Viewpoint August 13, 2009, 3:03PM EST

GM: Still Making the Same Mistakes

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GM's Turnaround: Always Four Years Out

The worst mistake is that by the time the Chevy Volt comes to market it won't be the all new and potentially most exciting introduction of 2010. And it needs to be, to attract the techno-impulse buyers—or those who could become mobile evangelists for GM. Why won't it be knocking socks off? Because by the time dealerships actually receive their Volts, the impulse buyers will have been seeing the vehicle for almost three years. To GM's most cherished buyer demographic, the Volt will be old news by the time the first one hits the streets.

GM should know better; in the 1980s the Chevrolet Lumina minivan was called the "most introduced" vehicle in America. GM started using photos of that unique minivan almost four years before actually having them available to sell. Again, by the time it came out it was old news, not something new and exciting. GM made the same mistake with its SSR pickup truck: The impulse buyers couldn't acquire one when their passions were high and by the time they could, years later, the mood had left them.

When we learned that Toyota (TM) had created the first modern hybrid electric with its Prius, the word leaked out mere months before it went on sale in Japan—and no pictures were available.

Note to GM: If you really want impulse buyers, you raise their emotions when they can actually purchase something. Asking them to hold on to that excitement for three or four years demonstrates a profound ignorance about how excitement for new automotive products can be transitory at best.

Please, Bid Our Cars Down

The other issue that GM's Henderson made official is that GM and its California dealers will try selling their new vehicles on the popular Web auction site, eBay (EBAY). Now GM's executives are proving they don't even understand how auctions work—that is, assuming you plan on getting maximum money for your product.

Over a month ago, when GM let it be known it might try to auction its vehicles online and eBay said it knew nothing about it, a quick search found a number of new GM products already being peddled online, including its redesigned 2010 Chevy Equinox crossover. That was embarrassing, to say the least: Bids were coming in nowhere near the price that would be required to actually purchase one of those vehicles. Assuming there were any bids at all. Many bidders, on the other hand, were offering top dollar for the popular new Camaro.

Second Note to GM: When you have products that are hot and desirable and whose inventory is extremely limited, that situation will drive the price up in an auction. When you try to auction a mass-produced vehicle whose production levels are going to exceed customer demand, auctions will drive the prices down; in effect, you are intentionally diminishing the value of your own product with the public.

People who have either purchased or sold new automobiles know that sometimes it takes hours of negotiation to get an offer that returns even a minimal profit to the dealer. Online auctions will not suddenly make wary consumers offer so much money on the vehicle that it sells profitably.

As for the salespeople, does GM think they are going to take hours and hours to sell customers on the features and benefits of a vehicle, then be totally cut out of the potential to make a living because, instead of returning to the dealership, the buyer tries to get a super deal at eBay? Well, those cars are not going to be sold at a loss online. Therefore many frustrated customers, realizing they can't buy the GM product at 50¢ on the dollar at eBay, will simply go to another brand of vehicle and negotiate another purchase elsewhere.

Moreover, because its concept of selling cars that have fixed costs at auction will die on arrival, GM will have given itself another black eye with the public.

Ask Your Experts!

Fifty years ago when new models came out, they were delivered to dealerships hidden under wraps, and the tarps came off only when dealerships had their new model year open house the third week of each September. The secrecy excited the public and packed showrooms every year; even those that didn't buy wanted to be the first to see what was new. Too bad the new guys haven't had time to brush up on GM's many past successes; but even more recently, they've learned nothing from watching Japan. By playing their cards close to the vest, the Japanese maximize the excitement, surprise, and delight among both buyers and sellers.

GM, you introduce cars far too long before they can be bought. You make promises you can't keep. And then, instead of building value and driving margins up to where GM returns to profitability, you're once again diminishing how customers view your products by constantly finding ways to drive the prices down.

It's clear that you guys have no idea how customers go about selecting and purchasing a new vehicle. You continue to act like you think that if you simplify the selling process, people will return to the flock. True, people want a "deal" when they buy a new car. But more important, they want to buy something exceptional. Today, GM has many exceptional products, the best in their history. The automotive selling process, done right, has little to do with negotiation: It has everything to do with building value in the vehicle.

Your best dealers know how it's done. You should listen to them.

Ed Wallace is a recipient of the the Gerald R. Loeb Award for business journalism, given by the G. and R. Loeb Foundation, and is a member of the American Historical Society. His column leads the Fort Worth Star-Telegram's "Sunday Drive" section. He reviews new cars every Friday morning at 7:15 on Fox Four's Good Day, contributes articles to BusinessWeek Online, and hosts the top-rated talk show Wheels Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on 570 KLIF.

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