Categories
Business Growth

Get a Jump on that Loan

Brien Joyce Vice President EFG Companies
Contributing Author:
Brien Joyce
Vice President
EFG Companies

I admit it. I fell victim to Amazon Prime Day. However, I still stuck to my guns and completed my due diligence for every purchase. For me, that included researching the price on multiple sites, checking out customer reviews and ratings, and reading the small print on the product description.

I’m not alone in my habits. An Ernst & Young study showed that more than two-thirds of customers now spend less than 10 hours to research their vehicle purchase – down from 15 hours in 2016. This same study showed that consumers spend more time online researching a vehicle than any other online purchase!

In fact, a recent Cox Automotive study found that 43 percent of consumers want to apply for financing or pre-qualify for a loan online. Furthermore, the amount of time spent completing a car purchase is the primary complaint for consumers. Less than half of the car-buyers surveyed were satisfied with the length of the car buying process.

How frequently do your customers contact your financial institution to pre-qualify for an auto loan? Have you run the numbers on your conversion rates between website page views, completed applications, and actual loans finalized? How often do consumers “shop” your site for auto loan rates? If you don’t have the answers to these questions, it’s likely you are losing money on your digital footprint.  Let’s look at some of the areas you should track and manage.

Categories
Business Growth

Are You Appealing to Millennials?

Brien Joyce Vice President EFG Companies
Contributing Author:
Brien Joyce
Vice President
EFG Companies

Millennials are in the market to buy cars. Are you in the market to lend to them?

According to Cox Automotive, Millennials are on pace to account for 40 percent of all vehicle sales by 2020. While it seemed like Millennials would never enter the market the way preceding generations had, this demographic is quickly making up for lost time.

Most of the Millennials with buying power today entered the job market around 2008 with record high student loan debt. Jobs were beyond scarce. High quality talent from Gen X and Boomers had flooded the market due to a markedly higher unemployment rate. It was virtually impossible for a recent college graduate to compete with a more experienced Boomer or Gen Xer for that entry-level job. Everyone was willing to work for less just to get by. These economic conditions made all those milestones of becoming an adult seem that much further away for Millennials. They deferred student loans, went back to school, moved in with their parents, and created innovative ways to save money.

A decade later, Millennials have a much greater ability to buy a vehicle, buy a house, get married and have children. However, their past experiences have greatly impacted their current buying habits. According to Cox Automotive:

  • 83 percent say an affordable monthly payment is very important when selecting a lender.
  • 39 percent financed their vehicle through a lender directly.
  • 54 percent prefer to research financing options online.