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GM's employee-discount offer on new autos pays off

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by tigermission1, Jun 30, 2005.

  1. tigermission1

    tigermission1 Member

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    Well, looks like buyers just don't like the haggle of car buying, so they prefer more of a set price that they can go in expecting to get.

    I guess the whole thing is going pretty well for GM, and now the copycats are going to follow (namely Ford and Chrysler)

    BTW, a good friend of mine got a pretty good deal on the LaCrosse.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/20050630/bs_usatoday/gmsemployeediscountofferonnewautospaysoff

    GM's employee-discount offer on new autos pays off

    General Motors (GM) has hit upon a possible escape from the big sales incentives that have ruined its bottom line without boosting its market share.

    The strategy is akin to one-price selling, minimizing distasteful negotiation. GM doesn't call it one-price, but that is at the core of GM's current promotion - selling anybody a vehicle for the price an employee would pay. (Related: Chrysler may match GM deals)

    Preliminary June data from analysts show that the program, which grew out of employee suggestions, is wildly successful. It appears to have boosted GM sales 20% to 30% compared with recent months and pushed June market share to 30%, from 25.4% the first five months. And it isn't costing GM much more than its previously ineffective rebates.

    "Our share the first five months has been abysmal. June, it'll be good," says Mark LaNeve, GM vice president of sales and marketing. He did not give numbers. Automakers report sales Friday.

    "The No. 1 reason this promotion is succeeding is not that people are getting great deals, but that they don't have to negotiate. They know they paid the same price their neighbor did," says Jesse Toprak, analyst at Edmunds.com, an online car-shopping service. "People tell us they'd rather have root-canal work than negotiate for a car."

    "The price is the price, and our customers seem to like that," says Jim Brasher, a Chevrolet dealer in Weimar, Texas.

    Paul Ballew, GM's head of market and industry analysis, says the promotion is part of GM's move toward "simple pricing and incentives" to stand out in "a very difficult, and at times muddled, environment for consumers."

    GM's employee price is what a dealer actually pays for a vehicle, about 4% less than the dealer's invoice price. The invoice includes a profit, called holdback.

    To compensate dealers for selling vehicles at no profit, GM gives them 5% of the window-sticker price, an average of about $1,500 a vehicle.

    Dealers can use the 5% to give additional discounts. And some models have rebates that push prices even lower than employee discounts.

    GM is paying for that 5% dealer compensation by cutting incentives. Toprak says GM's average per-vehicle June incentive cost is $3,714, slightly less than May's $3,729.

    "Alert visitors to GM showrooms are discovering that prices in June are actually little different from prices in May," says David Healy, Burnham Securities analyst, in a note to investors.

    Though not "the deal of a lifetime," the appeal is strong, he says.

    True one-price selling involves cutting dealer profit margins slim enough that they have to sell at or near window-sticker price. GM won't discuss whether it intends to do that.

    Chrysler is considering a similar promotion if GM extends its program past the Tuesday deadline.
     
  2. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Member

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    The public really hates rebates. Companies love using them, and customers loathe using time to send it.

    If prices aren't that much lower, then hats off to GM for realizing that the illusion of convenience and lower stress (persistent customers can haggle for that extra 5%) can make them money without sacrificing anything substantial.
     
  3. Stack24

    Stack24 Member

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    Hey that's how Carmax got so big and keeps making money. They have a set price so the customer knows what they are getting and how much it's gonna cost simple as that. That's the one thing people hate when buying a car so if you can eliminate it then your one step ahead of the game.

    Wonder why it took them this long to start implementing it and using a nice marketing ploy like the employee price to push it even harder in the market.
     

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