Tell us a little bit about how you got into social media, how you started promoting your vehicles and bring in for sale online via social media. Just give us a little insight. I got into social media completely by accident. We realized that we had these amazing cars in a warehouse in Munak, New Jersey that nobody knew existed essentially. So how could we get the word out there about them?
So one day a car came in off of a trailer and I was like, you know what? I'm going to take a video of this right now and post it. The car was dirty, it was not a professional video. It was just me being who I am, being authentic, which I think is contributed significantly to our success online. But I post this video of a 1995 Ford Mustang Cobra convertible. It still was in the plastic with 12 miles on it. I posted it and next thing I knew, I'm getting these notifications on my phone. Your real has 20,000 views, 50,000 views, 100,000 views, 500,000 views, million views. I'm like, oh my God.
Overnight went from 3,000 followers to 50,000 followers. A few days later, my brother-in-law who runs ourselves says to me, he wouldn't believe it. We're going to sell this Mustang that you posted on Instagram. I was like, who are you selling me to? It's like Gabriel and Glasius assistant just called and wants to buy the car. And I was like, that is the craziest thing I've ever heard in my life. Let's do it. I wonder if this is actually real. So sure enough, it was real.
Gabe bought the car and that was the beginning of a great relationship to Gabe and I have. He's bought, I think, six cars from me in the past six or eight months. Yeah, he's a really awesome, awesome guy. And I said, you know what? I'm just going to start putting myself out there. I never wanted to. I was afraid to, I guess, you know, people don't want to see me. They want to see the car. I'm like, you know what? They don't have to see me. Let's just show them the car. So that's what I did. I began just posting these real, showing people the cars and the cars are the stars.
And they were when you are a car enthusiast and you want to see a 04 Tacoma with 10,000 miles or 03 Dodge Dakota RT with eight miles on it. People are going to watch. And that's just what I kept doing. I kept sharing inventory that we have. Nothing special, no lighting, no effects. I do not do retakes. I just am myself. I record them from mid or mid and a half and post them. And that's been really successful.
So what does that drive for you? Does it mostly drive demand for vehicles they already have or how does it work just into your business? As of right now, it's working in getting people to buy cars from us. You've sold a bunch of cars off Instagram and now we're starting to buy cars off of Instagram, which I'll admit, I'm not great at because there's just so much follow ups or now hiring for that position just for, you know, somebody to respond to all these messages.
And it's been a huge, huge, huge driver of traffic to our websites. The number one driver of traffic to our site, the links in our bio that I post to listing the car and by a huge margin, you know, it outperforms car grooves. We're spending 8,500 a month cars.com where we spend 3,000 a month auto trader, car facts by a large multiple. And you do all the social yourself. I do everything and I'm extremely protective of it. It was funny.
When I spoke to Gabe on the phone for the first time, those people know was fluffy. I'm on the phone with them and I'm like, this is crazy. Like this is Gabriel and Grace. He's like, oh, we're too close yet. And I'm on the phone with Andrew, the Instagram voice. I'm like, oh my God. You actually record out here from the voice. So how else do you make money? Do you sell you sell classic cars? You said you sold 1400 cars in a couple of years on bring a trailer, right? What other profit centers do you have?
当我第一次和盖布在电话里交谈时,我感觉那些人很亲切。我在和他们通话时心想,这太疯狂了。这是盖布和格蕾丝。盖布说,我们还不太熟。然后我和安德鲁通话,Instagram的那个声音。我心里想,天哪,你真的在外面录音。那你还怎么赚钱?你卖经典老爷车?你说你在几年内在Bring a Trailer上卖了1400辆车,对吧?你还有其他的盈利渠道吗?
It's a dealership. We do the things that most dealerships do. We sell warranties. We do ceramic coating things of that nature. I'm a big believer in that I will not endorse a product or sell a product that I myself don't believe in. I don't sell window edge. I don't sell any of these, but I call like honestly BS products. I know that they can be big revenue drivers or dealerships, but it's also the thing that a lot of people leave regret buying.
So I'll only sell them something I myself. I'm into so ceramic and warranties, but we all entire insurance also, which around here, you really do need. And then in 2000 and 20, I embark on this journey of restoring and customizing Mercedes G wagons and Land Rover defenders. I really did so because I was passionate about these cars. Like I couldn't understand why they were all $200,000. There's got to be a better way to do this. So I was like, all right, if we've already got our bills paid, this can only be gravy on top.
Other companies doing it rely on funding their entire business just by selling these restored cars. So I began going to Europe really often and partnering with some people in Poland and Spain and Lithuania, where we do these bills. Clients come to us. They can pick out everything about the car, the color, the interior motor transmission. And we do a complete not involved restoration. By the way, embarking on that journey was very risky, has been extremely stressful. And the end has not been a money maker, at least not yet because of the lack of control you have over people in other countries. But now we finally, I think, ironed out the Kingston will be profitable unless stressful. But it has been an interesting experience for me and it will continue, I believe, to grow into a profitable profit center.
And what's the economics on that? Like, when you restore these vehicles, what are you really making on this? How much time is this take? These cars, the amount of time it took of me to deal with the people overseas, flying there was tremendous. If we were selling a car for, say, 140,000, they were making 40,000 a car. But the amount of time it took was just wild and stress and sleepless nights and parts missing and things of that nature. Now, at this point, we really have the process dialed in. Our target profit per unit is from 20 to 60,000 per unit. And that just depends on how much work we're doing. Are we doing a full body of frame restoration? Are we doing completely custom interior with Aston Martin? Leather? No. What are we building? That's really how we come up with what we're able to make on it.
And in terms of quality, our competitors are charging north of 200,000 for a defender that we're charging 154. And I believe our quality is actually superior, which is really because of my obsession with being involved, and being so enzyme and insisting that anything we put out there is of the vantage quality that I want it to be. You know, that's what I was going to say. I think one thing I've just realized with you, you're talking while I'm scrolling through your Instagram page and just thinking. And it's clear that you are just really passionate about the vehicles. Like, I could never do what you do because I'm just too desensitized to the cars. I wouldn't have an attachment to it. I would take the video for Instagram and I wouldn't really be that excited. I'd be like, get this thing off my lap. Like, let's sell this thing already.
To me, you know, I come from a high volume off-least vehicle play. And so that's, I actually admire that. And you how you really care about the cars, it's like your babies, each one, it seems like. Right. And that's why I'm transitioning the wholesale stuff. I could not care less about a 2021 Explorer. We sell 10 of them a week. When I see these cars, I'm like, my God, in 99 S320, a 30,000 miles, people think I'm nuts. But these, to me, are like amazing cars that bring back so many memories, to me, I'm passionate about them. I lose sleep being excited about the cars that are coming in the next day.