@ Zissou - I'm Chris a Carlypso Co-Founder. I'm always up for a friendly talk!
Getting the pricing to be reliably accurate was one of the biggest challenges. We tried many of the third party tools only to realize that most were not accurate for our needs.
We do a few things that distinguish our pricing from other sources after realizing no third-party tool worked particularly well. Granted, there are anomalies but here's a few brief guiding principles:
(1) As you pointed out the region matters - a truck in TX is not the same as one in central San Francisco.
(2) A listing is not the same as a sale. Dealers often attempt to hold gross margin when a car comes in, then gradually reduce to market rates to sell the car in a period of 30-45 days (e.g. price it high to start and then lower it). We measure how long a given car has been listed on a dealer's site, and often cars listed for a higher price only sell after they are reduced to a lower price. We can do some validation of the final negotiation with DMV records and comparing those values to final listing prices. Fewer and fewer cars have large negotiating margin.
(3) You can measure the relative demand and supply of the vehicle market by looking at the flow rate of the vehicle relative to the total local market supply (E.g. measure how many civics sell in a given month relative to how many are available that month).
(4) Everyone claims their vehicle is perfect but every vehicle we inspect needs some level of refurbishment so we factored that into our pricing to give "average levels". If a car truly is perfect, we're more than happy to help sell it for more than we predicted, we just prefer to be direct and honest upfront rather than reduce prices after the inspection occurs.
(5) The price floor is always set by what someone else would pay in very short notice. This is most easily observable by looking at auction values.
As a side-note, pricing a rare car is virtually impossible --- we can only price cars where there's a significant market and low levels of heterogeneity. The variance on a 1967 Porsche 912 can't be estimated by traditional models since a numbers match car with Fuch's wheels and three gauges is worth more than a restored car with non-numbers match engine, 5 gauges and re-welded floor pans.
I just checked your site out and wanted to give a little feedback since I like the idea after some mulling.
To buy a car it's somewhat annoying. There is no good way to filter based on things such as transmission for example or search based on anything at all such as location or price even. I have to go through the whole list and as you grow that will be no longer viable, it was already a pita.
Also when I go to an individual car there are very few details. The photos are good and what a lot of terrible CL ads lack, but it would be nice to have the specific engine in the car for example since in many cars there are many options there. I also expected a list of options and standard items like carmax gives.
Finally you should include the VIN, I always have a friend run it for me before I even see a car, that has saved me so much time.
Getting the pricing to be reliably accurate was one of the biggest challenges. We tried many of the third party tools only to realize that most were not accurate for our needs.
We do a few things that distinguish our pricing from other sources after realizing no third-party tool worked particularly well. Granted, there are anomalies but here's a few brief guiding principles:
(1) As you pointed out the region matters - a truck in TX is not the same as one in central San Francisco. (2) A listing is not the same as a sale. Dealers often attempt to hold gross margin when a car comes in, then gradually reduce to market rates to sell the car in a period of 30-45 days (e.g. price it high to start and then lower it). We measure how long a given car has been listed on a dealer's site, and often cars listed for a higher price only sell after they are reduced to a lower price. We can do some validation of the final negotiation with DMV records and comparing those values to final listing prices. Fewer and fewer cars have large negotiating margin. (3) You can measure the relative demand and supply of the vehicle market by looking at the flow rate of the vehicle relative to the total local market supply (E.g. measure how many civics sell in a given month relative to how many are available that month). (4) Everyone claims their vehicle is perfect but every vehicle we inspect needs some level of refurbishment so we factored that into our pricing to give "average levels". If a car truly is perfect, we're more than happy to help sell it for more than we predicted, we just prefer to be direct and honest upfront rather than reduce prices after the inspection occurs. (5) The price floor is always set by what someone else would pay in very short notice. This is most easily observable by looking at auction values.
As a side-note, pricing a rare car is virtually impossible --- we can only price cars where there's a significant market and low levels of heterogeneity. The variance on a 1967 Porsche 912 can't be estimated by traditional models since a numbers match car with Fuch's wheels and three gauges is worth more than a restored car with non-numbers match engine, 5 gauges and re-welded floor pans.
- Chris