digital marketing

Women Dominate Auto Decision Making and Purchasing Arena

An article on the decision makers & how they make their decisions (hint: it isn’t a commercial involving a rock song)

Women are the primary decision makers for over 80 percent of any major and minor household purchases, including cars where 60 percent of new car buyers are women, says Marti Barletta of Brandweek. Although, most car ads target men, women will actually make a purchase.

More than two-thirds of new-car buyers use the Internet during the shopping process, according to a 2006 study by J.D. Power and Associates. Knowledge is power and surfing the Web allows car shoppers to learn every detail about a car, including how much the dealer paid for it. Several third-party Web sites, not affiliated with the manufacturers or dealers, provide shoppers with the dealer invoice or the wholesale price on each car giving buyers a competitive edge in negotiating the price. Edmunds.com, for instance, provides what it calls “true market value”, an estimate of what buyers are paying for a particular car in a particular market.

While many women plan to take advantage of this information by conducting online research, in the end, they will request the attendance of a male counterpart. In accordance with a Capital One survey, 77 percent of women said they would bring a man to the dealership with them to make sure they get a good deal.

Over half of U.S. female Internet users, ages 25 and older, say the Internet is their main source for checking out potential product purchases, in accordance with “Online Insight” report published by Burst Media in June 2007. Online shopping increased with household income where half of the respondents with annual incomes of less than $35,000 bought something online in the past six months, while 68 percent of households with annual incomes of $100,000 or more had done so.

Conducting research via the Internet was the method of choice showing 10 percent or fewer of respondents stating they received their information from asking family and friends, reading newspapers and magazines, viewing television or referencing other sources.

However, as women consider the Internet a key source for product information, they refer to fewer Web sites on average in their research than men, states “Understanding Online Shopping Behavior Topline Summary” published by Frank About Women in March 2006. Adult female Internet users typically visited four or more Web sites during their research, while men visited an average of nearly five.

Barletta highlights some steps for marketers to consider while developing car ads for women:
Women don’t care about how many seconds it takes to reach 60 mph.

Women tend to be more interested in a car’s interior.

Women care about vehicle safety. Specifically, what happens when her car is hit, not if she can avoid it.

Women do consider the environment such as pollution.

From Digital Dealer
Thursday, July 12, 2007
Issue 28
VOLUME 2 ISSUE 28

http://www.imakenews.com/digital1/e_article000858239.cfm?x=b9ScsHT,b4TSprpk

Win the E-mail Budget Battle

Good article that supports e-mail marketing, find out how to make it work:

Email generates the best ROI of all marketing channels. Find out how to get a piece of the pie and turn the cold, hard numbers into a success story.

Email marketing works. Studies from numerous sources support this. The Direct Marketing Association, for example, reports that email delivers an eye-popping ROI when compared to other media: $57.25 for every dollar spent on it in 2005, compared to $7.08 for every dollar spent on print catalogs, and $22.52 for every dollar spent on non-email internet marketing.

Done right, it does even better. Jupiter Research has found that engaging audiences in more relevant communications increases net profits by an average of 18 times more than broadcast mailing. And marketers back up the claims.

According to Internet Retailer, 50.6 percent of internet retailers report that 6 percent or more of their sales come from email marketing, while another 25 percent say the proportion is over 11 percent.

In addition, 45 percent of chief marketing officers say their best performing online advertising tactic is emailing an in-house list, according to the CMO Council in 2006.
Despite these statistics and success stories, email programs remain under-funded compared to other marketing tactics. The latest IAB/PWC report on digital marketing spending in 2006 put email at only 2 percent of overall budgets.

“Companies are reticent to spend the dollars in the email marketing areas for a few reasons,” says Mark Politi, VP, marketing and media relations for Planetwide Media. Those reasons include:

-Lack of knowledge of how to send out large email blasts legally and not be considered a spammer.
-Lack of an internal email database list to work with.
-Lack of an email rental source to target the correct demographic.
-Proper measurable metrics to prove ROI for the campaign. Unique custom landing pages that can measure visits, downloads, sign-ups and purchases.
-Work involved compared to other online advertising programs make an email campaign low on the totem pole.

But to generate the type of ROI mentioned above, it takes investments in back-end technology for such tasks as targeting, email experts to ensure compliance with legislation and ISP guidelines, and creative specialists to write stellar copy.
So if you can get more, you can make more. Here’s how to do it.

Know the facts

Armed with information, an email marketer can convince the budget keeper his channel is worthy of more dollars.

Of greatest significance, Forrester reports that email has reached almost universal penetration, with 97 percent of consumers using the channel. That’s 147 million people in the United States using email almost every day, eMarketer calculates.

And that usage includes interaction with marketers.

According to JupiterResearch, 90 percent of users will use email to engage in and determine the value of a relationship with a company. And Quris reports that 40 percent of email subscribers will go “out of their way” to patronize a company whose email programs they like.

Not only do consumers use email to make specific purchases (50 percent of shoppers, according to Return Path), 50 percent of them who open and read email marketing messages are likely to also purchase other items on impulse and to spend 138 percent more than those who don’t buy through email (Forrester).

Do your math

Citing general statistics will provide the framework, but it’s the calculations on your own projects that will complete the picture for your CMO.

Simms Jenkins, founder and principal, BrightWave Marketing and EmailStatCenter.com, provides the following guideline:

Establish upfront what your goals from an email marketing effort are, including revenue, page view, in-store traffic, conversions, retention, subscribers, et cetera.

Then, create a monthly scorecard. What good are your email metrics if they live alone on a spreadsheet? A monthly scorecard provides an opportunity for the email/interactive team to monitor the key email performance indicators in the context of company goals (email specific and non-email specific) and industry benchmarks. Since email campaigns are so fluid, these goals in your scorecard are best evaluated and revised as an ongoing exercise. If anything, it prevents surprises and ensures the email team knows the score at all times.

Make sure to benchmark against the industry. Benchmarking internal stats against comparable industry metrics can be both valuable and an exercise in futility. The key is context. You want to make sure you are in the same ballpark as your industry on specific metrics like deliverability and open rates, but you should not make drastic changes to campaigns based on one research report that touted Tuesday as the best day to send emails.

Finally, focus/budget/judge on end-game/ROI. Go beyond CT/Open. Too often email marketers obsess over open and clickthrough rates. However, who cares if your open rate was high but no sales were generated? Your email program’s ultimate goal is what matters. Many email teams can’t even define that. If you fall into that camp, do yourself a favor and call a meeting and set your big picture goals. Worth considering are revenue, page views, sales leads, conversions, in-store sales, email subscribes, PR, cross promotion; the list can go on. Make sure your list is concise and clear.

With this information, make sure you see open and clicks as a means to an end, the end being your overall campaign goals. Otherwise, you may be flying blind.
Note: Company Current/Desired States are purely examples.

Share the successes

The final step in the process is to turn the cold, hard numbers into a success story.
Here’s an example. Furniture retailer Chiasso relies on email to drive customers to its website and Chicago store. Facing issues with deliverability and problems with its email lists, Chiasso spent much-needed cash on Bronto Software. The investment paid off. Chiasso embarked on two email campaigns that increased its online sales to 55 percent of total company sales, up from 32 percent the year prior.

Bronto helped VP of eCommerce and Systems Jerry Bergquist segment his contacts according to location, so he could send a store-opening announcement to his “Chicago” contacts. However, he wisely chose to not exclude his “Not Chicago” segment from the store-opening festivities. Besides keeping non-Chicago contacts aware of the company’s growth, the message also included $10 off coupons for online purchases.

The discount offer to the “Not Chicago” segment generated impressive results: 32 percent open rates and 10 percent clickthrough rates. Not to be outdone, the “Chicago” segment received a 49 percent open rate and a clickthrough rate of nearly 22 percent, with the vast majority of clicks linking to a landing page that included directions to and information about the new retail store.
Metrics for opens and clickthroughs provided Bergquist with important measurements for campaign evaluation, and conversion tracking provided him with sound insight into success. Conversion tracking let Bergquist follow the dollars-and-cents results of his messages. Some Chiasso campaigns, such as its “Good Buy” [note the clever pun] Winter Clearance Sale or its Art Décor Sale grossed more than $13,000 and $14,000, respectively, in sales.

“At Chiasso, we’ve seen such impressive ROI from email marketing that we are always open to increasing our budget,” says Bergquist. “Email marketing software has proven to be a cost-effective method for growing our business.”

Published: July 03, 2007
By: Dawn Anfuso senior editor, iMedia Connection.

http://www.imediaconnection.com/content/15448.asp

Do You Use Videos?

If not, maybe you should. See below article:

Poll results: video as a marketing tool
Digital Dealer recently conducted a poll asking dealership Internet sales managers, e-Commerce Directors, BDC managers, CRM managers, dealers and department managers who are most interested in sales-related technology solutions and applications if they use online video ads as part of their marketing initiatives. Our research revealed that 50 percent of managing personnel found success in utilizing online video ads in all marketing categories including: Web site, e-newsletters and e-mail campaigns.Top-Line Results:

69 percent included online video ads as part of their marketing program
31 percent didn’t include online video ads as part of their marketing program

Out of the 69 percent who utilized online video ads successfully as part of their marketing program:

41 percent used online video ads on their Web site
6 percent used online video ads in e-newsletters
3 percent used online video ads in e-mail campaigns

Conclusion: online video ads are generating sales.

In support, the Online Publishers Association (OPA) working in partnership with OTX published a report: Frames of Reference: Online Video Advertising, Content and Consumer Behavior in June 2007 citing, “Eighty percent of viewers who had watched an online video ad, just over half had taken some sort of action. Nearly a third had checked out a Web site, while 22% had searched for more information, 15% had gone into a store and 12% had actually made a purchase.”

Reaction and behaviors of US online video viewers who have seen an online video advertisement in April – May 2007 (% of respondents)

– 45% elicited a response
– 31% check out company Web site
– 28% looked for more information
– 22% searched for more information about the product
– 19% clicked on banner ad that accompanied video
– 16% bought something
– 16% talked to friends/family about the product
– 15% gone to store to check out product
– 13% requested information about the product
– 13% made a purchase
– 9% forwarded video ad to friends/family
– 9% signed up for product/service trial
– 5% called toll free number to find out more
– 4% ordered subscription

From Digital DealerThursday, June 21, 2007
Issue 25
VOLUME 2 ISSUE 25
http://www.imakenews.com/digital1/e_article000840660.cfm?x=b9LHBL9,b4TSprpk

Email, Making a Comeback

It wasn’t long ago that email was predicted to be the destroyer of direct mail. Then the public’s confidence in direct mail went the way of the dodo thanks to the piles and piles of virtual junk that was heaped upon us by spammers.

— “You too can make $10,000 a week working from home!” —

But recent advances in spam filtering, as well as special legislation, have brought email marketing back to the forefront of the marketing discussion. Consumers are starting to trust their email again… especially from businesses they know and trust.

So, if you are one of those dealerships that gave up on email marketing in the early part of the decade, it’s time to give it another try. You won’t be sorry.

D. Jones
Marketing Strategist/Creative Consultant
Smack Dabble LLC

Internet To Become Top Channel For Used Car Marketers

Here’s another good one:

The Center for Media Research says that according to a new report from Borrell Associates, automotive ad spending will reach $31 billion this year, but total ad dollars will grow only 1.7 percent during the next five years, compared with an annual growth rate of 3.7 percent in the last five years.

Online spending for the industry will hit $2.8 billion in 2007 and represent 7.6 percent of all automotive advertising, an annual growth of 13 percent. Moreover, the Internet will become the top marketing channel for used-car marketers this year at the local ad level, surpassing newspapers for the first time. Used-car dealers are allocating 20 percent of their spending to the online channel, compared with 7.6 percent of the industry’s total online ad budget.

Online car marketing will hit $4 billion by 2010, says the report, and become the second most-used medium for automotive advertisers, surpassing newspapers, cable, radio and direct mail and trailing only broadcast TV.

Budgets for offline auto ads in newspapers, direct mail and directories will decline by 20 percent each during the same period, the report indicates.

The report says that local car dealers will spend 29 percent of their online ad budget on online video and paid search this year, but will increase that proportion to 76 percent of online marketing by 2012. E-mail will also gain as a lead-generation tool, while display ads such as banners will decline.

Many shoppers are going directly to manufacturers’ Web sites rather than to third parties, doing their early research online. The Internet is not yet effective at reaching car buyers still in the “dreaming” stage, the report says, adding that manufacturers will use TV spots to sell their brands and then drive prospects to a Web location.

From Dealer Pre-owned
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Issue 43
VOLUME 1 ISSUE 43

http://www.imakenews.com/dealerdpo/e_article000822987.cfm?x=b9CjsB9,b5wVQglb

“Ultimate Tipping Point For Dealers”

by Cheril Hendry

I came across this article and thought it would be of interest to our readers.

Even the best online efforts of national and regional automotive marketers fall victim to the retail dealer’s ability to destroy them. But times are going to change.

Today’s auto dealer has the opportunity to benefit from the cheapest form of advertising his business has ever known. Yet his ability to give customers what they want in online shopping at the retail level continues to blinded by his past marketing tactics. He does what he’s always done when making marketing decisions. He relies on the influence of his equally blinded constituents in the retail automotive world, other dealers, and ignores any opportunity to understand and respond to the consumer better than ever before.

The result? Online versions of tacky dealer marketing that resemble past initiatives historic to print and broadcast: Lack of differentiation. Commodity advertising that ignores any kind of retail brand effort, and internal systems that give customers the same poor service they’ve received for decades. Now it’s just happening online instead of in person.

One obvious case in point is the average dealer’s Web site, most often built by a third party provider who knows the one thing a dealer wants from online marketing is leads. Leads that will bring live bodies into showrooms within hours. Leads that, he fears, may not come in unless they are coerced and teased and manipulated through online tactics. Every click, every link, every effort the consumer makes to get relevant information from a dealer’s site is responded to with a form to fill out. My personal favorite is the common “Get an Instant Quote Now” link. Once clicked on, you get a 15-line form to complete with the promise that someone will get back to you quickly with a price. Consumers are leaving virtual skid marks on links like this.

When a dealer is presented this information logically through Web site back-end statistics and industry behavioral tracking, he agrees this is not what most shoppers want to go through online. Yet when given the opportunity to change his website and provide customers with information they really want, he defers to his main competitor’s site that just happens to have the same form submission. Since this competitor is outselling him by 30 or so vehicles a month, the dealer assumes this particular form submission process must be a part of their success. So he sticks to what he’s been doing, and the consumer sticks to his opinion of dealer advertising. Bad.

But things are changing.

Contrary to retail automotive dealers’ past ability to deliver poor quality marketing messages and still be successful, today’s incomparably tough industry conditions require survival of the fittest. And guess who gets to be the judge? Refer to Time Magazine’s Person of the Year (You). Or Ad Age’s Agency of the Year (The Consumer). Consumers are in control and over the next few years if they don’t get what they want from a dealer’s online communication methods, they’ll have the ability to “virtually” kill the dealer. And “virtually” killing him by lack of attention online will equate to killing him via minimal showroom traffic, trickling service R.O.’s and non-existent repeat and referral business.

There are some smart dealer principals already aware of this. They understand a trip to their physical showroom is contingent upon a customer’s interest in their virtual showroom. These are certainly tomorrow’s industry leaders who will be chuckling all the way to the bank. Meanwhile, the factory’s job of filtering out the weaker franchisees may become a little easier with the help of these new consumers.

What will be left is what I personally hope for. The best of the best. Smart dealers taking good care of customers while they make more money due higher grosses and lower advertising costs. They will deliver what the customer wants. And it will center much more around a dealer’s brand than a dealer’s price. Just like Best Buy. And Starbucks. And Nordstrom. And all the other retailers who take advantage of the knowledge their customers offer them and do something with it.

Cheril Hendry is CEO of HLF Brandtailers in Irvine California, an agency exclusive to automotive marketing and advertising. www.hlfbrandtailers.com.

Published by Dealer Communications Copyright © 2007 Dealer Communications Inc.. All rights reserved.Information in this newsletter is provided by both proprietary and public sources. Dealer Communicaitons makes no claims as to the accuracy of information provided by third party providers.

http://www.imakenews.com/digital1/e_article000838289.cfm?x=b9K2SNg,b4TSprpk

GO DIGITAL

Welcome to GO DIGITAL, a blog dedicated to the digital marketing side of the automotive retail business. Every year, more and more cars are being sold online. And the tools and technologies employed by dealerships to sell those cars is becoming more and more sophisticated. That’s the business we’re in here at Dealer Impact and we figured it was high time we started a blog.
Why? Well because we have more thoughts, ideas and opinions about the digital automotive marketing business than our monthly newsletter (link to newsletter sign up page at left) can hold. What can you expect from GO DIGITAL? Well we’ll be posting exclusive strategies, tips and insights from our staff of marketing and technology professionals as well as aggregating third-party content we feel would be valuable to you, our clients and readers.
So, bookmark us and check back often for the latest and greatest.
Happy reading.