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Black Book (National Auto Research)

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The Black Book family of vehicle appraisal guides, widely known in the automotive industry for providing timely, independent and accurate vehicle pricing data, is published by National Auto Research, a division of Hearst Business Media. New and used car dealers, lenders, manufacturers, fleet remarketers, and government agencies have relied on Black Book since 1955.

Black Book provides values for both new and used vehicles, including cars, light trucks, and collectible vehicles produced since 1946, motorcycles, ATVs, snowmobiles, personal watercraft, and heavy duty commercial trucks and trailers. Other products include VIN decoding software, projected residual values, inventory management tools, and lead generation applications.

Black Book data is published daily in multiple electronic formats including data feeds, Internet-based applications, handheld PDAs, Web-enabled cell phones, Pocket PCs, BlackBerry and Palm devices, smart phones, Micro Browsers, online trade appraisal services, and in a variety of other custom products. Printed versions are also available.[1]

Black Book Function in the Auto Industry

Today, Black Book is a division of Hearst Business Media Corporation. The magazine is circulation controlled, restricted to dealers and financing sources. Black Book is the only value guide issued weekly instead of monthly, reflecting the latest prices direct from actual or online automobile dealers.[2] National Auto Research Inc, provides vehicle pricing. In select formats, Black Book vehicle appraisal guides are published daily, weekly, and monthly in various electronic formats, including data feeds, internet based applications, hand held PDAs, smart phones and online appraisal services.[3]

Black Book Methodology

Black Book visits 60 auctions nationwide every week to gather the most up to date information on used car values. It collects data from wholesale auctions it attends in person or online, applies adjustments and compares them against dealer advertised prices. Access is restricted because it requires subscriptions, but public access to its price search features are accessible through third party sites such as Newcars.com.[4] Finding out car value is dependent on several factors including make, model, year, condition, accessories and mileage of the vehicle.[5] Currently Black Book is the official valuation service for Cars.com, a third-party internet shopping site based on their accurate vehicle values which help serve as an important guide for consumers navigating the vehicle selling and trade-in process.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Hearst's Black Book profile".
  2. ^ "NADA Guide vs. Black Book vs. Kelley Blue Book". Auto Blog. Retrieved 26 March 2015.
  3. ^ "Company Overview of National Auto Research, Inc". Bloomberg. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
  4. ^ "Blue Book Vs. Black Book Auto Value". The Nest. Retrieved 26 March 2015.
  5. ^ "Blue Book Value of a Car vs. Black Book Value of a Car". Consumer Car Reviews. Retrieved 27 March 2015.
  6. ^ "Black Book replaces KBB as Cars.com's used-vehicle value provider". Auto News. Retrieved 27 March 2015.