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Car Sales Start With Clicks

APRIL 10, 2007

Car shoppers love digital shortcuts.

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More auto shoppers are going to branded carmaker Websites than ever, but they are going to fewer sites in total, according to Capgemini.

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Manufacturer sites topped the list of sources consumers planned to use during their auto shopping process: 49% of respondents planned to use them in 2006, compared with only 31% in 2005.

Select Information Sources that Consumers Worldwide Use When Researching a Vehicle Purchase, 2005 & 2006 (% of respondents)

In fact, online sources took four of the top five spots in Capgemini's survey: Manufacturer-specific dealer sites (46%), information sites (45%) and general dealer sites (43%) placed highly. Family and friends, typically the first or second choice in auto-related surveys, were a strong second this year, at 46%. Traditional media continued to lose ground: Reliance on print media dropped to 25% of respondents in 2006, from 32% in 2005, while TV advertising remained flat, with 24% of respondents in 2006, compared to 23% in 2005.

Newer sources of information like blogs and discussion groups resonated with 16% of respondents, and their influence is expected to rise in the coming years.

Auto shoppers do use OEM sites for research, but they think that non-automaker sites actually provide better information, according to a Burst Media study cited by iMedia Connection.

Almost a third of in-market respondents to the Burst Media study agreed that the Internet was the best source for getting automotive information — but not on automobile company Websites, which ranked fourth.

Auto shoppers rated word-of-mouth as second best to non-auto sites, in the form of talking to friends and family. Local dealers ranked third. Traditional media — magazines, newspapers, TV and radio — were far down the list of preferred information sources.

Best Source for Automotive Information according to US In-Market Internet Users, December 2006 (% of respondents)

eMarketer Senior Analyst Lisa Phillips says this points to the range of online information available to auto shoppers. "Consumers check out a variety sites, from independent sites to blogs, discussion boards and social networks," she says.

Find out how auto shoppers use the Internet. Read the eMarketer Automotive Online: The Race Is On report. 

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