tech:

taffy

Auto Industry Needs To Offer Consumers Better Online Experience

[Techtaffy Newsdesk]

Consumers say they are turning to a variety of online and offline services to help them make their car-buying decisions because industry websites fail to satisfy their needs, a new global survey by Accenture reveals.

The survey of 13,000 drivers in 11 countries found that consumers believe the car-buying process would be simpler and quicker if the content on auto industry websites was customized to be more relevant to their specific car-buying preferences and if the industry adopted such online innovations as web chat and mobile-enabled websites, which are used widely in other retailing sectors.
Of the survey respondents who say they research their car purchases online before buying a vehicle, 78 percent visit at least six websites or more first, and 15 percent say they need to browse more than 20 websites to get the information they seek. In addition, 75 percent say they still turn to more traditional offline media for the information required to make a car-buying decision.
Accenture believes the findings demonstrate a lack of integrated digital marketing among manufacturer and dealer sites in the automotive industry. More than three quarters (80 percent) of the respondents would like more intuitive, customized content made available to them, while 75 percent favor a process that will enable them to obtain more simplified information online. Nearly three quarters (73 percent) would like the comparison process simplified, and 68 percent would welcome the ability to chat online with a dealer.
“A consistent customer experience is vital to the online-offline sales process, an area in which the auto industry is notably lagging other sectors in the eyes of the consumer,” said Luca Mentuccia, global managing director of Accenture’s Automotive Industry Group. “Consumers have made it clear that they want better online support, advice and personalization when buying a car with consistent handoffs to the dealer when they are ready to visit the showroom. At a time when digital marketers are utilizing algorithms to predict what online visitors want to know, automakers should be better able to shape web content that is more user-centric.”
According to the survey, most respondents (88 percent) also want easier and clearer pricing to help expedite the car-buying process, while 77 percent want dealers to provide them with a simpler way to configure a vehicle. More than three quarters (76 percent) would like to have the ability to compare additional options with the same automaker’s product line and 75 percent would welcome more mobile-enabled websites. Additionally, 74 percent desire better integration between dealer sites and inventory search functions.
“In our experience, car buyers are open to post-sales activities such as loyalty program memberships and enrollment in maintenance plans,” said Mentuccia. “Success with these programs can be enhanced through the use of customized landing pages that are based on customer demographics, personal preferences and previous interactions. However, our research shows that consumers believe the auto industry has a way to go to enhance digital marketing.”
 
Better Digital Marketing Sites Key to Future Car-buying
According to the survey, 82 percent of the respondents believe that better interactive digital marketing is a must for the auto industry, and 83 percent agree that improved digital media would significantly reduce the time needed to purchase a vehicle. In addition, over three quarters of consumers (76 percent) feel that the auto sector significantly lags other retail industries in the use of digital media tools such as video and 360-degree website tours.
Accenture believes that putting digital marketing to better use could yield an increase in topline sales for the automotive sector of one to two percent.
 
Americans use social media, Italians less likely to use manufacturers’ websites, Germans want on-line chat with dealers
The study polled consumers in both developed and emerging markets. In each of these markets, the level of digital penetration has created an appetite among buyers for using digital channels, illustrating how important it is for auto makers and dealers to tap into the power of mobile devices and the internet. However, the research also uncovered some disparities among consumers in the countries represented in the survey:
  • American drivers, for example, are the most likely to turn to social media when buying a car – 94 percent use social media reviews as part of their online searches, compared with only 58 percent of consumers in India and 75 percent overall.
  • Chinese buyers expressed the highest interest – 82 percent – in using digital communications to find out more about new in car-technology. In contrast, they had the lowest interest – 76 percent – in using digital communications to learn more about parts exchange upgrades.
  • German drivers – 81 percent – had the greatest interest in chatting with dealers on line in order to make the online purchase process easier.
  • By contrast, only 58 percent of Malaysian drivers and 59 percent of Indian drivers expressed an interest in this option.
  • The country with the highest interest among consumers in carrying out the entire vehicle purchase process online is South Korea. In fact, 96 percent of South Korean respondents said they would be interested in handling everything regarding a car purchase online, including financing, price negotiation, back-office paperwork and final delivery to their home.
  • Indian drivers are the least likely to have bought their current car online: 13 percent, compared to 37 percent of American respondents.
  • More than half (56 percent) of Indonesians visit fewer than five car-buying websites, while 33 percent of Americans visit more than 20 websites when buying a car.
  • Italian drivers are the least likely to use manufacturers’ websites when making online searches for a car, at 60 percent, compared to 84 percent of South Koreans and 72 percent of respondents overall.
  • Brazilian and French drivers expressed the greatest interest in in seeing easier and clearer online pricing, with 93 percent of respondents in both countries citing this factor.
  • Among Japanese drivers responding to the survey, 83 percent said they would like to see more mobile-enabled websites to help them in the car-purchasing process, compared to only 54 percent of Indian respondents.
In terms of the major influencers that impact their car-buying decisions, survey respondents essentially gave equal weight across the board to manufacturer sites (53 percent), the recommendations of friends and colleagues (54 percent), social media (56 percent) and advice from family (59 percent).
The consumer survey was conducted by Coleman Parkes Research on behalf of Accenture. It was carried out online from August through September 2012 in multiple languages. The markets covered were Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, South Korea and the United States. 
Interviews were conducted with 13,000 drivers, between the ages of 18 to more than 65, who have a vehicle that is no more than three years old.
Upload: 12-25-12

Just in

Tembo raises $14M

Cincinnati, Ohio-based Tembo, a Postgres managed service provider, has raised $14 million in a Series A funding round.

Raspberry Pi is now a public company — TC

Raspberry Pi priced its IPO on the London Stock Exchange on Tuesday morning at £2.80 per share, valuing it at £542 million, or $690 million at today’s exchange rate, writes Romain Dillet. 

AlphaSense raises $650M

AlphaSense, a market intelligence and search platform, has raised $650 million in funding, co-led by Viking Global Investors and BDT & MSD Partners.

Elon Musk’s xAI raises $6B to take on OpenAI — VentureBeat

Confirming reports from April, the series B investment comes from the participation of multiple known venture capital firms and investors, including Valor Equity Partners, Vy Capital, Andreessen Horowitz (A16z), Sequoia Capital, Fidelity Management & Research Company, Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal and Kingdom Holding, writes Shubham Sharma. 

Capgemini partners with DARPA to explore quantum computing for carbon capture

Capgemini Government Solutions has launched a new initiative with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to investigate quantum computing's potential in carbon capture.