Responsible for developing and executing an aggressive digital ROI focused business strategy for profitable growth and increase market share in the automotive dealer sector, whilst effectively integrating online with the core business
I had an old rule of thumb when I was a dealer: You could get a bead on new vehicle inventory imbalances by the number of full-page ads in the Chicago Tribune on Sundays..
If the paper’s automotive section was chock-full of full-pagers, you could reasonably bet that dealers were sitting on, and therefore more desperate to sell, more vehicles than the local market apparently wanted or needed.
The converse was also true: If the section was relatively light on full-page ads, you could reasonably believe that dealer inventories, and local market demand, seemed in balance.
I thought of this old rule after a colleague says he’s noticed the Tribune’s published larger automotive sections the past few weekends than he’s seen in a long time. He says the ads came mostly from General Motors and Chrysler Dodge Jeep dealers.
The advertising affirms what many of us know: Dealers have a lot of new cars on their hands. An Automotive News story last week notes that the currently nearly 4.2 million new vehicles in dealer inventories is the highest it’s been in 13 years, despite record-setting incentives. The article says dealers currently have a 74-day supply of new vehicles—a tally that might be even higher if not for the proliferation of factory-encouraged rental car programs.
None of this is news to many dealers, particularly those who are renting space to house the additional inventory or doubling-down on their full-page newspaper advertising.
But here’s what is new: The problem’s not universal. Some dealers are blessed to have OEM partners who do a better job of aligning supply and demand. Their inventories aren’t nearly as heavy as their less-efficient competitors. Meanwhile, there are sharp inventory size disparities among dealers who share less market-efficient factory partners—differences that indicate some dealers are doing a better job managing current inventory conditions.
These dealers tend to do the following things to minimize the profitability drag that results when you’re sitting on too many vehicles:
Perhaps the best news about the growth in new vehicle inventories is that it doesn’t have to continue unabated. The key question is whether factories will do the right thing and trim production, or carry on the current path and make an increasingly difficult situation for their dealers even worse.
dalepollak.com
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