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Strategies & Market Trends : Angels of Alchemy

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To: TsioKawe who wrote (9830)8/24/2000 8:33:27 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (3) of 24256
 
Good news for companies like CBLT.......
E-Commerce Paying Off for Car Dealers
By Lori Enos
E-Commerce Times
August 25, 2000

A survey released Thursday by the National
Automobile Dealers Association (NADA)
indicates that e-commerce is paying off
handsomely for car dealers that have a
well-established Internet presence.

According to NADA, dealerships that have been operating Web
sites since 1995 sell some 13 new vehicles per month,
compared to just five new vehicle sales for those that
launched sites in 1999 or 2000.

"The more they work at it, the better they get at it," said
NADA chief economist Paul Taylor. "There's a learning curve."

More Dealers Embracing the Web

The survey found that the share of dealerships with Web sites
jumped nine percentage points in the past year, from 74.1
percent in 1999 to 83 percent this year. That figure has been
increasing steadily since 1997, the first year NADA surveyed
dealers about their Internet usage, when 47.1 percent of
dealerships were online.

Notably, 62.1 percent of dealerships with Web sites have
consummated sales online.

Sites are also getting more traffic than ever before. In 1997,
only 8.2 percent of dealer Web sites reported more than 500
visitors per month. That number jumped to 21.2 percent this
year.

Sites Becoming More Sophisticated

Not only are more dealerships establishing a Web presence, 98
percent have established interactive Web sites that allow
customers to send e-mail, order online or obtain financing
online.

"A few years ago, dealerships were content to just have their
name on the Web," NADA economist Jason Altman told the
E-Commerce Times.

That dynamic is changing, according to Altman, because a
growing number of dealerships are learning to harness the
power of the Web and are becoming more adept at using it as
a sales tool.

Altman pointed out that some car buyers will choose to visit a
particular dealership simply because the dealer took the time
to answer an e-mail query sent via the Web site.

More Than Sales

Dealerships are using their sites for more than sales, as some
52 percent allow visitors to schedule service appointments
online, and 82.9 percent allow visitors to obtain stock quotes
for auto manufacturers.

Other studies have highlighted the increasing appetite of car
shoppers for the Web. A recent survey by research firm
Gartner Group showed that from September 1999 to March
2000, 45 percent of the 40,000 households surveyed used the
Internet at some point in the car buying process. Three
percent bought their cars online.

Only two years ago, the percentage of online shoppers that
used the Internet for any part of the car buying process was
less than 25 percent.

The Washington D.C.-based NADA represents 19,300
franchised new car and truck dealers.
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