Is It Time To Reevaluate Your Opinion About TrueCar?

I have seen many issues polarize dealers, and at times energize them during my 30 years in the car business. Very few issues have rallied so many people in the auto industry to cry out than the advent of TrueCar’s advertising campaign in the Fall of 2011. In fact, since the creation of the two automotive professional networks I am involved with, AutomotiveDigitalMarketing.com and DealerELITE.net, there has been no other issue that has attracted even a tenth of the visitors to these sites, or engagement in the form of comments and subsequent posts… From October 2011 through January 2012 the most popular subject matter on many online sites catering to people working in the car business was the thorough vilifying of TrueCar.

Meanwhile, the outcry from dealers reached a crescendo of volume that was enough to get many State Dealer Associations and a handful of state regulators to “investigate” TrueCar for potential violation of everything from brokering without a license, to operating out of compliance with advertising regulations.

Amazingly enough, despite all the name calling and personal bashing that executives at TrueCar received, not a single “cease and desist” letter was sent, or lawsuit was filed by TrueCar against those of us who pushed our criticism of TrueCar beyond the boundaries of civilized and professional discussion or debate. In hindsight, I am very surprised that TrueCar took such a beating without resorting to legal measures against some of the worst name callers and accusers, including yours truly!

After receiving several phone calls and speaking with Scott Painter in December 2011 I put off visiting TrueCar’s headquarters at their invitation until just a few weeks ago. My first encounter with TrueCar executives on a face to face basis was in March 2012, at the Automotive Leadership Roundtable in Miami, FL. Bernie Brenner from TrueCar’s board came over to my table and asked me if I would sit with the TrueCar team during the lunch session and discuss changes they were making to their business model. Curiosity piqued, I accepted. Looking back on that lunch, I gave the TrueCar executive team a fairly strong rebuttal… I was polite, but explained my objections to their business model as inserting an unnecessary dealer expense. Mike Timmons, Bernie Brenner and a couple other TrueCar executives were polite, rational in their explanations and determined to convince me that they had seen many of the problems with their pricing models and were making changes so that TrueCar would make sense for dealers as a means of acquiring incremental business at about half of what the NADA average cost of advertising is Per Vehicle Retailed (PVR). At the time I remained resolute in my stated opinion that TrueCar was a bad deal for car dealers. However, I will admit that maintaining that opinion in the light of new information, changes TrueCar was making and the logic around their affinity model was already starting to erode the certainty I had in my position on TrueCar… Not that I was admitting any of that at the time!

The next time I saw any TrueCar executives was at Digital Dealer 12 in Orlando last April… Bernie Brenner approached me and asked me to bring any dealers who were avid TrueCar haters to him so he could meet them and listen to their grievances. Seemed like an odd request, but he was sincere and the entire TrueCar team was looking for people with negative perceptions of their company so they could show them all the aspects of their business model that had been changed, so that with new information these dealers might reevaluate their perception of the benefits of doing business with TrueCar.

What I have since learned is that from the beginning of January through May of 2012, TrueCar experienced a large number of dealers cancelling their TrueCar agreements and dropping out of the TrueCar program. This, combined with various state legislative issues is what prompted TrueCar to make so many dramatic changes to the way they do business. They simply had to change in order to move forward. Something that more people in the car business ought to consider!

When I accepted TrueCar’s invitation to visit their headquarters in Santa Monica, CA the timing was perfect… I arrived the day before a “all hands on deck” meeting where every TrueCar employee who works out of the headquarters was traveling in to attend. During my visit and tour I was able to spend more than an hour of quality time in detailed conversation with Scott Painter. Mike Timmons arrived a couple hours after I did and took me on a tour to meet various team leaders and department heads in the two building that TrueCar operates out of. I met many people and watched a team of TrueCar employees working directly with dealers all over the country, helping them to put deals together and sell cars. The people I met were intelligent, well spoken and knew what their part of the TrueCar mission was, and how it tied into selling cars. What I found was hardly a bastion of evil, nor were there any indicators that they were trying to eliminate car dealers or harm anyone working in a dealership. Like many companies I have visited, such as Edmunds, Kelley Blue Book, Dealix, AutoUSA, Cobalt, Reynolds, ADP and others, what I found at TrueCar was over 250 people who are educated and intelligent going about their specific duties and focused on generating more car sales for their participating dealers.

So, what about all these so called “changes” that TrueCar has made since the end of 2011? Let’s take a look at ten of them, why TrueCar made the changes and their intended impact.

10 Key TrueCar Changes – January to April 2012

In late 2011, TrueCar started receiving significant feedback – much of it critical – from the automotive retailing industry including dealers, dealer associations, manufacturers and industry consultants. In the first half of 2012, TrueCar made substantial changes to address industry concerns. By no means is TrueCar finished with implementing changes and revisions, but they do feel they have taken the necessary actions to ensure TrueCar is acting as a key auto industry partner.

Listed below are 10 key changes that TrueCar provided to me, which I subsequently edited for greater accuracy. I have validated this list with people inside and outside of TrueCar, as well viewed related documents supporting the implementation of these changes and further verified with dealers currently using TrueCar:

1. Changed Website Experience Nationwide and Billing Model in Certain States to Address Regulatory Compliance Concerns

What TrueCar Heard: Through trade publications, dealer association communications and social media sites, there was a lot of attention on whether TrueCar’s business model complied with the existing regulatory framework in certain states.

What TrueCar Did: Completely overhauled its website experience to address state-specific concerns related to advertising regulations. Among other changes, dealers no longer communicate price offers relative to invoice through the TrueCar website experience. Additionally, “bait and switch” concerns have been addressed through website features expressly clarifying that TrueCar.com users who use the website to explore the new car market are configuring “virtual vehicles” – not vehicles that are actually in inventory at participating dealers. TrueCar has also implemented a subscription-based billing model in certain states. 30 of the 50 states continue with TrueCar’s pay for performance model, while 19 other states have variations designed to comply with that state’s laws. Louisiana remains a state not served by TrueCar.

2. Overhauled Display of Information on TrueCar Price Curves and Dealer Portal to Address Dealer Concerns

What TrueCar Heard: Though not their intent, TrueCar heard loud and clear from dealers that the TrueCar price curves and Dealer Portal did not provide the most contextualized, relevant, and informative display of information to assist consumers and dealers.

What TrueCar Did: TrueCar realizes that their success depends on providing services that result in a better car buying experience for dealers and consumers. TrueCar changed the TrueCar price curves in January to provide more robust, comprehensive data that allows consumers to understand what constitutes a “fair” price in the current market. They also switched from providing “network-pricing” information in the Dealer Portal (which focused on the pricing of other TrueCar dealers) to providing “market-based” pricing information driven by recent transactions in the dealer’s local market area (not just transactions by TrueCar dealers).

3. Reduced DMS Data Received From Dealers

What We Heard: A small number of industry consultants used social media sites (such as Automotive Digital Marketing and dealerELITE) to spread misinformation that participating dealers’ sales matching data was being used to create the TrueCar price curves and/or that TrueCar actively markets to customers found in the dealers’ DMS. TrueCar data security executives swear, and all evidence I have seen shows that these are both myths.

What TrueCar Did: TrueCar only requires dealers to provide customer contact information (name, address, phone, email for buyer and co-buyer) and basic vehicle information (VIN, make/model/trim, year, new/used, stock number, sale date) in order to perform the sales matching, billing (in states with performance-based billing models), dealer scoring and analytics and reporting aspects of their business. TrueCar does not directly access dealer DMS systems and they never have. Their data extraction, normalization and compilation is handled by respected third-party vendors, such as Digital Motorworks (DMi) and Netlink. All dealers also have the option to “push” their sales matching data via FTP to TrueCar’s third-party vendors; the data received by TrueCar is the same whether the dealer chooses automated or manual sales data reporting. To address concerns that TrueCar was receiving extraneous data from its third-party vendors, TrueCar worked with both Digital Motorworks (DMi) and Netlink in February, 2012 to remove all unused fields from the data feeds sent to TrueCar, reducing the fields to just those listed above. Although I was aware that this was a false objection to TrueCar as far back as last December, it still seems like a lot of people in the business are under the false assumption that TrueCar uses DMS data for pricing curves. The reality is that they do not need DMS data to do their pricing reports, and what they would get from participating dealer DMS would be inadequate to provide the reporting they do.

4. Rolled Out More “Dealer-Friendly” Dealer Agreement, Including Indemnification

What TrueCar Heard: Some dealers told TrueCar that the dealer agreement needed to be more fair to the dealer.

What TrueCar Did: In February, they rolled out a new dealer agreement, the key aspects of which include: (i) dealers can cancel at any time for any or no reason; (ii) more clarity and control on how dealers provide sales reporting data to TrueCar; (iii) confirmation that the dealers’ sales reporting data is NOT used to create TrueCar price curves; and (iv) confirmation that dealers’ sales reporting data is NOT used to send marketing-related communications to customers. In April, TrueCar added a limited indemnification provision to the new dealer agreement. The decision to indemnify dealers is another manifestation of TrueCar’s commitment to their dealer partners and underscores that they are fully invested in standing behind the services that TrueCar provides to dealers.

5. Launched TrueCar National Dealer Council

What TrueCar Heard: Many dealers, dealer associations and manufacturers expressed concern that TrueCar was making major product, process and policy changes without incorporating feedback from dealers.

What TrueCar Did: In April, 2012 TrueCar launched a National Dealer Council with 20 Members representing 24 states, 35 unique makes and 281 franchises. The purpose of the Council is to ensure TrueCar is actively listening to dealers, and the Council is chaired by Gary Marcotte (former SVP Marketing & Strategy at AutoNation). The inaugural full-day Council meeting in April was reported as being "excellent" by those who participated, and TrueCar executives received much appreciated feedback from the Dealer Council Members. Going forward, the Council will meet periodically with TrueCar senior executives to provide guidance on how TrueCar can improve the services it provides to dealers.

6. Initiated Dealer Associations Outreach

What TrueCar Learned: TrueCar had not historically communicated with state and large metro dealer associations and paid a price for not directly engaging this important constituency.

What TrueCar Did: In March, TrueCar hired Pat Watson, VP of Industry Relations, to directly communicate and work collaboratively with dealer associations on how to help their mutual partners – dealers. Pat is the former CEO of the South Carolina Automobile Dealers Association, where he worked for 38 years.

7. Started Participating In Key Industry Conferences

What TrueCar Learned: Prior to 2012, TrueCar did not have an active presence at key industry conferences, which was perceived by some as an indication that TrueCar did not care to engage directly with the industry.

What TrueCar Did: In 2012, TrueCar has sponsored and actively participated at key industry conferences, including Automotive Leadership Roundtable in March and Digital Dealer 12 in April, and the upcoming AutoCon 2012 in September. TrueCar will continue to have an active presence at future conferences, including Digital Dealer 13, Driving Sales, J.D. Power Automotive Internet Roundtable, various 20 Groups, trade associations and dealer group events.

8. Improved TrueCar’s Social Media Response and Presence

What TrueCar Learned: Social media can be a powerful medium for individuals in the automotive retail industry to share opinions and stories that shape perceptions of many automotive professionals.

What TrueCar Did: Mike Timmons, EVP of TrueCar and an auto retailing veteran (VP Operations AutoNation; independent auto dealer; new car sales and management) has taken ownership of monitoring and responding as appropriate to social media related to TrueCar and industry-related issues. Additionally, Mike has directly reached out to key TrueCar detractors to understand and address their concerns, as well as to correct any misinformation, and he will continue to do so. In the future, TrueCar will be taking a more proactive approach to leverage social media to showcase their product, services and changes in the way they do business.

9. Increased Communication With Manufacturers

Before: Previously, TrueCar’s communication with manufacturers was sporadic and reactionary, sometimes leading to significant misconceptions.

What TrueCar Did: In the past four months, Larry Dominique, EVP Data Solutions, with over 27 years of OEM experience (former VP Advanced and Product Planning and Strategy, Nissan, plus stints at GM and Chrysler), has met with key decision makers from 20 car companies to listen to their concerns and inform them as to what TrueCar is really all about. Going forward, TrueCar will continue to directly engage with OEM management to discuss ways that TrueCar can improve the services it provides to their dealer networks.

10. Added More Dealer Support

What TrueCar Heard: Dealers told TrueCar they want more face time and direct support from TrueCar dealer-facing personnel.

What TrueCar Did: In the first four months of 2012, they added 13 new employees to the TrueCar Dealer Development Team, including Ken Potter (VP Dealer Development; former VP & GM of Internet Brands / CarsDirect; former GM of two dealerships), Amir Rizkalla (Director Account Management; formerly of Fisker Automotive and Toyota), two Area Sales Managers and four Account Managers. TrueCar is currently looking to hire 9 additional dealer-facing employees in the next 60 days, including six more Area Sales Managers (Philadelphia, Charlotte, Atlanta, Seattle, Des Moines, and St. Louis) as well as two more Account Managers, to ensure that they are adequately staffed to continue providing dealers with the level of support they want and need.

After traveling to TrueCar headquarters on a Monday in July and then visiting Southern California dealers, I returned home to Phoenix on Tuesday evening. Later that week I had an appointment with the owners and management team at Courtesy Chevrolet in Phoenix. This is the same Courtesy Chevrolet that I worked at from 2005 to 2007, and I have a close bond with the leadership team there… During my visit, which was to convince them to attend AutoCon 2012, I mentioned visiting TrueCar headquarters earlier in the week. The response I received from the owner and several managers was “we really like the TrueCar program, they have gotten a lot better about invoicing us and the business we get from them seems to be purely incremental… deals we would not otherwise have made.”

These statements and the discussions I had with the team at Courtesy, as well as all the information I had witnessed firsthand during my meetings at TrueCar, and from the conversations I had with at least a dozen TrueCar employees lead me to a conclusion I feel very certain about. It would be foolish for any dealer to ignore the changes that TrueCar has made and not reevaluate whether to do business with TrueCar based on the new information available and the changes TrueCar has made to the way they do business.

 

Researched and written by Ralph Paglia - The above represents my own perceptions and opinions, and does not necessarily reflect those of the ADM editorial staff or its members.

Be sure to take advantage of the opportunity to learn more about this topic and many relevant issues focused on growing a competitive advantage in automotive retail by registering and attending AutoCon 2012 in Las Vegas at the Aria Resort Conference Center from September 5th to the 8th...

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Comment by David Ruggles on August 7, 2012 at 10:42am

There is no doubt that TrueCar has been forced to change its business model.  And I have no doubt that many TrueCar employees have good intentions.  I DO have doubt that Scott Painter's ultimate objective is helping dealers.  As long as the business model of TrueCar is based on leveraging consumers' inherit distrust of Dealers I'm a skeptic. Painter's many interviews regarding car dealers still ring in my head.

Once Painter invests his own millions into a dealership and attempts to compete based on underselling his competition I'll be a lot more receptive.  I am resistant to the idea that amateurs are the ones to lead us all out of the dark and into the dawn.  I'm fine with the new vehicle distribution system in place from the beginning.  I can accept the fact that parties in negotiation might not always feel they made the best deal.  I can sympathize with consumers who would l like a guarantee that they will be the winners in the negotiation with the dealer, but not to the point that I want them handed any more advantages than they already have.

The CFPB will probably remove the opportunity to make rate spread.  At least, this seems to be  their focus.  And YES, our industry has probably brought the additional scrutiny on itself through unsavory practices.  But the last thing Dealers need is consumers armed with even more information to put additional downward pressure on gross profits while at the same time losing the opportunity to "make rate."  

TrueCar has not shown me that they are causing any more vehicle to be sold.  They HAVE shown me that they are causing the same number of vehicles to be sold, but at lower gross profits while changing the Dealer the consumer buys from based on which Dealer pays them and which don't.   And they do so by positioning themselves as the protector of the consumer against the money grubbing Dealer.  I have a problem with that. 

And TrueCar doesn't seem to be the only company engaged in this practice.  When I started in the business in October 1970, consumers could go to the news stand and by a book with invoice prices listed.  BUT there weren't any dealers advertising in these books.  And they certainly weren't supporting the publishers of these books in any way.  These days many Dealers support the very vendors who are working against them as a group by paying them money.  Some would say paying the newspaper to facilitate the delivery of Dealer advertising messages is the same thing.  I don't share that view.  But that's a discussion for another day.

Comment by Randy Fry on August 7, 2012 at 9:14am

Ralph,, nice well written article, but as my granddaddy always said, a  Skunk can change it's stink but never can change it's stripes....

Comment by Timothy Martell on August 7, 2012 at 8:58am

Ralph, I have to say, I don't believe this article would have been written without the financial support of AutoCon by TrueCar. Though I don't think that this article smacks of any kind of cool aid drinking rhetoric, I see no value for dealers in the TrueCar business model. Having spent 20 years in automotive retail, I knew when I entered the vendor space that I wanted to add value to dealers -- not earn a living at the expense of dealers. 

The whole good vs evil aspects of this might make great headlines and spark controversy that leads to a lot of readership and sharing, all it is is razzle dazzle that keeps the focus off the only fact that matters in all of this. In short, Scott Painter's stated mission is to end the automotive retail business model. His goal is to see the end of car dealers and see americans follow the european model of buying direct and his business model is designed to commoditize vehicles and remove the human factor any where possible.

While I'm sure that sounds like evil from a dealer's perspective, I take a much more open minded approach. I don't think it is evil, I just think that no dealer's interest can be served, regardless of the number of vehicles sold via true car. This model is counter to dealer profitability and the sustainability of the retail dealer model. 

Might TrueCar have made changes? Sure! If you cut off your hand, you go to the hospital so you don't bleed to death. Common sense isn't it? So they make a few changes to seem less villainous to the car dealers without which they could not survive. But again, its smoke and mirrors. They want to balance the scales just enough so that car dealer's will be willing to trade their future sustainability to make a quick buck now. 

In reality, nothing has changed. Scott Painter wants to see the end of car dealers in the USA. Period. Until TrueCar is sold to another company or principal investor or group of investors with a vastly different goal, no dealer in their right mind should do business with TrueCar. There is simply no value.

Comment by Jerry Thibeau on August 7, 2012 at 8:43am

When there's hundreds of millions of dollars at stake I am sure a company would do just about anything to survive.  The BEAST is still controlled by the same people and their mission has not changed.  Of course they are going to do what it takes to survive.  Do you really think their vision is any different today than it was last year?  I don't!  They may appear to be playing nice, but in the end they have an agenda and they are executing that agenda.  BEWARE I SAY!

Comment by Bob Gaber on August 7, 2012 at 5:08am

u have got to be kidding.

Comment by Keith Shetterly on August 6, 2012 at 9:13am

I never made a single dollar from my own criticism of TrueCar.  To my mind, they deserved every word I wrote; to reevaluate is always good, but I don't agree with this article as I'm reading it now--because it was Painter's own words, far from innocent, that hung the company up.  It wasn't this or any other forum.  The Internet riot that occurred was birthed in a disregard for his own marketplace, which disregard is still, unfortunately, a common mistake that too many dealers make themselves and share with him.  However, the blame isn't on the riot, which is how I take this article's meaning, mostly because it doesn't even recap the simple idea that Painter telling dealers they should be closing their doors and treating dealers as stupid is a bad idea when they are paying his income.  Personally, if there was a lawsuit, the investors would have to face both that and the inflammatory and condescending reactions of his investment house and his Director of Dealer Relations.  Which have been archived, along with any words we or they have written, as the Internet is just like that.  So I'm not surprised at all that there was no lawsuit TO DATE.

All that said, because I felt it needed to be said, I've spoken many times to Mike Timmons, and if there has been any mass turnaround in feeling towards TrueCar they can lay that progress at his feet.  And I've seen TrueCar revamp and tune its dealer attitude to one that I have personally experienced in a very positive way.  That's just what happened, and it happened because a guy like Mike was given the tools to help TrueCar with those problems.  And it started, not because TrueCar understood at all it's own market, but because the market rioted against them and woke them up.  TrueCar is a better company today because of those events, and that kind of change is not easy under fire.  For that, I thank them.

And, for the record, Google is now poised to control the consumer marketplace for dealers in ways that make TrueCar's earlier positions pale by comparison.

Anyway, thanks again to TrueCar for the changes they made, and for Mike Timmons, VP of TrueCar, who helped show them the way.

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