By on January 7, 2012

First fallout of  TrueCar.com’s run-in with regulators: TrueCar suspended its service in Colorado. In an e-mail sent to dealers, a Colorado TrueCar account manager told his flock that the suspension is voluntary while TrueCar tries to work out with the state how to “conform to the rules of the road in your state.” In the e-mail, obtained by Automotive News [sub], TrueCar account manager Thuy Adomitias writes:

“We feel comfortable that we will be able to address any regulatory issues by Jan. 17, at which point we will be reactivating our service, including automatically reactivating your account.”

Colorado was not the only state that put TrueCar under the magnifying glass.  Regulators and dealer associations in several other states had contacted TrueCar. However, TrueCar did not extend the suspension to other states.

TrueCar said it will comply with all state laws and will change its Web site and methods if necessary.

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13 Comments on “TrueCar On Ice In Colorado...”


  • avatar
    Tstag

    Is that an MG F?

  • avatar
    siuol11.2

    Could we get a little backstory? This article tells me nothing.

    • 0 avatar
      Mike

      https://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/2012/01/truecar%E2%80%99s-troubles-could-change-the-way-we-shop-for-cars-back-to-the-past/

      This comes from the first clickable link within the story, the red portion “First fallout of TrueCar.com’s run-in with regulators:.”

  • avatar

    I’m not sure TrueCar understands the meaning of “law.” These are old laws. EVERYONE knew about them. But apparently they decided that it’s easier to beg forgiveness than ask permission. This is often the way to go, but state legislatures that cater to local interests are probably an exception.

    • 0 avatar
      daveainchina

      Let’s hope that they can get this laws removed. I like their model of business and it fits the more modern connected world we live in. I think this is one of those things dealers will have to adapt to. One process I always hated was the bargaining process for cars. So many places in American society we don’t bargain anymore.

      Because of this, I think that this really leaves too huge an advantage to the dealer when it comes to bargaining. Too much of the population no longer has much bargaining skill. Times are changing and this is giving customers a way to bargain much more evenly. The dealers that are crying foul play etc.. boohoo they’ve had it too easy for such a long time. Much like the record industry and everything else, figure out a better method of making profit than fleecing people who can’t bargain.

      I hope they succeed in their business model, but we’ll have to see how that goes, I suspect this is going to take years to settle in courts and in the different legislatures.

      • 0 avatar
        carbiz

        The real issue is that there is no way of knowing what exactly a good deal is. You take the MSRP as the baseline, but the price varies according to supply, demand, time of year, time of the month, etc. Unless your ride is written off and you absolutely need a car NOW, it seems like the variables are endless.
        Newsflash: there is no way to absolutely abolish those variables. If you want to use a 3rd party, either by paying them directly (as in the invoice purchasing services), or indirectly (by the dealer ‘kicking back’ to the 3rd party for their service), then knock yourself out.
        For me, life is too short. Time too valuable. After I’ve done my research, shopping, etc. to decide which vehicle of the thousands available I want, a visit to 2 dealers and 2 prices when I am ready is just fine by me.
        Do not believe the shock stories about people who saved ‘thousands.’ It’s like winning the lottery: someone has to win it, but he/she will be one out of a million, literally.
        There’s no magic, only propaganda and urban mythology.

        Well, that and our ‘me-first’ attitudes where one bad story emanating from a retail outlet (any retail outlet) and suddenly they are the Source of All Evil in the Known Universe.
        Gawd forbid retailers made money these days. Give all the business to the internet, by all means.

      • 0 avatar
        Dynamic88

        @ Daveinchina It sound as if you are contending that Americans don’t bargain as much as they used to do in some past era. I’m not sure I agree with that. Seems to me that people do more bargaining now than a generation or two ago. I could be wrong, but that’s how it appears to me.

        If the advantage were with the dealer, why are there so many mini deals now? And why are we constantly reminded that new cars don’t make money for the dealer – it’s all in the service dept., body shop, used cars, etc. ?

      • 0 avatar
        Pch101

        You take the MSRP as the baseline

        A smart car shopper will use invoice, less holdback and incentives as a baseline.

  • avatar
    Dynamic88

    @carbiz

    A good deal is a state of mind. You’ll never know if I got the same car for a $1 less, or if I paid a $1 more. And all the variables will make comparing apples to apples nearly impossible.

  • avatar
    Stan Esposito

    I agree with people who say the way of buying a car is outdated. I also believe truecar is not the replacement. They take transaction data from their members and sell it to third parties. They charge the dealer $300 per deal. Who do you think pays the $300? They give prices to cars that don’t exist they have no inventory of their own but they set prices on everyone elses?

    • 0 avatar
      daveainchina

      yup it’s outdated but shutting down truecar because of outdated laws is not a good way to encourage innovation in this arena.

      @carbiz

      yes I think people in the USA don’t bargain well. We don’t have the skill/practice at it that people in many other countries do who bargain everyday for everything.

      Car sales people bargain everyday all day long, that is their job. Bargaining is a skill much like anything else and if you don’t practice it, you tend to not be very good at it. Quite simple really. Whether people are bargaining now more than they used to is irrelevant, in general, the average person does not have much practice bargaining so the dealer will always have an unfair advantage here over the average person.

      Cross shopping is one technique to help, but it doesn’t beat simply knowing the average transaction price. We can use techniques to mitigate our disadvantage but we are still at that disadvantage. /shrug

      I want to see more creativity in how cars are sold, I truly feel the way they are sold now is an outdated model. I think we would be happier to see a new way of selling cars. I doubt though that will happen in the near future.

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