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Half Of Automotive Advertising To Shift To Digital
by Jack Loechner, Wednesday, November 12, 2014 6:15 AM
For decades, car and truck ads have swollen newspapers, screamed from radio stations and transformed local car dealers into TV celebrities. If any single ad category were responsible for
reshaping the face of local media, it would be automotive, says the 2014-2015 Automotive Advertising Outlook from Borrell. But no longer, says the report. This year, for the first time, more
than half of those dollars will be spent on digital media. The local newspaper’s auto advertising bonanza is long gone. Radio’s has only recently disappeared. Local TV stations may be
next on the chopping block, observes the report. At $35.5 billion, automotive is the second-largest advertising category, behind general merchandise stores. Car sales are up 5% this year and
ad budgets are up 17%. Online media accounts for 95% of this year’s increase. The new report outlines the mechanics of this important category:
- Since 2004, the number of
franchised dealers has dropped 18% while the number of new vehicles sold per dealership has increased 18%.
- The increase in sales and decrease in competition has reduced the per-vehicle
price of advertising for a new car by 21%, to $522. It’s the type of efficiency that has attracted new investors, and investors won’t manage dealerships the way family owners
did.
- Used cars are no longer synonymous with clunkers. The price has risen 28% in the past five years and is approaching $20,000. There will be twice as many used cars as new ones sold
this year, many from the lots of new-car dealerships.
- More than 90% of car purchases start with research via digital media. Empowered consumers are transforming dealerships from
“stores” to fulfillment centers.
- Now that dealers have their own media channel in the form of the Internet, they’re discovering that they need to come up with
“news” programming on a regular basis. Specials and rebates are their versions of breaking news. They’re now spending $2,404 per new vehicle, nearly five times what they spend
on advertising, in the form of rebates, loyalty programs, contests and incentives, says the report.
While new-car sales slowly climb back to pre-recession levels, the
euphoria won’t be enjoyed by the more than 3,500 franchised dealerships and five major car brands (Mercury, Plymouth, Oldsmobile, Hummer and Saturn) that have disappeared in the past
decade. What’s left is a smaller, more efficient, and digitally-focused marketplace. All signs point to sales of 16.3 million new cars and light trucks this year, a return to levels the
industry has not seen since before the Great Recession. Aided by improvement in the national economy, declining oil prices, abating unemployment, and consumers’ need to replace an
aging vehicle population, dealers are once again emptying their lots of new cars and light trucks more quickly than last year’s forecasts had predicted. Sales are up 5% over last year.
The recovering and re-formed car industry has attracted the attention of the nation’s most successful investor, Warren Buffett, who recently purchased the nation’s fifth-largest
new-car dealer, renamed Berkshire Hathaway Automotive, the new company plans to buy more dealerships. Buffett observed that the business enjoys high sales volume and comparatively low capital
investment, allowing “substantial” profits even though margins can be low. At the industry’s peak in 1991 there were 23,500 franchised dealerships and 48,050
used-car dealers; today there are 5,800 fewer franchised dealers and 20,700 fewer used-car dealers. In the past five years alone, the industry has lost 750 franchised dealers and 7,050
used-car dealers.
U.S. Total New Car/Light Truck Sales, 2007-2019 (Millions Of
Units) Year 2007 2008 2009 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
MM Units 16.1 13.2 10.4 16.3 16.3 15.6 15.9 16.3 16.6
Sources: NADA/Borrell, November 2014 Total Auto Dealerships
(Thousands) Since 1991 And Forecast To 2015
YearUsed Car DealersFranchised Dealers 2001 39.4 21.8 2007 37.48 2077 2011 30.82 17.54 2014 27.64 17.71
2015 (Est) 27.35 17.70
Sources: NADA/Borrell, November 2014 … though rising sales means a good thing for auto advertising, the declining number of dealerships tempers that optimism. Times were much better for ad agencies and media
companies when 20 dealers competed for sales in one market. Since 2004, the average number of franchised dealers has dropped 18% while the average number of new vehicles sold per dealership
has increased 18%. That odd inversion has led to a market efficiency that bodes well for dealers but not for media companies. The average amount spent to advertise a new
vehicle today is $522, down 21% from five years ago. The per-vehicle expenditure on digital media has increased to the point that it has surpassed that of traditional media this year: $295
per vehicle in digital marketing expense versus $227 in legacy media. The per-vehicle amount spent on traditional media has been decreasing for five years. New-Car Ad Spending Per New Vehicle, Digital Vs. Traditional Media Media Year Digital Traditional
2005$52$4042008147432201023138320122303192014e295227 Sources: NADA/Borrell, November 2014: Gone are the days when half of the people who walked into a dealership left
without buying a new car, perhaps settling instead for a used car. The “fall through” rate, the percentage of people planning to buy a new car who never wind up buying one, has
slipped from a high of 56% in 2009 to 25% last year. This year the rate is forecast to be 19%, dropping to 15% next year. Every walk-in seems ready to buy, and often more educated than the
sales rep about options and pricing. Although millennials make up roughly one-fourth of the adult population, they account for more than half of all adults who said they plan to buy or lease a
new car or light truck during the coming year. That’s up from 33% just four years ago, and their behavior is certainly different than that of their SUV-generation parents, as “American car
culture is dying a slow death.” Reasons that were suggested responding to why young americans don’t buy cars are:
- Preference to live virtually (online) has replaced the joy
of “cruising”
- Living with parents longer (about 36% live with parents) gives them access to dad’s car
- High unemployment (the jobless rate is 12% for millennials,
twice the national average) and low pay has made car purchases impossible
Against the backdrop of rising sales, dealership consolidation, empowered buyers, the emerging importance of
used cars, and a new generation less enamored with automobiles, the report says “… this is where automotive advertising is headed… “
- At $35.5 billion,
automotive is the second-largest advertising category in the U.S., behind general merchandise stores. While it represents 12% of total ad spending, at the local level it’s been the lifeblood of
broadcast and print media, accounting for as much as 35% of all ad revenue for some.
- This year, total auto advertising is forecast to grow 17%. Online media will account for 95% of that
increase. It’s a landmark year for digital advertising. For the first time, more than half of all automotive ad dollars will be spent on digital media. While it’s clearly come at the
expense of radio and newspaper budgets, the next phase of erosion will likely affect TV the most.
- For the purposes of this report, we separate ad spending into four categories: The amount
spent by manufacturers, up 12.2% this year, to $12.3 billion The amount spent by dealers, both franchised and independents, up 21.8%, to $21.2 billion The amount spent by dealer
associations, up 1.1%, to $1.3 billion The amount spent by private parties, up 9.5%, to $577 million
Manufacturers New car advertising has historically
maintained a delicate balance between dealers, dealer associations, and manufacturers. The balance will be largely maintained this year and next, but will be strained by the shift from higher priced
traditional media toward less expensive digital venues. Manufacturers are continuing to decrease their dependence on broadcast TV and newspapers, while at the same time growing their usage of digital
media.
Dealers When co-op is included, auto dealers are projected to spend $21.2 billion on advertising to support both new and used vehicle sales this year. That’s
a 21.8% increase over last year’s levels. Online, growing at 39%, isn’t the only big gainer. Cinema, direct mail, telemarketing and directory advertising are showing relatively large
gains in the automotive category this year. That’s because cinema and directories are on a very small base (accounting for less than 1% of all automotive advertising in each case), and any
fluctuation can look big. For
additional
information from Borrell, and access to the complete PDF report, please visit here.