Anything can be sold online.... BUT
Initial reading of the title may make you think this article is
in completely the wrong category. Read on... I am a freelance
web developer and a recent contract for a small family business
in Wales changed my vision on the motor car completely. First, a
little background on the company - a wholesale motor factor
selling parts to cars, auto refinishing products and providing
an automotive electronics repair service. Started in 1963 by an
ex-World War II RAF pilot, who started by selling car batteries
to local garages in the South Wales valleys. Now into its 3rd
generation of family and the Internet opening a whole new world
of customers, a web site was required.
My first consultation was used as a teaching exercise - a three
hour meeting informing the owners of how the process will work
and the options they have, from domain names to content
management systems, the whole lot was described - until they
knew what they wanted, I couldn't start. My second visit to the
store involved me spending time with the telesales department
and using the stock control system. The stock control system was
UNIX based and developed especially for the automotive industry,
not being up with UNIX, I sat down and index fingered my way
through it. My first "purchase" would be a CV joint for my 2002
Mini Cooper, which, took me the best part of a morning to
process - not because I had no idea of the system (which was
very user friendly), not because I entered the details wrong,
not because my Mini Cooper didn't have a CV joint, but because
there were so many options.
Think about it, a new car is revealed, just like software, bugs
are found and with the next release they are fixed. Which means
within a year a car can have no cosmetic changes but have
hundreds of mechanical changes. All previous versions of parts
still have to be manufactured; unlike software, the driver
cannot just upgrade or use a patch.
In one year there may be several revisions or temporary changes,
for example, the 1999 Rover 200 series BRM. During manufacture
it was discovered that there weren't enough CV joints produced
to keep production rolling, Rover executives instructed that the
BRM be changed to accept CV joints off the 1999 Rover 45 (of
which there were plenty). This change was made for 6 months
until the backlog of BRM CV joints were manufactured - years
later BRM CV joints start failing and need replacing, according
to computer systems the BRM has its own specific CV joints but
for those manufactured within the 6 month period in 1999 accept
a Rover 45 CV joint only - to program this knowledge into a
system would be incredibly hard and not feasible.
After this day, I looked at the telesales department in a
completely different light as they choose the correct part the
caller is requesting in minutes through a combination of
database querying non-documented knowledge. After weeks of
consultation we user friendly web based solution was developed
and an efficient process to match.
>From the 1st quarter of 2006, Autoparts (S.Wales) Ltd. -
www.apsw.co.uk will be
launching their new online car part store, selling products such
as QH, Fram, Mintex and Denso.