Showing posts with label JEEP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JEEP. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Survival on dealer's row

john_zapp.03.jpg
John Zapp on his lot in Oklahoma City

A veteran car salesman turns to used cars to stay afloat.

By Alex Taylor III, senior editor

(Fortune Magazine) -- John Zapp's car dealerships - a Buick-Pontiac-GMC outlet and a Dodge-Chrysler-Jeep store - sit right on auto dealers' row in Oklahoma City, a mile-long stretch on the north side of town that's home to some 28 lots. All over this region the car business is soft, hurt by a slowing economy, high gas prices, and inventory from Detroit that isn't selling. Zapp and his salespeople watch as customers stream to Toyota and Honda next door. In January his gross profit per unit on new cars at his GM store was about a quarter as much as the Toyota outlet's - and he sold just a third as many new vehicles.

But after four decades in the car business, the 52-year-old salesman has learned that complaining about Detroit's shortcomings doesn't sell cars. "We decided this is all the floor traffic we're going to have, and we just have to do a better job with it," Zapp says. So he has shifted focus at his dealerships to a more lucrative practice: selling used cars.

He picked the right place. Nationally, car dealers sell two new cars for every used one; here on the southern plains, where mild winters ease the wear and tear, the ratio is closer to one to one. That's good for Zapp. All new cars leave the factory in the same condition, making it easy for consumers to comparison-shop, but each used car is different. So while he often makes a gross profit of $1,000 a unit on a new car, he can make twice that on a three-year-old used one.

Zapp has learned that the key to a successful used-car business is turning inventory. He can quickly size up a car's value and get rid of the slow sellers (hello, Chevy Suburban) by adding extras or running ads. Rather than maintaining a stock of 200 vehicles that turns every 60 days, as many dealers do, Zapp keeps 100 or so and turns them in half the time. "Volume is what matters," he says, pausing to send a stream of tobacco juice into a Styrofoam cup. "It keeps inventories clean, salespeople happy, and dealership owners off your back."

The strategy has been working. At his GM (GM, Fortune 500) store in January, Zapp outsold the nearby Toyota (TM) outlet in used cars while keeping just a 27-day supply. Better still, his profit per unit on used cars was seven times higher than on new cars, and used cars contributed 96% of his gross profit on vehicle sales.

Another tactic: Keeping salespeople eager by rewarding them with small cash payments for hitting targets. "Salespeople for the most part stay broke," he says. "If we can put $200 to $300 in their pocket for the weekend, it makes a difference."

On those rare occasions when he gets his hands on a hot new model, Zapp squeezes out every last penny. When four-door Jeep Wranglers were in short supply last year, he charged $500 to $1,000 over the sticker price. And he's looking forward to the arrival of the Dodge Challenger SRT-8, a reengineered version of the 1970s muscle car. He's expecting nostalgic baby-boomers to pay him $15,000 to $20,000 over the $38,000 sticker for the six units he's been allocated.

"The best used-car retailers are always the best new-car dealers," says Earl Hesterberg, CEO of Group 1 Automotive (GPI, Fortune 500), the publicly traded dealer chain that owns Zapp's lots. "If they know they can retail a customer trade-in off their own used-car lot, they can put $500 to $1,000 more into that trade - which makes a lot of incremental new-car deals." That hasn't helped new Pontiac sales, which are a third what they were a decade ago. But thanks to his used cars, Zapp made money at both his outlets in January, while two competing domestic dealers ran in the red. Struggling dealers take note: When Detroit sends you lemons, sell lemonade.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

DRIVERS LOG: '08 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited CRD



'08 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED CRD
IN FLEET: Feb. 14-27
AS-TESTED PRICE: $43,795
DRIVETRAIN: 3.0-liter turbodiesel V6; 4wd, five-speed automatic
OUTPUT: 215 hp @ 3800 rpm, 376 lb-ft @ 1600-2800 rpm
CURB WEIGHT: 4724 lb
FUEL ECONOMY (EPA): 19 mpg


JEWETT: The diesel engine is a great addition to the Grand Cherokee. It starts right up with no smoke, idles quietly enough that you don't have to shut it down in order to place your burger order at the drive-through and squirts away from a stop without causing the fuel gauge to hightail it toward the empty mark. It's $1,600 well spent if you were going to buy a Grand Cherokee.

That said, I wouldn't take ownership of this SUV if you gave it to me for free. Here's why: In less than a day of driving, I'm pretty sure I've sustained a mild concussion from getting in and out of the Grand Cherokee. The culprit is the side-curtain airbag.

I'm all for safety technology. ABS, traction control, stability control, airbags all around-I want all this technology in the vehicles my family and friends drive. The problem comes from the side-curtain airbag, combined with a raised ride height and a seat that's been set up even higher off the floorpan. (It seems as if most carmakers are convinced that everyone wants to drive around with his head in the clouds!) Bottom line: I can't get in or out of this thing without whacking my head on the edge of the headliner that holds that side-curtain airbag-no matter how I contort my body. And there's not enough adjustment in the power driver's seat to negate this.

There's a generous amount of cargo room in back, but rear-seat passengers are punished with incredibly little foot room, and the back-seat cushion sits pretty low--an aid for headroom but torturous on the legs after anything but a short trip.

My recommendation for a vehicle with some cargo room and a nice diesel engine would be a new-tech Mercedes-Benz Bluetech E-class wagon.

Toledo-made Jeeps post sales declines


Sales of Toledo-made Jeep Libertys and Wranglers fell again last month as all three Detroit automakers posted significant sales declines in the face of weak economic conditions in North America.

Sales of the Wrangler dropped 23 percent in February from the same period last year, from 9,240 units to 7,088. Sales of the Jeep Liberty declined just 3 percent from a year ago, from 7,588 to 7,350.

Chrysler LLC reported an overall sales decline of 14 percent in February from a year earlier. By comparison, sales at Ford Motor Co. fell 10 percent, and at General Motors Corp. dropped 16 percent last month. Other automakers also posted declines.

However, on a conference call with analysts, Chrysler executives found reason to be optimistic about the two Toledo-made Jeeps.

Steven Landry, Chrysler executive vice president for North American sales, argued that Wrangler sales were bound to decline given their astounding performance last year, when Jeep introduced the four-door Wrangler Unlimited.

"We're now into comparing ourselves month-to-month last year, and last year Wrangler hit it out of the park," Mr. Landry said.

Sales of the Toledo-made Dodge Nitro, which shares most major components with the Jeep Liberty and sells at a lower price, fell 29 percent last month from a year ago, from 5,974 units to 4,255. The Nitro has been cited as one of several models that may be eliminated as Chrysler modifies its product lineup under new owner Cerberus Capital Management LP.

Mr. Landry said sales of the Toledo-made Liberty have pleased Chrysler executives. Even though the midsized SUV posted an overall decline, "retail sales of the Liberty were up over 20 percent over last year," he said, explaining that the overall decline was caused by reduced fleet sales.

GM's sales slid on weaker demand for such large trucks as the Chevrolet Silverado pickup and Chevy Tahoe and Saturn Vue sport utility vehicles. It also said it would cut second-quarter production by 5 percent from year-ago levels.

Ford said it will cut second-quarter production by 10 percent because of weaker demand for its F-Series full-size pickups and SUVs like the Explorer and Expedition. The company said it will eliminate shifts at four U.S. plants and lay off 2,500 workers - or almost 5 percent of its remaining work force - as part of an effort to cut costs and return to profitability.

Japan's Toyota Motor Corp. and Nissan Motor Co. Ltd. reported February sales declines of 6.6 percent and 3 percent, respectively, and Honda Motor Co. Ltd. did the best among major automakers with an increase of nearly 1 percent.

Analysts expect industrywide 2008 U.S. auto sales to extend a downturn that began to accelerate in the second half of last year, reflecting the slumping housing market, higher gas prices and tighter credit. Some industry observers have even predicted a 15-year low for sales this year.

- LARRY P. VELLEQUETTE

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

SUV safety improves, but soft spots remain

nissan_murano.03.jpg
The 2009 Nissan Murano won IIHS' "Top Safety Pick" award
Video
Top family rides
A closer look at some of Kelley Blue Book's picks for the best new family vehicles.
Video
Detroit concept cars
Check out some of the concept cars on display at the Detroit Auto Show.

Highway safety group says Hummer H3, Jeep are less than stellar. Names Nissan Murano as a top safety pick.

By Ben Rooney, CNNMoney.com staff writer

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Midsize SUVs are becoming safer, but side and rear impact crashes remain a weakness, according to recent testing by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety.

The IIHS conducts crash tests in three main areas: font, side and rear. Of the ten vehicles tested, nearly all received the top rating of "good" in the frontal crash protection test.

The one exception was General Motors' (GM, Fortune 500) Hummer H3, which earned an "acceptable" rating in the front evaluation, one step below "good" on the scale. The 2008 H3 also received an "acceptable" rating in the side evaluation and a "poor" rating, which is the lowest possible score, in the rear crash protection test.

Nick Richards, a Hummer spokesman, pointed out that the H3 meets or exceeds all federal crash safety standards. "The Insurance Institute tests represent one measurement of crash performance," he said in a statement.

In the side test, the Jeep Liberty, Jeep Wrangler, Dodge Nitro and Kia (KIMTF) Sorento, all 2008 models, were the worst performers. The Liberty, Wrangler and Nitro all received the second-lowest rating "marginal," while the Sorento had the lowest rating of "poor."

Joe Nolan, the Insurance Institute's senior vice president, said in the report that the side impact evaluation revealed some "surprising" results.

"SUVs should have an inherent advantage in such [side] crashes because drivers and passengers ride higher up than in cars. People often think they're safer in an SUV, but many cars perform much better in our side test than some of the SUVs in this group."

The IIHS report noted that the Jeep Wrangler was tested without its optional combination head and torso side airbags. Manufacturers may request a second test with the airbag option at their own expense. But Chrysler, which makes the Wrangler, did not request another test, according to the report.

"We assume that Chrysler doesn't expect the Wrangler to perform much better, even with the optional airbags," Nolan said in the report.

Max Gates, a Chrysler spokesman, said in a statement that the IIHS report contains "unsupported speculation" about the company's reasons for not paying to conduct a second side impact test for the Wrangler.

"In fact, our internal testing indicates there is additional protection provided by side air bags," he said.

The 2009 Nissan (NSANY) Murano received top ratings in all three categories and was named a Top Safety Pick by the Insurance Institute. That means it earned the best possible ratings for front, side and rear impact protection, and it's available with electronic stability control.

Overall SUV safety has been improving over the last few years as manufacturers add safety features like ESC and side airbags, according to the Insurance Institute.

In 2001, only half of the midsize SUVs tested by the IIHS earned "good" ratings in the frontal offset tests. In the latest round of testing, only one vehicle was rated below "good."

"Increasingly, consumers are getting the latest safety equipment without having to hunt through a list of options," Nolan said. To top of page