Token collectors have a variety of options to choose from - merchant tokens, transportation tokens, parking tokens, even vending machine
tokens. And now there's a vending machine that dispenses automobiles. -Editor
The neighbors have fielded questions for months as the five-story steel and glass structure started to rise from the ground: "What is
that?"
"We just reply that it's a car vending machine," said Anje Clay, who works at the import auto shop next door.
Now that the vehicle dispenser is operational, the online auto retailer can answer for itself. Carvana officials said their
brick-and-mortar retail location in Nashville is more than a head-turning gimmick. This city got the first of this design, but the
Phoenix-based company plans to put these vending machines in many of its markets, which currently stretch from Dallas to Raleigh-Durham.
Atlanta has a more modest version.
"It’s surprisingly practical," Carvana CEO Ernie Garcia said.
Like any vending machine, this one takes coins. But they’re just for show. Drop the oversized Carvana token in the slot, and the gears
start turning inside. A platform rises from the floor and stops at the correct level. The German-engineered robotics pull the car over. The
SUV or sedan drops down, sliding over into a bay for pick-up by the customer.
Here's why Garcia said this spectacle makes sense: with its by-the-interstate location and pulsating neon lights, the vending
machine doubles as a Carvana billboard.
The second reason Garcia said this makes sense: it may save Carvana money on shipping, which is the make or break line-item for an
online dealership.
Home delivery costs Carvana about $200 per vehicle. The company is still offering that service — free of charge. But Garcia, the CEO, is
hoping some buyers will be willing to drive to this central location instead. They still purchase the car online. But before they arrive
for the pick-up, it’s loaded into the vending machine to create some drama around the transaction.
“When a customer comes here, they save us money by not making us go drive to them," he said. "Then we’re able to take that
savings and invest it in an experience that we think is really fun for them.”
Garcia won’t say how much this German-engineered car vending machine cost him to design and build, only that it was less than the
typical start-up investment for a car lot. And, he added, there’s a repairman on standby. That way, he never has to put up the dreaded “out
of order” sign on this vending machine.
To read the complete article, see:
Car 'vending machine' built
to save on delivery costs (www.marketplace.org/2015/12/04/business/car-vending-machine-built-save-delivery-costs)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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