $1,000 spent on Internet leads from all sources (SEM, independent and third-party leads, classified site subscriptions, etc.) ?

Of the 183 responses, the answers broke down:

3X or less: 33%

4X-6X: 18%

7X-10X or greater: 20%

Don’t Know: 29%

 

These answers reveal there is quite a large disparity between auto dealers’ return on investment (ROI) on Internet spending, as well as a surprisingly large percentage that don’t even know their ROI.  So I wanted to know: what should a dealership target for a reasonable Internet marketing ROI?

 One of the experts we consulted for measuring this metric was David Kain, President of Kain Automotive. He suggested that 5X ROI was the absolute minimum that a dealership should strive for, and ideally Internet departments should be seeing 7X ROI on their Internet spend.

But how do you calculate your ROI? Basically, ROI is what you get for what you spend. Here is a simple formula:

(Gross Profit – Marketing Investment) / Marketing Investment = ROI

 This formula represents three steps.

 1)   Marketing investment should be simple to figure out as it is the total cost of a campaign. For instance, if you spend $1,000 per month on a Pay-Per-Click campaign, $1,000 per month on independent leads and $1,000 per month on a subscription site, then your total marketing spend on Internet leads that month is $3,000. For the sake of simplicity, I’m going to suggest here that the cost of overhead, while included in some ROI measurements, should not be included when figuring out ROI for Internet leads, regardless of source. So in this formula, don’t worry about including labor costs (for staff), web site maintenance costs, etc.

 

2)   Gross profit is the next metric you’ll need to figure (my first GM used to say, “Volume is vanity. Gross is sanity.”). If you can pull the actual grosses on all Internet deals, that’s great. If not, take the number of sales and multiply it by your dealership’s average front and back combined gross profits. So if $3,000 in marketing spend delivers 10 sales at an average of $3000 combined gross, then your total Internet-related gross profit will be $30,000.

 

3)   Next, you need to subtract the initial marketing investment ($3,000) from your gross profit ($30,000) for a total of $27,000.

 

4)   Divide that number by your initial marketing investment ($27,000/$3,000) and in this scenario you end up with 9X ROI, an excellent result.

 

Why is it important to know your ROI? Any time you spend money on anything, whether on Internet leads or a marketing campaign, it is an investment. Like any investment, it should be measured, monitored and compared to other investments so you know where you should be spending your money.

 

Also, knowing the ROI for all your lead sources gives you leverage. How many Internet marketing budgets were slashed in 2009 and 2010? Perhaps some cuts were deserved, but do you know which ones? Cutting back on a lead source that returns a high ROI is only going to hurt the bottom line.

 

Of course, our question focused on the overall Internet marketing spend, not on the ROI of various lead sources. But applying this formula to your separate lead sources is highly recommended and gives a better measurement of success than just closing percentage or other metrics. After all, ROI is what goes to the bottom line.

 

I’d love to hear some feedback: how do you calculate your dealership’s ROI on your Internet leads spend? What do you consider a good ROI? In my next blog, I’m going to give some tips on how to drive your team to improve ROI.

 

Pre-Qualifying Customers: The Mixed Messages

by Josh Vajda, Director of Inside Sales 7. August 2012 11:20

I remember my first off-site used car super sale and the sales meeting that preceded it. “Guys, forget about the sales process. Don’t worry about demo drives. When customers walk in, sit them down, ask a few questions and qualify them for a payment.” Those weren’t the exact words, but I’m pretty sure I took away the right message. With 1500 cars to choose from and hundreds of customers pouring into the stadium every hour, expediting the process and making it as easy as possible just made sense.

I’m going out to go out on a limb and say that you’ve heard, taught, or currently teach your salespeople that it’s wrong to pre-qualify your customers. And I’m guessing you also know and stress the importance of landing the customer on the right vehicle. It’s difficult to do both things well; when you don’t have a conversation about affordability, you often end up on the wrong vehicle and either lose your customer or start the process all over again. I cannot tell you how many interactions at the desk I’ve heard where the Sales Manager is grinding on the salesperson for putting the customer into a vehicle he or she cannot afford. Well, didn’t you train the salesperson not to pre-qualify customers?

Yes, sometimes “love will find a way.” We all have stories of the customer who wanted to be at $300 a month who left at $550 per month. But we’re kidding ourselves if we think that’s the majority. Good dealerships close about 25% of their total opportunities.  There are plenty of stories we forget to tell about those customers who left without buying – or even sitting down to consider – a vehicle we desperately wanted them to love. And that’s not even considering the phone and Internet customers who never make it in the door.

When you shop for anything these days, you probably hop online, do some research, review pricing, determine how the purchase will fit in to your budget, and then identify where you’re buying. Your customers are no different. They want to know what fits into their budget, and since more than 90% will end up financing their vehicles, the payment is critical in their consideration process. So how do you bridge the gap, online and offline?

1.     Earn the right to have the conversation. Obviously, the greeting is not the time to say, “What payment are you looking for?” We still need to build rapport and make payment part of, not the focus of, the process.

2.     Make it the customer’s choice. Having a conversation about finances can be complicated. Make it easy, and let the customer choose whether to engage in it or not. Simple questions like, “Is there a payment range we should be considering when we’re looking for the right vehicle for you?” can help guide the selection process.

3.      Give the customers the information they need to select the right vehicle, online or in store. Do you put payments on the vehicles in your showroom or on the front line? How about online? Since most customers don’t equate $20,000 with $380/month, it helps “connect the dots” and lowers the surprise factor during the negotiation, which should reduce time and improve CSI.

 

Most dealers give customers a static payment calculator and an option to fill out a credit application on their website. Historically, these tools have very low engagement and offer limited information of real benefit. There is a tool available now, however, that changes that. AutoUSA’s Payment Pro puts real payments on new and used inventory on the dealer’s site and pre-qualifies customers for those payments without affecting their credit score. Powered by Drive It Now’s patent-pending technology, the customer gets the information they need to help them select the right car, and the dealer gets a lead that includes the customer’s credit eligibility, vehicle of interest, and all of the payments the customer qualified for and selected.

 

If you read my blogs, you know I don’t push our products. Well, this one’s too exciting to keep to myself. Finally, this gives the customer what they want and ask for, and it gives the dealer what we need to facilitate a sale with good gross, front and back. Check it out and let me know what you think! http://www.Paymentprodemo.com

Three Tips for Overcoming the Selection Objection

by Holly Forsberg 26. July 2012 11:25
What happens when your dealership gets an Internet lead for a vehicle you don't have in stock? Josh Vajda gives 3 tips for overcoming the selection objection.

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