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Virtual dealership promises no used car salesmen

A virtual used car dealership called Clutch intends to exploit the bad reputation of used car salesmen by offering a service with no sales staff, and a "concierge" to bring the car to the customer for a test drive. No commissions and no showrooms means the startup is also promising lower prices.

Owner of Clutch aims to make buying a second-hand car cheaper and more convenient

Trevor Bergmann, left, chose a car on the Clutch virtual dealership website, and a Clutch 'concierge' delivered it to his workplace for a test drive. (Patrick Callaghan/CBC News)

When Trevor Bergmann of Halifax went looking for a second-hand car, he decided to check out a brand new way to shop for one.

"My partner Jennifer found a vehicle online it linked through to this company, Clutch, and we thought it was the best idea ever," said Bergmann, 36.

Clutch is what could be called a virtual dealership. Instead of visiting one or more showrooms to compare vehicles, consumers browse the website for a used car, and a "Clutch concierge" brings it to their home or workplace for a test drive.

"Going to every dealership to have a look at the vehicles we wanted was less ideal than having somebody bring us the vehicles," says Bergmann, CEO of commercial drone operatorAeroVision, who took a 2017 Ford Explorer for a spin during his lunch hour.

The Clutch website allows consumers to search the company's inventory by make, colour, price and mileage. (Keith Whelan/CBC News)

Innovation is a big deal in this business, given that most Canadians buy second-hand. Consider this: a record number of new vehicles were sold in Canada last year two million but that same number of used cars is sold annually in Ontario alone.

Unlike other online used car sites, such as AutoTrader, which are classified ad sitesthat connect buyers and sellers, Clutch owns all the vehicles in its inventory.

Nationwide expansion planned

Clutch also says itoffers better prices.

"Most new entrants in an industry might provide a better service, but they do it for a bit more money," says co-founder Stephen Seibel. "Think of something like Uber Eatsfood comes to your door but you're paying a premium."

But Seibel says that without the overhead costs of a flashy showroom orcommissions to sales staff,Clutch can price its cars at $2,000 less, on average, than a regular dealership.

He points to CarGurus, a website founded by the co-founder of TripAdvisor, that promises"unbiased insights" on car pricing and dealer reputation.The site shows price savings on Clutch vehicles as high as $4,693 and as low as $400.

Clutch makes money the same way a bricks-and-mortar dealership does:by marking up the prices of cars it buys at wholesale auctions, to create a profit margin. But it can profit with a smaller markupthanks to its online business model and reduced overhead costs.

Stephen Seibel is one of the three partners who co-founded Clutch. (Keith Whelan/CBC News)

So far, the company operates only in Halifax, but it intends to launch in Vancouver by June, then in Montreal by the end of the year, with a plan to be nationwide within five years.

Siebel says as far as he knows, Clutch is the only company of its kind in Canada.

"Canadian auto customers have been deprived of the car buying experience that they deserve," Seibel said. "We truly see Canada as being 30 years behind the U.S. in terms of customer experience for buying a used car."

Sleazy reputation needs fixing

Virtual dealerships have, indeed, taken off in the American marketplace. Carvana, Vroom and Shift are all business models similar to Clutchoperating south of the border. Like Clutch, all promise concierge service and quality guarantees.

Consumers are keen:Arizona-based Carvana was founded in 2012 and now operates in 60 cities. The publicly traded company iscurrently valued at more than $5 billionUSon the stock market.

"Buying a car is the second-largest purchase in a person's life, and they're just having atrocious experiences," Seibel says of the way consumers have traditionally shopped for a used car.

"We want to give them a better option."

Used car dealers have, indeed, been stereotyped over the yearsas sleazy salesmen in plaid sports jackets, interested less in a customer's needs than in scoring a commission. In reality, there are many professional, ethical used car dealerships and dealers, but even the head of their professional association acknowledges an image problem.

Warren Barnard, executive director of the Used Car Dealers Association of Ontario, says his members aren't overly concerned about new, online competition. (Keith Whelan/CBC News)

"Our reputation as an industry still needs to be improved," said Warren Barnard, executive director of the Used Car Dealers Association of Ontario. He saidthe industry is raising its standards through education programs.

"As the new generation of dealers and salespeople come into the industry, they'll have this background behind them, to be more familiar with the increased transparencies, and so some of these questionable practices of the past will be long, long gone and they're on the way out now."

Is Canada ready?

But many Canadian consumers are already moving their car purchases to the internet. Online auctions have become more common. And Canada's largest classified advertising service, Kijiji, is about to launch a standalone new and used vehicle website, Kijiji Autos.

Still, bricks-and-mortar dealerships may not need to fear widespread competition from virtual competitors like Clutch for years.

Seibel says Clutch faced regulatory hurdles in Ontariowhen it first proposed to launch in the province. The Ontario Motor Vehicle Industry Council (OMVIC)said any company involved in the buying and selling of cars must register as a dealer, and that the Clutch business model didn't fit the bill.

Canada's largest classified advertising website, Kijiji, is launching a stand-alone new and used vehicle website, Kijiji Autos. (Kijiji)

That may change by the time Clutch attempts to enter the Ontario marketplace next year.

In an email to CBC News, a spokesperson for OMVIC said the agency acknowledges that the regulations, drafted before 2010, "did not contemplate many of today's emerging business models."

"To that end, OMVIC is working with the government to review and modernize the legislation."

Seibel suspects the regulator's concerns may have easedin partbecause more dealers of both new and used vehicles have begun to offer concierge service.

And he's confident about national expansion, believingthat provincial governments and even other auto dealerswill eventually embrace a moreconvenient way to sell used cars.

Barnard, of the Used Car Dealers Association of Ontario, says his members aren't too worried yet about new online competition.

"Most people are still buying their cars at physical dealerships," he said. "And that will continue for quite a while. This digital market is coming, but it's coming in as more of a tide than a tsunami."