Who says its great value?
27 June 2016
In the past couple of years, Auto Trader has been working hard to improve its relations with auto retailers. They went through a rocky patch after a group of retailers got together to complain about its pricing structure and its market dominance.
While there have been a few hiccups along the way, moving away from commission based sales staff and operating in a more transparent way has, mostly, helped.
Now, with the announcement that it plans to bring in a great value badging system for cars, is it risking this improved relationship?
Auto Trader, rightly, believes that openness and transparency improve trust and consumer confidence. Consumers want to do things such as compare prices on a level playing field, get a fair value for their trade-in and know theyre getting a good deal on the car theyre buying.
If retailers dont open up to consumers, then this paves the way for third parties to disrupt the market with clever products and services. But should it be the retailer or the advertising medium that decides a car is great value for the consumer?
And, while the idea behind the new great value badge may be a good one, and not a million miles from any retailer in any sector promoting the best offer they have, if its anything other than accurate it could cause more harm than good.
Auto Trader admits it doesnt have all of the optional equipment information it needs yet to give perfect valuations, which could be this systems downfall. After all, if Auto Trader is, as it claims, using average optional equipment levels for each model, then you could easily end up with a situation where a poorly equipped car is priced low and badged great value when clearly its not. At this point trust could be lost.
Its a fine line that Auto Trader must tread. After all, the company has two sets of customers who must maintain trust theres you, the auto retailer and the car buyers who must come back time and time again to look for their next car.
Get it right though and it could lift overall confidence in the auto retail sector.
Tristan Young
Auto Retail Network
Editorial director