Archive for the ‘Armada Data’ Category

Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada) Featured in THE GLOBE AND MAIL

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Newspaper Story: Our client, Armada Data Corporation, (Carcostcanada)  was profiled in this DRIVING SECTION FEATURE STORY in the GLOBE AND MAIL JUNE 3RD, 2010

Five car-buying terms you should know

by Jeremy Cato

2010 Mazda3 Mazda

2010 Mazda3

Before you walk into a car showroom, understand these terms if you want to negotiate the best deal

The Mazda3 compact is now the best-selling car in Canada and Mazda’s sales overall were up in May, a month in which car sales overall were down 10.6 per cent.

If you follow us week-to-week, you know we smell a deal or two when we see an auto maker out-performing the market.

But before we get to the details, have a look at these tips from www.carcostcanada.com (CCC). Having sold cars myself for a brief time, I can vouch for them.

The people at CCC call this list the “five most important car-buying terms you need to know before you buy a new car.” If nothing else, they’ll help you appreciate the deals we chronicle here.

MSRP: Officially, this is the manufacturer’s suggested retail price. Unofficially, CCC calls the MSRP “the price the dealer wants you to pay.” The list or sticker price is what the manufacturer says is a fair price for the dealer to charge. Buyers rarely pay this amount, however.

Dealer Invoice Price: This, says CCC, is the price the dealer pays – and the dealer starts paying it as soon as any vehicle is delivered – typically via a prearranged line of credit. Remember, the dealer starts paying interest on whatever loan or credit line is being used to cover the cost of vehicles. That’s one reason why dealers are motivated to move along vehicles already in stock, on the lot.

Hold Back/ Marketing Assistance: “Most manufacturers help subsidize the interest charges and marketing/advertising that a dealer incurs by paying the dealer a holdback and or marketing assistance dollar amount, after the vehicle has been sold. This amount typically ranges from 2.0 per cent to 2.5 per cent of the dealer invoice price.” Obviously this is money in the dealer’s pocket and helps explain why many dealers will “typically accept an offer of only 3-5 per cent more than the dealer invoice price.”

Factory to consumer incentives: CCC calls these savings on the negotiating table waiting for you to pick up. Incentives stimulate sales, of course, and include cash-back bonuses, cut rate financing and other sweeteners. Some of these can be “stacked” or combined, some not.

Factory to dealer incentives: These often are hidden or kept secret by the dealer in negotiations for a new vehicle. Most dealers factor incentives into negotiations, though not all will explain the details. They are also stackable or not, depending on the circumstance. You will never find factory to dealer incentives advertised.

As for Mazda, here’s what we found on the Mazda3 and the Mazda Tribute small SUV (sport-utility vehicle), based on numbers sourced from www.carcostcanada.com:

2010 Mazda3

2010 Mazda3

2010 Mazda3 GX automatic:

MSRP: $17,195

Freight, dealer prep, air conditioning tax: $1,495

Dealer discount (estimated): $500

Factory discount: $2,000 (Mazda Retail Cash, factory-to-dealer rebate; cash purchases only)

Taxable subtotal: $16,190

Total price with 8 per cent PST and 5 per cent GST: $18,294.70

0.0 per cent finance for five years available, but cannot be combined with Cash

Mazda

2010 Mazda Tribute

2010 Mazda Tribute GS FWD automatic:

MSRP: $24,745

Freight, dealer prep and air conditioning tax: $1,695

Dealer discount (estimated): $1,000

Factory discount: $4,500 (Mazda Retail Cash, factory-to-dealer rebate; cash purchases only)

Taxable subtotal: $20,940

Total price with 8 per cent PST and 5 per cent GST: $23,662.20

0.0 per cent finance for five years available, but cannot be combined with Cash

Suzuki

2010 Suzuki SX4

2010 Suzuki SX4

2010 Suzuki SX4 hatchback: Note that the 0.0 per cent financing for up to 84 months can be combined with other offers.

MSRP: $17,695

Freight, dealer prep and air conditioning tax: $1,495

Dealer discount (estimated): $500

Factory discount: $750 (Stackable Cash, factory-to-dealer rebate)

Taxable subtotal: $17,940

Total price with 8 per cent PST and 5 per cent GST: $20,272.20

2010 Acura MDX

2010 Acura MDX:

MSRP: $51,990

Freight, dealer prep and air conditioning tax: $1,995

Dealer discount (estimated): $2,000

Factory discount: $4,500 (Non-stackable Trading Dollars factory-to-dealer rebate)

Taxable subtotal: $47,485

Total price with 8 per cent PST and 5 per cent GST: $53,658.05

Pricing information source: www.carcostcanada.com.

Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada) interviewed on CKLB RADIO YELLOWKNIFE

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Radio Interview: Our Client Paul Timoteo, President of Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada)  discussed what you need to know before you go and buy a new vehicle.

Click Here To Listen

Armada Data Corporation (CarCostCanada) Interviewed on CJOB RADIO WINNIPEG

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Radio Interview: Our Client Paul Timoteo, President of Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada)  discussed what you need to know before you go and buy a new vehicle.

Click Here To Listen

Armada Data Corporation (CarcostCanada) Interviewed on CFRA RADIO OTTAWA

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Radio Interview:
Our Client Paul Timoteo, President of Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada)  discussed what you need to know before you go and buy a new vehicle.

Click Here To Listen

Armada Data Corporation (CarcostCanada) Interviewed on CKNX RADIO

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Radio Interview: Our Client Paul Timoteo, President of Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada)  discussed the upcoming Toronto International Auto Show, and what you need to know before you go and buy a new vehicle.

cknx_logo

Click Here To Listen

Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada) Interviewed on CAR CONCERNS WITH HARRY DOUGLAS

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Radio Interview: Our Client Paul Timoteo, President of Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada)   discussed what you need to know before you go and buy a new vehicle.

Car Concerns with Harry Douglas

Click Here To Listen

Armada Data Corporation (Carcostcanada) Featured in THE TORONTO STAR

Monday, August 3rd, 2009

Newspaper Story: Our client Paul Timoteo, President of Armada Data Corporation, (Carcostcanada)  was featured in this front Page Business Section Story August 3rd,  2009.

http://www.thestar.com/business/article/675451

Winning A Showdown in New Car Showroom

Car Cost Canada has helped more than 100,000 Canadians find discounts – often substantial – on vehicles they covet

Mon Aug 03 2009

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Former car salesman Paul Timoteo, now the president of Car Cost Canada, say his company aims to “eliminate the haggling nonsense” that can accompany the purchase of a new car.

By Lisa Wright Toronto Star

Paul Timoteo has always been a big-time car guy, and he’s well on his way to becoming Canada’s ultimate car guide.

The former car salesman and president of CarCostCanada.com is positively driven to find consumers the best deal possible when they’re shopping for that sweet new ride, and to help steer clients through this confusing auto market.

Timoteo basically takes the guesswork out of dealing with dealerships, supplying members with dealer cost invoices for $39.95, or $30 for CAA members, through his handy consumer website.

His crack team of researchers gathers new car pricing data and sells the information directly to new vehicle buyers. So far, Car Cost Canada has helped more than 100,000 Canadians get discounts – in many cases substantial discounts – on the cars they covet.

And his 10-year-old business is on the verge of reaching its target of 10 per cent of prospective new car buyers across the country.

“Our approach is to eliminate the haggling nonsense,” says Timoteo, while cruising around town in the brand-new white Mercedes SUV he picked up just a month ago.

Negotiating the lease price “took all of five minutes on the phone” for him, he says.

“Haggling is so old school, and who has the time. But if all you know is the retail price, you have no idea what a good discount is. It’s a challenge for most people.

“This way, they go to the dealership and there are no surprises. The info speaks for itself.”

Timoteo’s company has grown by leaps and bounds in the last few months, given the wonky auto market that has seen behemoths like General Motors and Chrysler hit the skids, and the rest just trying to stay at the wheel in the midst of a crippling recession.

Because business was so bad earlier this year, a lot of dealers didn’t order as many cars for the summer as they normally would have, figuring sales were going to be lousy, he notes. The best deals to be had on a new car were back in April and May, Timoteo says, adding that there’s been some price creep in the market because supply has shrunk.

“The net result is there is a lot of confusion in the marketplace and it’s more confusing to buy a car now than ever,” says Timoteo.

“So people are asking us: `Can you help me figure it out?’”

Timoteo comes by this business pretty naturally.

“My dad had a used-car lot in Toronto. I was the kid who washed the cars and parked the cars, so I grew up with them,” he says.

He then went on to sales at several dealerships over the years, including Ford, Chevy, Honda, Lotus and Alpha Romeo.

His insight into the inner workings of those intimidating dealerships allows him to sniff out the deals – and share his tricks of the trade with consumers.

What buyers need to know, he says, is that two cars with the same retail sticker price are not actually the same price.

Why is that? Well, due to different dealer margins, varying profit levels and changing rebates and incentives, the difference could be thousands of dollars in savings.

Car Cost Canada is a helpful resource that arms consumers with exclusive, up-to-date information on everything from what the dealers actually pay the factory to how to find secret factory rebates, seek out the lower-priced dealers and get the best bottom-line price.

With car sales down roughly 20 per cent in the first quarter of 2009 and big automakers continuing their downward slide, Armada Data Corp. – the Mississauga-based, publicly traded parent company to Car Cost Canada – has seen a 45 per cent jump in sales and a doubling of market share.

And it has plans to expand through acquisition.

A lot of the new business is from cost-conscious women, Timoteo notes.

In the past two years, his members have saved an average of more than $5,500 on GM models and $6,000 on new Cadillacs.

For your membership fee, Car Cost Canada researches up to five vehicles you’re interested in, with bonuses if you fill out website surveys down the road. Members can also share the information they get with friends and family.

New Chevy Equinox owner Aaron Welch couldn’t be happier that he signed up for the service, saying it saved him “a pile of money.”

After he presented seven different dealerships with the information he got from Car Cost Canada, he figures he saved about $1,500 on his 2010 vehicle at a Chevrolet dealer in Mississauga.

“I thought people would laugh at me when I went in. One of them didn’t want to deal with me, but the rest appreciated that I was informed and knew I would negotiate a fair price,” Welch says.

“On my last car, a Pontiac Sunfire, I paid full sticker price and I got totally ripped off because I had no idea about pricing.”

There are different types of cash incentives, Timoteo explains. Automakers can discount the car’s suggested retail price and offer rebates to buyers over and above that amount. There is everything from loyalty bonuses to rebates for recent graduates and military personnel.

As well, the factory can offer rebates directly to dealers. Many of these dealer incentives are rarely advertised, so buyers should do their homework.

Car Cost Canada also provides members with a list of 150 recommended dealerships across the country, including 45 in the GTA. These dealerships have high ratings from members and are receptive to the process. Some dealers, fearing lower profits on sales, are not.

Timoteo recommends members offer a profit of 3 to 5 per cent to the dealer.

Welch, for example, paid the higher end of that range because he liked the salesman – and the fact that there was mutual respect in their transaction.

Timoteo says he doesn’t understand why some dealerships don’t want to get on board.

Dealers, on average, make a profit of 8 per cent to 10 per cent on the sale of a new car. At least with the Car Cost Canada way, dealers are assured a sale, he notes.

“One out of 10 visits to a dealership will result in the customer actually walking out with keys in their hand,” he says. “This way, it’s simple and easy and everyone knows what they’re getting.”

Tony Bellisario, sales manager at Westowne Mazda in Toronto, is all for it.

“The benefit is that you get the leads. It simplifies getting the customer through the door,” he says.

“It’s seamless. Everyone knows what they’re getting.”

Timoteo does not guarantee a minimum for the savings his members get, but estimates it is an average of $1,000, depending on the make of the vehicle.

“The car brokers are worried we are going to put them out of business because this is self service,” he says.

“It’s like an online discount brokerage versus a full-service broker.”

Q&A with Paul Timoteo of Car Cost Canada

Q. What were your total sales and profits in the last year?

A. Somewhere in the area of $1,000,000 in sales and $100-$150,000 bottom line.

Q. How much seed capital did you have when you launched and where did you get it?

A. About $200,000 from private sources.

Q. What’s been your biggest success/failure so far?

A. Our success is being able to grow an online national brand with limited marketing resources. Failure? Not being able to grow it fast enough for my liking.

Q. What are the biggest challenges facing your business?

Teaching new car buyers and new car dealers that buying and selling can actually be an easy and stress-free experience if everyone is equally well informed and expectations are reasonable on both sides. I review daily many of the 300 to 400 member surveys we receive every month and the positive feedback is very encouraging. So I believe we are making a real difference.

Lisa Wright