top of page
moses toyota.JPG

Moses Toyota Case Study

49x Gross Profit Return Over 3 Months

66

$220,433

49x

$68

Units
Sold

Gross
Profit

Cost Per
Sale

Gross
ROI

Toyota Store In West Virginia Spends $4500 And Generates $220K In Gross Profit On New Cars

Case study period: 3 months

Total dealership spend: $4500

Average monthly spend: $1500/month

Campaigns: New Car VDP Traffic, New Car Lead Form

Notes: At this time, Moses Toyota in St Albans, WV had been a ShapeShift client for 2.5 years and had a fully optimized New Cars campaign.

mosestoyota.png

The Results

mosestoyota.png

Impressions: the amount of times ads were served

Landing page views: visits to vehicle detail pages

Leads: leads generated from both dealership website and On-Facebook Lead Forms

Offline purchases: cars sold

Offline purchase conversion value: sum of front-end and back-end gross profit on cars sold

How Are Sales Measured?

How Facebook's attribution model works

Facebook's offline purchase attribution is based on last touch, 1 day view or 7 day click. This means that if a customer last sees in an ad and then purchases a car within 1 day, or last clicks on an ad and then purchases a car within 7 days, Facebook will attribute the sale to the ad. However, if for example, a customer clicks on an ad, and then doesn't purchase the car until 9 days later, Facebook will not count this as a sale, even if the ad was responsible for it.

"Sales matchback reports are bullshit!"

Can you relate? Yes sales attribution in the auto industry can be tricky when savvy shoppers are browsing your vehicles on multiple channels before converting. Which channel deserves the credit? Is it the first one the customer discovered the vehicle on? Or is it the one where the customer submitted their lead to?

Our honest thoughts on attribution

If your customer researched your vehicle on multiple channels, then it's a team effort of all of your channels to drive the sale home, and no one channel deserves all of the credit. Regardless if attribution is not 100%, it is still important to track your sales from your Facebook campaign, so we can optimize towards increasing your sales, instead of optimizing for the cheapest click.

You ultimately decide what to do with the data

For our clients, we give them a full report down to the specific deal and customer that Facebook is claiming attribution for. This allows the dealership to see when a customer clicked, when they bought, and decide for themselves how much credit to give to Facebook.

More Case Studies

GET STARTED

bottom of page