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Archive for December, 2008

Save the Date

December 24, 2008 Leave a comment

So you set a date each month to have your previous month closed, your managers’ meeting, your advertising meeting, your district manager or zone rep in, you have a date to hit your fast start objective, your chamber meeting, the rotary club and usually allow a day or two for a game of golf. You set your entire life around a 30-day mentality but there is one thing that I promise nobody who is reading this blog saves a date for each month…

The date to have someone in your dealership, your automotive advertising agency or your local marketing partners scour the internet searching sites like You TubeMyspace,Facebook or other social networking forums looking for derogatory or inflammatory videos or comments about an experience or a person in your dealership. On a monthly basis,Strong employees pour through these pages and sites using keyword search terms and our dealers names and locations looking for erroneous content and using our knowledge of the web and power with the internet to remove these items. 

myspace, ning&facebook social networking logos

No will we catch every one? Probably not – but will we find all the ones in high traffic areas and notify the dealer or general manager and remove the content? We do it all the time. The goal of this blog is to inform you, so consider yourself informed… The days of people talking behind your back are over. The days of them talking about you ‘to any nut online’ are here and people listen; word will travel extremely fast. Your bad deeds and bad perception will travel 10 times faster and be more widespread than any good deed you can ever do.  

Make sure that someone is watching or checking the social network sites of the world for your dealership. One video can cost you thousands of potential buyers and millions of potential dollars. The saddest part is, you may never even know that it is happening.

Categories: JPS

Automotive Advertising

December 15, 2008 1 comment

In the current economic climate, Image is Nothing. Attitude is Everything. This is not only a blog about a relentless promoter, but probably the most successful “dealership fixer” that I have ever had the pleasure of working with.

Most Area Managers for a Top 10 Toyota store in the country aren’t at work at 8AM on a Saturday morning, but not only is Scott Rossi at work, he is wearing the custom made #1Suit, built to further embellish his advertising campaign centered around being #1 in his region.

Hudson Toyota Sales 2

What Scott knows that a lot of dealers and a lot of good managers forget is ATTITUDE:
If your people think you are going to succeed, then guess what – you probably will.
If your people think you are going to fail, then guess what – you probably will.

Members of Strong, LLC, and myself have blogged over the last few weeks about the bailout, what tactics are still creating traffic and how to capitalize on your traffic the most. The only purpose of this letter is to remind everyone that “Attitude is Everything”. Without a good attitude, you might as well quit and go home because you will not succeed. It was very cold, windy and uncomfortable for a December morning, but look in the eyes and look at the smiles on this sales force. Don’t you wish your Saturday Morning Meeting started out like this?

Hudson Toyota Sales 3

Take a lesson from Scott. The Speed of the Boss is the Speed of the Gang.


Categories: JPS

Recession Proof?

December 12, 2008 Leave a comment

eagle flagThe military markets are always the first that will come out of a recession or economic downturn the fastest, it is a fact. If you are a dealer or general manager and you operate in a market that has very high military and defense contract employment without a lot of troop deployment – do not let yourself get fooled into thinking that you are in the same boat with everyone else. Government workers do not fear for their jobs like the rest of the American public does today. From NBC News this morning, the unemployment rate in America is the highest it has been in 26 years – this will hurt an economy. But for military markets and for the dealers who sell and service these markets you need to put the pedal to the metal and be aggressive.
 
Government and Military personnel CAN AND WILL buy vehicles even in this tough economic time. Adjust your sites and your focus at this target audience and reward them for what they do for our country by making them the most compelling offer they have ever had to buy a vehicle.

Categories: JPS

Ford Benefits from CEO’s Turn to Road Less Traveled

December 12, 2008 Leave a comment

This article appears in today’s USA Today and if you are a Ford Dealer – you should be ashamed if you don’t have this posted in your showroom, service lounge and on your website. 

http://www.usatoday.com/money/autos/2008-12-10-ford-ceo-alan-mulally-interview_N.htm

USA Today logo

Ford benefits from CEO’s turn to road less traveled

By Sharon Silke Carty, USA TODAYAlan Mulally

DEARBORN, Michigan — On this rainy, cold, miserable Tuesday in December, Alan Mulally sits in his office at Ford Motor’s headquarters, beaming. 

With Ford’s (F) sales down 19.5% this year, the economy showing no sign of recovery, and Congress and the White House working on loans to help the domestic auto industry survive, you’d think Mulally would have very little to smile about.

But he’s perfectly chipper, showing off a 1903 Indian head penny sent to him by a Ford dealer’s son. For luck.

“Isn’t that great?” he says, peeling it out of its protective wrapper. “I’m going to keep that in my pocket.” 

Compared with the other two domestic automakers, Ford looks like it’s already been blessed. The automaker has $18.9 billion in cash and $10.7 billion in untapped credit, which Mulally says has his company positioned to survive the market falloff. 

That’s in stark contrast to General Motors and Chrysler, which say they need billions by this month to avoid filing for bankruptcy court protection. 

Not that Ford isn’t hurting: It lost $129 million in the third quarter and says it won’t be profitable again until 2010 — at the earliest. 

But its cash position puts it in the enviable position of saying it doesn’t plan to tap government loans that may be offered. That’s not unless things get markedly worse for the overall economy, or if one of its Detroit competitors goes under, disrupting the entire supply system. 

Is it luck or good planning that got Ford here?

Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, an associate dean at the Yale School of Management, says Mulally’s ability to move quickly and not let ego get in the way have helped the company achieve much more than many expected. 

“He has surprised an awful lot of people,” Sonnenfeld says. “He’s had the courage to say he’s largely accelerating a given plan, and he’s fortified the top lieutenants around him. He’s done a great job working with people who know what he doesn’t know about the industry.”

Mulally has said his strategy since he left running Boeing to take over Ford two years ago was to speed up the three-step line of attack the company had in place: cut production to match demand; make cars people want; and focus on core brands.

It’s not complicated, but it has meant breaking with old Detroit ways of doing things, selling brands people admired and laying off tens of thousands. 

Plus, he made one key decision three months into his tenure that set up Ford’s cash cushion today. In December 2006, Mulally decided to mortgage all of Ford’s assets — plants, buildings, real estate, patents and trademarks, including the Blue Oval — for $23.4 billion in cash. 

In a recent speech to the Rotary Club in Seattle, Mulally’s hometown, he had the audience laughing when he walked them through the steps of his deceptively simple strategy.

“I know,” he said, pausing for dramatic effect. “This is revolutionary.”

New way to do business 

Sarcasm aside, in some ways that thinking is a big departure from how the Detroit 3 have operated.

For decades, the U.S. carmakers dealt with their high fixed labor and production costs by pumping out more cars, regardless of market conditions. That spruced up their balance sheets, because carmakers book the profit on a car when it leaves the plant and is shipped to a dealer.

At that point, a complicated financing dance begins, with the automaker giving the dealers loans to pay for the cars until they’re sold. Then the automakers cough up thousands per car in rebates to persuade consumers to buy the car — ideally, coaxed by interest rate incentives with money borrowed from the automakers’ finance arms. 

Until recently, the Detroit automakers often made more money in a quarter from their banking operations than from making cars.

Under Ford’s plan, revenue won’t look as rosy as in the past because demand-driven production totals will be lower. But if that means cars can be sold without costly sales incentives, profits should improve.

“This is a completely new business plan, where we take the hurt,” Mulally says. “We are going to be the leader in sizing our operations to the real demand out there. And we’ll keep doing it. … No matter when (the market) comes back, no matter what the industry is, we’ve sized our operations to the real demand.”

That’s meant fewer jobs at all levels of the company. On Ford headquarters’ 12th floor, several offices sit dark and empty following a trimming of upper management. Ford has eliminated 14,000 jobs across all pay levels in the last three years and closed 17 plants, cutting $5 billion in costs. 

But being smaller is the only thing that makes sense in this environment, Mulally says, admitting he was a little surprised that industry leaders hadn’t approached business this way in the past. 

“It was the only thing I knew as a business person,” he says. “Clearly, this is a new plan for Ford, and it’s working. … We got on this journey, and for the first quarter, before the credit and financial meltdown hit, it was working.” 

What Mulally says was lacking before he came was “a point of view of the world.” The economy was slowing, he says, and had the potential to slow further, making a cash cushion critical. The company view now also includes the assumption that gas prices will rise over the long term and that while consumers still will want a whole range of vehicle sizes, they’ll demand category-leading fuel efficiency. 

“We developed a point of view about that, and it seems to be working,” he says. 

Compensation brings criticism

Mulally hasn’t been able to avoid public criticism. His starting salary — he earned $28 million in his first four months on the job — raised eyebrows in 2007 as Ford pushed to cut its workforce. And his personal use of company aircraft cost Ford $792,000 in 2007, as he earned $22 million in salary and bonuses. 

This year, he’ll make a base salary of $2 million, and bonuses have been suspended for all senior managers. Mulally has agreed to take just $1 in salary if Ford taps government credit. But he says he wants to avoid federal loans.

“It’s taxpayer money, and we take that very seriously,” he says.

Mulally says he went to Washington, D.C., to testify with GM CEO Rick Wagoner and Chrysler CEO Bob Nardelli to show his support and help convince politicians that the industry is important enough to help save. In the process, Ford got lumped in with GM’s and Chrysler’s woes, sitting through a verbal assault from politicians intent on making the automakers answer for past mistakes. 

Even Mulally’s mom could see Ford was taking a bruising. Mulally says she watched every minute of the hearings on C-Span, and called him afterward to ask why no one seemed to be listening. 

An image at issue

In the long run, the congressional hearings could hurt Ford’s image. 
Like GM and Chrysler, the automaker has been battling an image problem with consumers. While overall quality has gone up, bringing Ford’s quality in line with Toyota’s according to one recent study, and fuel efficiency is improving, there’s a gap between consumer perception and reality. 

“In the court of public opinion, they are all one in the same,” says Leslie Gaines-Ross, chief reputation strategist for public relations firm Weber Shandwick. “They’re all looking for help. If anything happens to any of those companies, it’s going to impact every situation. I think that’s how the average consumer looks at it. 

“There is so much distrust of companies today that it’s very hard to distinguish one company from another,” Gaines-Ross says. “But it’s certainly possible to change perceptions. … It’s just going to be crucial to get the message across.”

Jim Farley, group vice president of marketing and communications for Ford, says he’s been frustrated by some of the debate in the media about the bailout. “It’s one thing for the consumers, but for the mass media and our real thought leaders in the country to literally have a five- to 10-year-old image about where Ford Motor Co. is, it’s mind boggling.” 

Still, he’s never seen so much interest in the auto industry. And Farley says he thinks the conversation will change as soon as people delve more into the details about each company. 

“It’s raising the awareness to a level that we couldn’t do with all the marketing money in the world,” Farley says. “If GM, Chrysler and Ford joined up tomorrow, we could not get the American public to be as interested in the car companies’ health as it is right now.” 

Farley, who was lured to Ford from Toyota a year ago by Mulally, says he’s excited about the future of Ford: Working there is a lot like working at Toyota in the 1980s, when they were working to build their market and persuade people to buy their products. 

Farley says Mulally has had a laser focus on his plan, and managed to rally people around his vision. 

“He’s one heck of a salesman,” Farley says. “He has a laser focus that hasn’t changed one iota.”

Categories: Uncategorized

Corporate Survival vs. Consumer Confidence

December 12, 2008 Leave a comment

GM,Chrysler, Ford, Big 3 graphic

As I travel around the country the vote on the automotive bailout is a hot topic. My straw poll runs about 50-50 among dealers and associates; their reasons vary, but for the most part they are looking at it as small businessmen who have had to survive by their own means. An AOL on-line survey with nearly 37,000 responses [which is a huge sampling compared to Gallup, etc.] showed 55% opposed the automotive bailout. The second question asked if respondents owned a domestic vehicle, and the response was 69% drove domestics.

There is no question hundreds of thousands of jobs are at stake, as well as a network of businesses beyond the manufacturers who are watching intently. But the bottom line in the big picture to me is going to be consumer response in the marketplace. The most recent information we have indicated only 30% of Americans were even considering buying a vehicle new or used in 2009. Understanding full well that figures can lie and liars can figure, here is my take [which is business talk for best guess]:

“If the bailout moves another 10% of our market into the shopping cycle for the year, based on roughly 11,000,000 vehicles forecast for next year, that’s another 1.1 million sales. The bailout is good for the big boys, another million plus vehicles being sold is good for my boys! Here’s hoping the bailout starts the turnaround and the market responds beyond our expectations.”

Categories: JPS

Eyes Open, Heads Up!

December 12, 2008 Leave a comment

I get a daily e-newsletter about our industry, and today two articles reminded me of how important automotive intelligence always is. The comeback will happen, and when it does, the dealerships that stayed on top of their business during the lull will be first out of the gate.

In one article, DuPont delivered their annual Color Popularity Report. White and white pearl combined as the top color for the second year in a row; silver was second, with black and black effect next in line. It also mentioned consumers looking for differentiation with “tri-coat effects”. My thought – even when it’s tough to order more inventory at this time, make sure you order correctly for your market.DuPont Color Chart

BLACKBOOKThe other story was an overview of wholesale values with Ricky Beggs, Vice President and Managing Editor of Black Book. Two comments by Beggs stood out: He said, “It’s not a spring market yet,” but added, “a few vehicles are seeing raised value” [trucks, in particular and to a certain extend SUVs – he attributed low gas prices as spurring renewed interest]. And Beggs closed by commenting, “It is December, but that doesn’t mean the market is going to stop. We look forward to seeing what happens this week.”

With the impending bailout vote, I am anxious to see how the buying market reacts. Just remember when they do, there are preferences particular to your area, i.e. most popular colors! And watch your inventory mix on the used lot – if something gets hot make sure you have it and tell your buyers about it.

Everybody loves a winner, but the winner who makes the big comeback is the one most respected. Keep on playing with your eyes open and heads up!

NOTE:  You can read these articles in full at www.autoremarketing.com.


Categories: Uncategorized

The Vote Is In! Obama…And Used!

December 12, 2008 Leave a comment

54to46

The voters have spoken, and there is a clear-cut winner! Yes, we know President-elect Barack Obama took the top spot. But there is one other vote you need to pay attention to for your business…

A recent article featured a survey by a company named CarGurus, and in their survey of over 2500 on-line shoppers found consumers convincingly turning to used vehicles instead of new vehicles.

The survey says “54% of the respondents claimed they will purchase a used model for their next vehicle purchase, while 46% plan on buying a new unit.”

I believe these numbers are what the experts call a landslide! More specifically, 10% of consumers saying they would purchase used will buy a certified pre-owned model, while 44%would by conventional used vehicles.

With the credit crunch and tighter budgets, this used trend is a sign of the times. Attention needs to be given in your marketing plan to let them know you have what 54% are looking for right now.

We have had success running used events during the second week of the month when there is less competition on the airwaves or in the paper. If the second payday of the month (the 15th) hits early in any given week, that is also a prime time for pre-owned success.

Categories: JPS

Marketing Management

December 12, 2008 Leave a comment

It was more by chance that when meeting with a Toyota dealer in the southeastern United States about 60 days ago, we decided collectively to take a dilapidated radio sports package for a College Football Teams coaches show and use the radio spots that aired twice a week and focus on Parts and Service advertising.

Yes it is true, there are co-op advertising dollars available for running an approved parts and service ad but we really decided this because 2 radio spots per week on a sports talk show is hardly going to drive enough showroom traffic to be measurable.  We were locked into a pre-existing contract and did our best to turn a lemon into lemonade.

So we created a :30 radio ad with the best service offer we could find… A $9.95 Oil Change in 30 minutes or less. The idea is to step sell from the service lane so the service department does not eat all the cost (this usually works in theory but is sometimes hard in application) and create traffic using media dollars we felt would not be effective on their own for sales.

The result? How about over 202 $9.95 Oil Changes in 30 days… Ok, so you lost money on the $9.95 Oil Change, but you increased your ROI count during a time when the industry is down both in sales and service.

If your service lane will step sell off of this – then you could turn a large profit in conjunction with your increased ROI count.

In the market we are currently in, not only do you have to be creative but you also have to make sure that the dollars you spend create the most effective return on investment. In 2005, we would not have thought twice about running a sales event ad or a new car message on this radio schedule, but in 2008 times are different. You can either manage your marketing or it can manage you… Usually when it manages you it is managing your financial statement and the outcome is not good.

Utilize all ways, especially service advertising, right now to drive more traffic. With vehicle sales barely tipping 11 million for the year, people are keeping their vehicles longer and this requires more service to keep the cars rolling.

Categories: JPS

What Does Automotive Intelligence Mean?

December 12, 2008 Leave a comment

In this day and age when everyone is looking for answers, who has them? Being versatile in this automotive climate is the “Silver Bullet” in what is commonly referred to asAutomotive Advertising. An owner of a dealership decides for business reasons to reduce the ad budget by 50% for the final month of the year. WHAT DO YOU DO? Strong, LLC has learned the ability through direct mail, email contact, press releases, buying media on a 1 to 1, spot for spot basis with local stations to maximize a dealers budget beyond what they image it can do.

If the general public quits shopping, target small business owners with a message like the Federal Tax Law Section 179. When the new car business suffers based on brand penetration and market share, target pre-owned vehicles and dedicate 100% of an ad budget to this cause with something as effective as “Greenlight Used Cars.” If the dollars do not allow for an electronic media presence – resort to owner body mail. Do not listen to what some fly-by-night direct mail companies tell you, you can and should mail your customers every 30 or 60 days.

Strong, LLC does not try to sell any product, CRM tool, website company, direct mail company or other means of production. What Strong, LLC does is effectively manage your marketing plan and take your dollars to the furthest of their ability with the tools you have in place. Some of the best Internet Managers we have ever worked with prefer nothing more than a Reynolds and Reynolds website and Reynolds Web Solutions as the CRM tool. While some people may disagree, that is their open right and it is Strong, LLC’s ability to plan and adapt to the tools that dealer may decide to use.

Categories: JPS

Grassroots Advertising to the Foundation of Your Market

December 8, 2008 Leave a comment

Guest Blog by Dennis Johnson

How do you bring nearly 1000 people into your dealership on a cold November weekend? Bill Penney Toyota in Huntsville, AL, did it the weekend of November 21-22, 2008.

When General Manager, Zack Penney, decided to donate free turkeys to area military families, he knew it was the right move. Every salesperson on his team has several customers from Huntsville-based NASA operations and the Redstone Arsenal.

Promoting the campaign via radio and email blast, word got around in a big way. Over 50 guests were in line an hour 
before the giveaway began. Each was offered the choice of a turkey voucher, an oil change coupon, or the opportunity 
to have a donation made in their name to the Downtown downtown rescue mission logo
Rescue Mission. Bottom line – over 570 families received 
turkeys, over $1000 was donated to the Mission, and 
dozens of coupons handed out.

The investment was significant, but as the Bill Penney sales team worked the line handing out cards and talking about Toyotas, as Zack’s mother and wife, along with office staff, worked at the registration desk, it was obvious the goodwill achieved was priceless. 

Poignant moment! An elderly man using a cane and assisted by his wife arrived. Zack met them and offered to take them to the front of a lengthy line. As they walked to the front, Zack asked the crowd, “Do you mind if I escort this World War II POW to the front?” To a person, they broke into a round of applause, and the gentleman returned their courtesy with a salute.

 

World War II Veterans Memorial

Now do the math! Over 1000 visitors, and if only a small percentage of the many who said they would be back returned and purchased a vehicle, this grassroots effort would provide a profitable harvest. It certainly made for a Happy Thanksgiving!
 

Dennis Johnson is the Creative Director at Strong, LLC 
and has over 30 years experience in Retail Automotive Advertising.

Categories: Strong
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