Survey: 1 In 5 New-Car Buyers Skips Test Drive

11 years, 11 months ago - 28 November 2012, Automotive News
Survey: 1 In 5 New-Car Buyers Skips Test Drive
One in five U.S. new-car buyers and lessees did not test drive a single vehicle, a new IBM Corp. auto-retail survey shows. But pollsters disagree about what will become of test drives in the future.

The survey found 21 % did not test drive a single vehicle, while more than half test drove only one or two vehicles other than the one they purchased or leased.

"Fifty % of the marketplace zeroed right in on the car they wanted, took it out for a drive, then went out and bought it," said Kalman Gyimesi, industrial-automotive leader for IBM. "One of the key parts of the dealership process has always been the test drive."

The IBM results show more buyers skipping the test drive than a similar survey by Maritz Research. Maritz's June survey, the most recent one available, found 11 % of U.S. new-car buyers did not test drive the vehicle they purchased.

Changing technology

Chris Travell, Maritz vice president of strategic consulting, agreed that more Americans are skipping test drives but said surveying methodology may be behind the different results: "It looks like IBM cast the net a little bigger." The IBM survey "would suggest that fewer American car buyers are test driving on the whole, which is a concern since so much has changed in vehicle technology from the last time they were in the market."

Travell said if IBM's survey is accurate, it means the problem is more serious than the Maritz survey shows.

In October, IBM asked 2,029 adult car buyers in the United States between the ages of 18 and 65 who had purchased or leased a new car in the past three years whether they took any test drives.

For its latest report, Maritz asked more than 120,000 people who had bought a 2012 model vehicle between October 2011 and June 2012 whether they test drove the vehicle they eventually purchased.

The pollsters disagree about what will become of test drives in the future. Gyimesi predicts the %age of consumers forgoing the test drive will continue to rise, as reliable information sources such as Consumer Reports and Kelley Blue Book grow and improve.

Also, physical test drives will decrease as automakers step up their efforts to stimulate the car-buying experience through virtual automotive showrooms allowing the consumer to interact with a 3-D rendition of the vehicle on a video wall, he said. Gyimesi said Jaguar Land Rover, Audi and Nissan have begun experimenting with virtual showrooms, which eventually will expand to tablets and smartphones.

"These channels for attracting customers and selling to them are in their very early stages and will continue to grow," he said. "I expect all of this will make the desire for a physical test drive lower for consumers."

A comeback?

But Travell predicts test drives will make a comeback as dealers encourage consumers to experience new technology firsthand. The average new-car consumer is out of the market for six and a half years between purchases, he said.

"It's in the customer's best interest to take the vehicles they are considering out for a test drive since there is no substitute for being behind the wheel and experiencing everything the vehicle has to offer," Travell said. "From the dealer's standpoint, they need to encourage it for the same reasons."

The IBM survey also found 40 % of car buyers visited only one dealership -- the one where they purchased their vehicle.

In addition, 42 % spent less than five hours researching their most recent vehicle purchase, and 24 % researched only one car -- again, the one they purchased.