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Remote services are all the rage these days following the first pandemic wave in early 2020 that forced many business, including dealerships, to close their doors to the public. We’ve come a long way since then, but many car dealers are still bucking the trend of offering remote delivery.

Not everyone is sold on the practice though, including Alderman’s Chevrolet-Buick-GMC in Rutland, Vermont, which had experimented with delivering their vehicles all over New England free of charge for seven years, from 2011 through 2018 before ending the service for good. Even during the pandemic lockdown, the dealership decided to go against the prevailing wisdom and continue serving customers locally exclusively with in-story delivery.

What happened?

The decision to end remote services, the practice of delivering vehicles to buyers from hither and yon for free, was not reached easily. Intended as a way to improve customer service, the offer was taken up by many buyers, but the dealership found itself dedicating employees to making deliveries and retaining fewer and fewer customers.

“What we were doing was really spreading ourselves thin, not executing as well and raising expenses,” Mark Alderman, general manager, told Automotive News.

Read Also: Chevy Technician Caught Red-Handed Driving Customer’s C8 Corvette At Over 100 MPH

It’s all comes down to returning customers

The dealership found that up to 30 percent of the 1,100 new and used vehicles it sold annually were delivered across state lines, to people for whom it would not make sense to return for service. It also found that finance and insurance revenue was hurting as a result of the free deliveries.

“We were doing it because we wanted to sell more cars,” Alderman said. “When we looked back on it, there were a lot of benefits to the dealership and the customer experience that get lost when you ship a car.”

By 2014, the dealership reached its lowest customer retention rate of 42 percent. In 2018, Alderman decided to stop offering the service and instead mandated that each new vehicle be delivered in the dealership’s service lane, where customers could take a picture with their new car and a sign proclaiming where they got the car. The photos would then be posted to Facebook and the customers tagged.

Even through the pandemic, when low inventory meant that people from all over New England were shopping for cars anywhere they could find them, Alderman says he doesn’t regret focusing on local. Salespeople do have to make their sales online, but they’ve taken to posting videos that demonstrate vehicle features and hosting Zoom chats with customers to talk them through the purchasing process.

All of which is leading to some of the highest loyalty levels the dealership has ever seen. In 2020, 62 percent of customers were returning customers and so far in 2021, 69 percent have purchased a vehicle with Alderman before.

Dealerships “are afraid of the customer walking away,” Alderman told Autonews. “We just made a deep commitment to not try to be everything to everybody, of trying to be just really excellent in our space.”

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Lets be real: no one needs a pickup truck with 700 hp. But would people want a pickup truck with 700 hp? Absolutely – and that’s exactly what this 2020 GMC Sierra from Hennessey Performance offers.

The Texas tuning company rolled out its Goliath 700 Supercharged upgrade package for the Sierra earlier this year and recently completed work on a special Harley-Davidson example.

The Harley-Davidson edition of the GMC Sierra is the fruit of a collaboration between the motorcycle manufacturer and Tuscany Motor Co. that builds each example in Elkhart, Indiana. It takes inspiration from the 2019 Ford F-150 Harley-Davidson pickup and benefits from no less than 65 changes over a standard Sierra.

Read More: Hennessey’s 2020 GMC Sierra And Chevy Silverado Goliath Will Obliterate A Civic Type R In 0-60 MPH Sprint

Key upgrades include an increased ride height thanks to a BDS suspension lift and new Fox shocks. Each model also features 22-inch milled aluminum wheels wrapped in 35-inch all-terrain tires, while other upgrades include orange accents around the front grille, a functional ram air hood, and an LED light bar.

To make the pickup even more unique, Hennessey’s Goliath 700 package, which can be fitted to all Sierra 6.2-liter models, sees a 2.9-liter supercharger running six pounds of boost mated to the truck’s V8 engine. Other modifications include a high-flow intercooling system, high-flow air induction system custom camshaft, Chromoly hardened pushrods, a crankcase ventilation system and new engine management calibration. This results in 700 hp at 6,300 rpm, allowing the truck to hit 60 mph (96 km/h) in an impressive 4.3 seconds.

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The coronavirus pandemic hammered the auto industry as plants and dealerships were closed due to stay-at-home orders.

Both have since reopened and auto sales have quickly rebounded following steep declines earlier this year. Unsurprisingly, trucks have led the way but demand is on the verge of outstripping supply.

While it’s no secret that truck inventories have been running low, CNBC reports GM is facing “historically low levels” of supply. In particular, the company only has about 20 days worth of GMC Sierra pickups which is far less than the typical 75-90 day supply. The situation is largely the same at Chevrolet as they have approximately 26 days worth of inventory.

Also Read: Pickups Are Cash Cows, But Supplies Are Starting To Run Low

Of course, GM got hit by a double whammy of last year’s UAW strike and then the coronavirus pandemic. Both caused plants to close and inventories levels to drop.

However, GMC’s Duncan Aldred suggested strong sales are primarily responsible as he said “We’re continuing to sell faster than we build. That’s not a comment on the build schedule, that’s a comment on how fast we’re selling them.”

GM’s second quarter results showed year-to-date sales of the Silverado 1500 increased 4.1% compared to 2019, while the GMC Sierra 1500 was up to 6.0%. Sales of the heavy duty variants also climbed on a year-to-date basis.

At the time, GM noted “solid demand translated to stronger average transaction pricing and lower incentives, with full-size pickup ATPs increasing $1,526 (£1,176 / €1,287) versus the first quarter.”

Of course, there are some downsides as customers can have a hard time finding the exact truck they want. Strong demand and low inventories also discourage discounts, so you might have to pay more to get behind the wheel of a pickup.

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