http://www.columbian.com/news/2015/dec/25/startups-drive-used-car-buying-experience-online/
Startups drive used-car buying experience online
December 25, 2015  Jennifer Van Grove

[image  
http://www.columbian.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/1225_met_AUTO-USEDSALES_1_S-770x0-c-default.jpg
Shift "car enthusiast" Becca Hertz uses a proprietary app on her iPad to
help appraise a seller's car on Dec. 10 in San Diego. (Nelvin C. Cepeda/San
Diego Union-Tribune)
]

SAN DIEGO — A fleet of technology startups are aiming to upend the old way
of buying and selling used cars, remodeling the often torturous processes
into pleasant ones that require little or no work at all.

One such company, Shift, is pulling into the San Diego region with a Web and
mobile used car marketplace designed by former Googlers. The San Francisco
company, backed by more than $73 million in capital, encourages car sellers
to sit at home and click or tap their way to a sale price that is 30 percent
greater, on average, than what is offered by traditional dealers.

The year-and-a-half-old startup hopes to capture a sizable portion of the
$105 billion used car dealer market, as estimated by industry researcher
IBIS World, with an approach that should feel more glamorous than
gut-wrenching.

“We offer a hassle-free, white-glove experience if you want to sell your
car,” said Minnie Ingersoll, co-founder and chief operations officer at
Shift. “You get an easier experience than Craigslist, and a better price
than a dealership.”

Ingersoll, who helped to create Google Fiber during her 11 years at the
Mountain View Internet titan, said the idea behind Shift first clicked after
she tried to unsuccessfully sell a car on Craigslist. She ended up at a
dealership, opting to accept an unattractive offer over dealing with
strangers.

With Shift, interested sellers need only visit the company’s website and
enter some basic information about their vehicle to receive a quote. The
company then dispatches an employee, called a “car enthusiast,” to the
seller’s location to perform a 15-minute evaluation of the car and make a
firm offer. The price is calculated by dissecting car sales data in local
markets.

“We use an algorithm, and it’s based on how fast we think we can sell your
car, or demand from markets,” Ingersoll said.

Should the seller accept the deal, Shift takes the car into its possession,
puts it through a rigorous inspection and detailing process, snaps
professional photos and uses its founders’ Google prowess to intelligently
list the vehicle across a variety of sites. And, if Shift sells the car for
more than the original offer, it will split the extra proceeds, 50-50, with
the customer. Plus, no matter what, the seller will always receive at least
the amount originally offered.

The selling process, Ingersoll said, generally takes less than 30 days, and,
if Shift can’t find a buyer, the seller is paid after 60 days.

Shift operates a two-sided marketplace, meaning the company offers a
similar, hands-off experience for would-be buyers who also want to avoid the
dealership experience. Shift’s buying component, however, won’t arrive in
San Diego until the company establishes a warehouse locally, which it plans
to do early next year.

Currently, Shift operates warehouses in San Francisco and Los Angeles, and
uses the locations to house and prep its for-sale inventory. The idea is to
keep cars in close proximity to local buyers, as part of Shift’s twist is to
deliver a car, on demand, to a prospective buyer’s home or office, leaving
one of the core tenets of old-fashioned car-buying intact: the test drive.

The test drive, however, turns out to be a divisive detail in the debate as
to whether online used car players can effectively sell direct to consumers.

“Our experience at (Kelley Blue Book) is that people still want to see the
car they want to buy,” said Jack Nerad, an executive market analyst with
Kelley Blue Book.

Yet startup Beepi, a licensed online dealer of used cars, has been operating
its alternative auto business, a competitor to Shift, in San Diego since
March and insists the test drive is a thing of the past.

“We think of car buying and car selling in a completely different way,” said
Alejandro Resnik, CEO of Beepi. “We eliminated the test drive from the
process. It’s better for sellers; better for buyers.”

For sellers, he said, the advantage is being able to keep — and continue to
drive — your car while Beepi works to sell it online. Whereas with Shift,
you need to hand your vehicle over to the company during the sale process.

Those who buy with Beepi may not get to kick the tires, but they do get the
reassurance of being able to return the vehicle for any reason in 10 days.
That plus a 240-point inspection should allay any reservations about buying
cars sight unseen, Resnik believes. And shoppers do benefit by not having to
limit browsing to local-only inventory. With Beepi, a buyer can choose a car
from any of the startup’s markets, which span nine states and 15
metropolitan areas.

“If you like it, you buy it,” Resnik said. “Seven days later, a beautiful
car will show up with a bow on top.”

Test drive or not, Shift, Beepi and other tech novices looking to change the
age-old car-selling game are fighting against a tried-and-true formula that
may not be as ripe for disruption as the companies’ think.

“There is a perception, real or not, and I think not, that the current
system is broken,” Nerad said. “It’s great that people are always trying to
find a better mouse trap, but there are some things that, I think, are going
to be hard to change.”

Consumers may not always love the car-buying process in the moment, he said,
but most are pretty satisfied once it’s completed.

“When you have convenience plus (a better) price, it’s not a hugely
difficult thing to change consumer behavior,” said Emily Melton, a partner
at venture firm DFJ and a Shift board member.

Melton may be biased, but her firm isn’t new to the automotive business.
DFJ, which co-led Shift’s Series A financing round with Highland Capital
last fall, was a substantial investor in electric car-maker Tesla. And
Highland Capital was an investor in CarMax, the current leader in used car
sales.

The easiest sell is convincing people to turn to Shift or Beepi when looking
to offload a vehicle. All you really need to feel comfortable in that
scenario is a big check that won’t bounce.

When Najé Evans of El Cajon was looking to sell his 2015 Kia Optima Hybrid,
he went back to the dealer where he bought the car. After the experience
proved disappointing, a friend who worked at the dealership pointed him to
Beepi.

“At first Beepi priced (the car) $6,000 over what Team Kia (of El Cajon) was
offering, but Beepi actually ended up giving us $7,500 more,” Evans said.
“Beepi made it easy . I can do thing everything without lifting a finger —
literally.”

The testimonial suggests the online-only model has real legs, or wheels
rather.
[© 2015 columbian.com]
...
http://www.nwaonline.com/news/2015/dec/28/online-firms-buying-selling-used-cars-2/
Online firms buying, selling used cars
December 28, 2015  California startups offer transactions without
negotiations, trips to dealer
...
https://driveshift.com/
(Shift - app selling and buying used cars. CA cities & WashDC)




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