This is officially the beginning of the end for many. December 27, 2011. There will be a moment over the next couple to handful of years in which you'll reflect back to this post (or others like it) and say "oh crap". Or it may be the longer rendition which usually sounds something like "Why did I allow me to get in my way over and over again? Why did I shut down and refuse to change, giving garbage excuses?"
As time went on from December 27, 2011 Acute Death by Delusional Digital Defiance, we'll call it ADDDD for short, you invested more and more in the comfort zone, allowing vendors to do with you money and brand what they wanted and would essentially squandering opportunities while you were convinced you were actually doing something. Your business was actually disappearing at the same time everything looked the same from your vantage point behind the desk or golf cart steering wheel.
And who could blame you? You read the ads in the trades and took advice from your 20 Group and absorbed the Powerpoint presentations. You wrote the checks. You took the training, however often that someone actually showed up and you attended the conferences. It never dawned on you that everything you relied so heavily on was the white elephant in the room. You took the easy way out instead of asking the tough questions and not believing the hype. Simply put you allowed yourself to fail.
Why did this happen? You didn't take the road less traveled when the paths diverged in the woods. As far as you knew, you believed it wasn't supposed to be about "hard work" anymore: you're senior management or, better yet, a business owner. Add to that the whole "Internet thing" was just too difficult to understand and should be handled by young kids and "people who text a lot and surf the web".
So wind it down now so you don't experience the slow, deliberate march of self-induced death. Ignore the articles from Joe Webb prodding the salespeople that you mistreat (http://bit.ly/rVN66B) and from HubSpot on Harvard Business Review about Google changes (http://bit.ly/ub6iOH) that your website company will not talk about, or some trends to capitalize on (http://bit.ly/rU9VAt) and what's going on with mobile (http://bit.ly/smRSOt) from Search Engine Watch. You've been reading all of these...right?
Nope..."too busy running a business". More like "too ignorant to run a business"
So while you idly wait for the inevitable why don't you ask:
Your website company why:
- your pages have the same names and metadata
- you don't have model and trim level landing pages
- you don't have separate tracking numbers
- you don't have original content on your pages (heard of Google Panda?)
- you don't have a truly optimized mobile presence
- you can't track conversions on Google Analytics or your PPC/SEM
- they don't truly offer eCommerce
- their proouction team doesn't talk with their marketing team (ie SEO to SEM)
- they lack in customer support
- they're not up to date on what's happening with Google and social
Your CRM company why:
- you can't track email opens, bounces, links, shares, etc.
- you can't change headers and footers dynamically
- they don't append and integrate for text/mobile delivery
- you are still on servers and not on the cloud
- they don't offer true mobility
- they can't make lead duplication management much easier
- data "siloing" still existst (lead based: service/sales/finance)
- they're not up to date on what's happening with Google and social
Your social media company why:
- they don't actually write content
- what they do publish is redundant and automated (ie "Caption this photo" of dogs or cats)
- they don't create engagement
- they sold you on 20+ "social media sites/platforms" when traffic comes from 4-8 of them
- they pitch and don't produce (and not actually active on the networks at all themselves)
- they are disconnected from the store
- they're not up to date on what's happening with Google and social
Waiting? You've been told your entire life that good things come to those that wait. Well, we're here to set the record straight. Only the leaders thrive. You can wing it today, sure. There will be "those" that still make it with no true effort. However, it is a false existence and leads to ADDDD.
The grim reaper is coming and his sickle has your business' name on it. Are you waiting? Still? Well.....Goodbye!
Thanks to @HarryHaber and @BryanCarGuy for a little insight on the list of dealer pain points... you're great friends and car guys!
Best Practices: Professional Insight, Powerful Results


NADA Time: Start Operating Your Business As Yours Or Someone Else Will
More often than not, businesses are left to turning part (or all) of their operation over to vendors and partners with the reasoning that they're not able to "do everything". In automotive retail the de facto excuse you hear usually has something to do with how selling cars is what gets done and nothing else matters. Well, it's 2012 and everything has to do with selling cars.
News flash: It always has been so.
More likely than not, as we're upon the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) season, hundreds if not thousands of dealers will leave with contracts signed, or nearly signed, convinced that simply punting their responsibilities over the wall is the best way to get 'er done. Fact is nothing is further from the truth.
Dealers must grasp a much more realistic perspective of controlling their business through action, education and accountability or they will absolutely have it taken over. And nobody is saying that's a bad thing, in the event that a business has no desire to be "in" business. While a $6M dealership may not scale, invest, market or operate like a Fortune 100 business, but there is not a single reason why it can't approach and plan business in the same way or using the similar methodology.
A few things to keep in mind as we go into the NADA conference this coming weekend.
While the above steps are no guarantee against "being had", it should at least put some steps between a mediocre quick decision and a thought out beneficial one.
Areas that seem to be gaining traction and popularity that don't make sense include:
There will be a lot of fanfare, parties, speakers pitching and snow jobs at booths. However, it's in everyone's best interest to see through the smoke and put the rose-colored glasses down. Our entire world is digital, mobile and fast. It's time for 17,000+ franchises (and who knows how many independents) to get so as well. Leave the hook, line and sinker at home, ignore the playmates for as long as you can and get real with your business.
There is a boatload of opportunity for those that want it in 2012 and NADA happens to be a great place to kick it all off or continue down the progressive road if you've already started. It's also where tons of dealers get sucked in by nothing more than marketing and get nothing for their hard-earned cash except for an open liability door.
So go with purpose to NADA. Come back and operate your business properly. Or someone else will take it from you. All of it.
Best practices: Professional Insight, Powerful Results
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