By Clare Saliba E-Commerce Times
06/13/01 2:03 AM PT
During the past year, nearly 400,000 AOL subscribers signed up for GM sweepstakes or
requested brochures on the automaker's products, the companies said.
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America Online (NYSE: AOL)
and General Motors (NYSE: GM)
announced Wednesday that they are extending a marketing and
advertising alliance to push for the sale of the auto giant's
cars on the Internet.
As part of the "multimillion dollar" agreement, the companies
will continue to promote GM's full line of cars and trucks
across AOL and its other interactive brands, including Netscape.com,
CompuServe and Digital City.
AOL and GM also said they will continue to co-promote the
GMBuyPower.com Web site, which enables consumers to locate
an automobile in a dealer's inventory, access finance tools,
view special Internet-only offers and e-mail dealers for price quotes.
GM spokesperson Ryndee Carney told the E-Commerce Times that
the companies originally formed an alliance in January 2000,
but declined to specify the duration of the new agreement.
According to published reports, Wednesday's deal allows them
to extend the relationship through January 2002.
During the past year, nearly 400,000 AOL subscribers signed
up for GM sweepstakes or requested brochures on the automaker's
products, the companies said.
Steering Traffic
Although some recent studies have found that automakers need to
focus their online efforts on building brand awareness, rather
than generating new car sales, a report released last month by
Jupiter Media Metrix also concluded that portals -- such as AOL --
are the single largest source of traffic
for automaker and third-party sites.
In fact, Jupiter said that automaker sites receive 36 percent of their
traffic from portals, and third-party sites garner 47 percent of their
traffic from them, which could bode well for the AOL-GM deal.
"We continue to integrate
the online medium into the auto-shopping experience,"
said e-GM North America general director Katherine Benoit.
"We've worked together to give AOL members more information
about GM products and to strengthen the ties between consumers
and our dealer network."
Full Throttle
GM has been expanding its presence in the online automotive
market with several deals. In February, it
inked a deal with Autobytel.com
to test an online shopping system that will show consumers which
cars are available for purchase in their area.
GM said the trial run, which began in May and is slated to
run for 90 days, will provide the company and its dealers
with a blueprint for creating an online locate-to-order system.
The cars shown to consumers will bear dealer-set Web prices.
During the same month, the giant automaker also said it
would form a partnership
with its network of dealers to build a Web shopping site called
AutoCentric, which will offer GM cars as well as other brands.
In addition, GM has a marketing alliance with eBay Motors.
New Web 'Patrol' Looks To Lasso Wayward Shoppers June 12, 2001
'I don't know how other e-tailers might react to this,' a Half.com spokesperson said when
asked if competing e-tailers might try to find ways to block Half.com's
Price Patrol feature.
Chrysler Taps IBM for E-Commerce Upgrade June 07, 2001
In contrast to its automaker rivals, DaimlerChrysler has thus far
taken a relatively tame approach to developing an e-commerce presence.
Study: European Auto Sites Enjoy Traffic Surge April 25, 2001
Jupiter MMXI found that the European audience for automotive
Web sites in March 2001 was more than 70 percent male, falling primarily
into the age bracket of 25- to 34-year-olds.
Jupiter, NetRatings Renew Patent Lawsuit January 21, 2002
Though still pursuing their merger, Internet measurement firms Jupiter Media Metrix
and NetRatings now intend to re-open their patent litigation.