Study pinpoints 3 documents that convince used shoppers to buy specific vehicle
A new study from Rapid Recon-certified partner iPacket identified the three most convincing documents utilize when used-vehicle buyers are evaluating their purchase decision.
The study results released on Tuesday pointed to authentic OEM MSRP data, new-vehicle brochures and reconditioning receipts
For the study, Rapid Recon and iPacket explained that click activity and time spent were measured on various modules or documents provided in participating dealers’ digital vehicle presentations on their websites.
Combined, according to a news release, authentic OEM MSRP data, the reconditioning receipts and the new-vehicle brochure accounted for 36.6% of all click activity (99,190 clicks) and 42.3% of total session duration minutes (448,398 minutes).
Rapid Recon founder and chief executive officer Dennis McGinn said the study’s results underscore the value provided in the sales process by reconditioning and proper vehicle documentation in the sales process, which may be surprising news to dealers.
“Buyers are looking for longer useful life from the used vehicles they buy. Information from vehicle reconditioning reports helps provide the information car shoppers crave,” said McGinn, who runs the dealership reconditioning and communications software company.
“Their interest and trust in how a dealership reconditions its used cars should command every dealer’s attention. Displaying proof of this recon-to-retail investment is a value-focused differentiator and proven by the data in this study,” he continued.
Seve Astorg, who is iPacket's founder and chief executive officer, said the study’s goal was to determine what content drives shopper engagement as they research used vehicles and what materials they look at that hold their attention most.
“The recon report lists the mechanical and cosmetic details the dealer invested in to make the used car safe, dependable, and appealing,” McGinn said. “This investment builds trust in the dealership and for the dealer value in the vehicle to hold margin.”
iPacket’s three-month study involved 500 iPacket dealers and 80,000-plus unique vehicle shoppers.
“The results concluded that shoppers recorded approximately half of their click activities and session duration on research data not traditionally found on dealer websites,” Astorg said.
Traditional dealer websites provide consumers photos of vehicles, a vehicle history report, and bullet data points specific to a vehicle, such as the model year, make, and miles.
iPacket solutions can improve dealers’ websites and one-to-one client communication. They do so by providing enhanced research material, such as the original OEM MSRP/build sheets, reconditioning receipts, new car brochures, warranty information, and more for every vehicle they offer for sale.
“Consumers want all the data, and when the data is not at their fingertips, they take it upon themselves to find the information via search engines,” the companies said. “By providing OEM verified data directly from the dealer’s website, consumers can review photos against the build sheets to understand the vehicle more specifically.
“When information also includes reconditioning receipts, consumers will have even greater confidence in knowing what was done to the vehicle they’re shopping for to prepare it correctly for sale,” the companies added.
Other documentation measured for this study included vehicle history reports, warranty information, images, vehicle videos, and dealer “about us” information.
Astorg said the study data suggests that dealers who use the iPacket-enhanced research material record 46.9% more consumer-click activity and shopper session duration than dealers who do not display enhanced research content.
“The data is astonishing, considering the time spent on the average iPacket display is more than 35 minutes by the consumer, further elaborating that they want the data and to be informed,” Astorg said.