The present disclosure relates generally to computerized methods for adding accessories to vehicles.
A customer for a vehicle may desire to further customize the vehicle by the addition and/or installation of accessories. Retailers may desire a process for managing the process of vehicle customization so as to provide the customer with information regarding the accessories and prices of the accessories. Further, such a process may facilitate purchases of accessories by those clients that might otherwise not occur had such a process not existed.
Traditional processes for presenting information regarding accessories and prices of the accessories have been limited. For instance, a retailer employee may show the customer a picture of the accessory, such as a line drawing, from a paper catalog, magazine, product guide, or digital image. In certain traditional methods, only a list of parts without images was available to the retailer for presentation to a customer regarding accessories. In some traditional processes, the accessory may be shown on a generic vehicle. For example, accessories may be shown to customers from physical copies of catalogs, which may be in some cases out of date or not offered for particular models or years of vehicles. Traditional system have limited, manual systems for determining whether the accessory selected by the customer may be used or available for the vehicle the customer has selected. Also, in traditional methods, the customer would not be able to view the accessory, or, a combination of accessories being selected or considered by the customer, on a vehicle that is the same or similar to the vehicle being purchased or considered for purchase by the customer.
The present disclosure provides for a method. The method includes determining a specific or basic vehicle, retrieving a base image or modified base image corresponding to the specific or basic vehicle, and selecting an accessory. The method also includes retrieving an accessory image corresponding to the accessory and animating the accessory image onto the base image or modified base image.
The present disclosure is best understood from the following detailed description when read with the accompanying figures. It is emphasized that, in accordance with the standard practice in the industry, various features are not drawn to scale. In fact, the dimensions of the various features may be arbitrarily increased or reduced for clarity of discussion.
It is to be understood that the following disclosure provides many different embodiments, or examples, for implementing different features of various embodiments. Specific examples of components and arrangements are described below to simplify the present disclosure. These are, of course, merely examples and are not intended to be limiting. In addition, the present disclosure may repeat reference numerals and/or letters in the various examples. This repetition is for the purpose of simplicity and clarity and does not in itself dictate a relationship between the various embodiments and/or configurations discussed.
As used herein, a “GUI” is a graphical user interface in which data may be displayed and entered. In certain non-limiting embodiments, the GUIs described below may be customized depending on the device on which they are displayed. For instance, vehicle selection GUI 212 as discussed below may display different information when displayed on a computer terminal screen then when displayed on a tablet or smartphone screen.
As used herein, “Add-On-Auto process” or “AOA process” refers to the process of selection of accessories for a vehicle.
As used herein, “retailer” refers to any seller of vehicles, with a physical presence, such as having a car lot, or a virtual presence, such as a website, or a combination thereof.
As used herein, a “salesperson” refers to any employee of a retailer.
As used herein, “deal” refers to an agreement between a retailer and a customer that includes a specific vehicle and the terms at which the vehicle is sold or leased.
As depicted in
In certain embodiments, as shown in
In negotiate deal 120, retailer employees, including for instance the salesperson, sales manager, and others, negotiate with the customer under what terms the customer will purchase the specific vehicle. An example of an online negotiation system that may be used in negotiation process 490 is described in U.S. application Ser. No. 62/061,006, which is fully incorporated by reference. Certain of these terms, as well as information about the customer and the vehicle to be purchased, may be entered into and located in a deal database as part of negotiate deal 120. A deal database is a database on a non-transitory, computer-readable medium in which information and documents regarding deals are stored. Deal summary 300 of such a deal is shown in
AOA process 200, as depicted in
In some embodiments of the present disclosure, as part of the step of determine vehicle 210, vehicle selection GUI 212 as shown in
In certain embodiments, data in the deal database may not include the year or model of the specific vehicle. In other embodiments, a customer may wish to examine different makes, models, or years of basic vehicles. In yet other embodiments, the deal may not be completed, as shown in
In some embodiments, the trim package may not be included in the deal database for the specific vehicle or may be specified for a basic vehicle by a customer or retailer employee. As used herein, “trim package” means a set of cosmetic embellishments on a vehicle. In such embodiments, the trim package of the vehicle may be selected, such as with trim package selection GUI 218, as depicted in
In some embodiments, the exterior and interior colors of the vehicle may not be included in the deal database for the specific vehicle or may be specified for a basic vehicle by a customer or retailer employee. Interior and exterior colors of the vehicle may be selected, such as with color selector GUI 222 through exterior color buttons 324 and interior color buttons 326. In certain embodiments, use of exterior color button 324 may result in display of vehicle image 328 from the vehicle image database having the make, model, trim package, and exterior color selected through vehicle selection GUI 212, year selection GUI 214, model selection GUI 216, trim package selection GUI 218, and color selector GUI 222. In certain embodiments, use of interior color button 326 may result in display of interior vehicle image 330 from the vehicle image database having the make, model, trim package, and interior color selected through vehicle selection GUI 212, year selection GUI 214, model selection GUI 216, trim package selection GUI 218, and color selector GUI 222. Vehicle selection GUI 212, year selection GUI 214, model selection GUI 216, trim package selection GUI 218, and color selector GUI 222 are non-limiting examples and other selection GUIs may be used to select information about the vehicle of the deal.
Once the specific vehicle of the deal or the basic vehicle has been selected, such as by retrieving information regarding the vehicle from the deal database or the deal database in conjunction with the selection GUIs discussed above, only through the selection GUIs discussed above, or by otherwise determining the specific or basic vehicle, the customer in conjunction with retailer employees may specify accessories that may be added to the vehicle as part of the step of specify accessory configuration 220. Non-limiting examples of accessories that may be specified include, but are not limited to body kits, electronics, exterior parts, interior parts, performance accessories, wheel accessories, wheels, and other accessories. Electronics may include alarms, remote starts, amplifiers, speakers, backup camera and sensors, Bluetooth connections, navigation packages, radar detectors, and video accessories. Exterior parts may include armor and rocker protection, bed liners, body side moldings, chrome trim, deflectors, doors, windows, exterior graphics, fender flares, bumpers, grille guards, grilles, hitches, hoods, jeep tops, lighting, roof racks, cargo carriers, bike racks, roof spoilers, side scoops, side skirts, spoilers, step bars, styling bars, sunroofs, tire covers, tires, tonneau covers, bed caps, truck bed accessories, window films and window tinting. Interior parts may include dash kits, floor mats, and upholstery. Performance accessories may include air filters, air intakes, exhaust accessories, and suspension kits. Other accessories may include covers, snow accessories, and winches. One or of ordinary skill in the art with the benefit of this disclosure may envision other accessories that may be specified as part of AOA process 200.
Certain accessories may be specified through the use of configurator GUI 400, as shown in
The specific or basic vehicle image displayed in vehicle animation window 410 prior to specifying accessories is referred to as a base image or modified base image. In certain embodiments, a base image may be determined by the year, make, model and trim package of the specific or basic vehicle. Base images may be constructed from digital photographs of basic vehicles stored in raw image files, such as a DNG file. In other embodiments, base images of basic vehicles may be supplied by new car manufacturers. In some embodiments, the raw image file may be converted to a layered image file, such as a .PSD file for use in an image manipulation program, such as Adobe PhotoShop. In some embodiments, the base image may be modified to include such features as shadows and highlights.
In some embodiments, base images in a layered image file may be manipulated through the image manipulation program to produce one or more modified base images of a color or trim package different from the original base image. For instance, a base image may be of a pick-up truck having a standard bed. The modified base image may have manipulated to form a digital image of a pick-up truck having a short or long bed. This process of producing modified base images may be repeated for multiple color or trim packages. In some embodiments, the base images and modified base images may include a ¾ front view, a ¾ rear view, an interior view, or a combination thereof.
In certain embodiments, base images and modified base images may be made up of multiple layers, for example and without limitation, between three and seven layers. In a non-limiting example, base images and modified base images may be made up of body and non-body layer, wheel base layer, and rims layer. The body and non-body layer may consist of, for example, the painted area of the vehicle (body) and the non-painted area (non-body), such as the window, grill, headlights, and tail lights. The wheel base layer may consist of, for example the wheels, wheel caliber and shadow of the vehicle. The rims layer may consist only of the rims of the vehicle.
Digital images of accessories may be obtained from such sources as original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), accessory manufacturers, captured from the interne, or captured through digital photography of physical accessories. Digital images of accessories may be converted to an image file suitable for use in an image manipulation application, such as PhotoShop.
In some embodiments of the present disclosure digital images of accessories may be used to form an overlay. An overlay is an image that may be overlaid onto the base image or modified base image. For example, as shown in
When particular accessories are selected in configurator GUI 400, AOA process server 630 may layer the base image with the overlay to form an accessorized image, a process referred to as “animation.” In certain embodiments, multiple overlays with different accessories may be overlaid onto the base image or modified base image to form an accessorized image as the different accessories are selected through configurator GUI 400.
In other embodiments, such as for wheels, rather than form an overlay, AOA process server 630 may use a process referred to herein as dynamic image placement. In dynamic image placement, the base image or modified base image may be mapped at least in part and the portion of on the image where the potential accessory may be positioned is selected. As shown in
In some embodiments, AOA process server 630 may determine whether two particular accessories may be selected and displayed in vehicle animation window 410 of configurator GUI 400. For instance, if a bumper and a hitch are chosen through configurator GUI 400, AOA process server 630 may determine that overlays exist for each of the bumper and a hitch and the overlays will not interfere with one another, i.e., have pieces of the overlay image that would be occupy the same space on the accessorized image. If the AOA process server 630 determines that the overlays will interfere with each other, the AOA process server 630 may direct configurator 400 to depict only the first accessory chose, only the second accessory chosen, or neither of the accessories chosen in vehicle animation window 410. In certain embodiments, AOA process server 630 may also verify that overlays exist for the accessory.
Selection of an accessories from accessory list 430 will animate the selected accessory onto the base image or modified base image of the vehicle depicted in vehicle animation window 410. As shown in
With further reference to
As additional accessories are selected by the customer, these additional accessories are added to the vehicle depiction in vehicle animation window 410. For instance, as shown in
In certain embodiments, a retailer may choose to group accessories into “packages.” These packages may be selected from accessory list 430 and all, some or none of the accessories in the package may be displayed on the vehicle depiction in vehicle animation window 410. Packages may be specified to simplify part selection. A non-limiting example of such a package includes, a fender package. In certain embodiments, accessory list 430 may include both a right fender and a left fender. A fender package may be listed on the accessory list 430 that includes matching right and left fenders. As another example of a package to simplify part selection could be a roof rack with cross bars. Customers may select a roof rack without realizing that crossbars may not be included in the roof rack. A package may be created that would include both the roof rack and the cross bars. Another category of packages may be a convenience package. A convenience package may include accessories that customers may have in the past selected together or ones in which a user may sell together. Common convenience packages include performance packages towing packages, and body packages. A performance package could include tuning parts, exhaust systems, and cold air intakes. A towing package may include specific mirrors, brake controllers, a bigger radiator than normally specified, a leaf spring in the back of the vehicle, and an increased payload capacity. A body package for a truck might include a grill guard, step bar, and fender flares.
Configurator GUI 400 may further include additional information user interface elements 480. Additional information user interface elements 480 may provide a link to an external database or information system such as the internet that allows additional information to be shown in vehicle animation window 410.
Accessory tally window 440 may include tally review user interface element 442, entitled “view shopping cart” on
After the customer has completed selection of the accessories through configurator GUI 400, specify accessory configuration step 220 may be completed through selection of accessory completion user interface element 490, entitled “DONE” in
In certain embodiments of the present disclosure, after the accessories selected by the customer are imported into the deal database, the accessories selected by the customer may be ordered by the retailer from a third party, such as an accessories vendor, or designated for the customer from existing retailer inventory, such as the retailer's service department. In these embodiments, the customer may be scheduled for service department appointment wherein the accessories selected by the customer are installed. In other embodiments, the accessory may be installed by a third party, such as an accessories installer. In these embodiments, the customer may be scheduled for an appointment for installation of the accessory with the third party, wherein the accessories are installed. As one of ordinary skill in the art with the benefit of this disclosure will appreciate, a combination of these embodiments may be employed, i.e., certain accessories may be installed by the retailer service department and other accessories may be installed by a third party.
Although depicted herein as using buttons in the various GUIs, one having ordinary skill in the art with the benefit of this disclosure will understand that any user interface element may be utilized without deviating from the scope of this disclosure. For example and without limitation, interactive elements may include buttons, drop down lists, radio buttons, check boxes, list boxes, dropdown buttons, toggles, text fields, or sliders, as understood in the art.
AOA process server 630 may include instructions on a non-transitory, computer readable medium for performing the processes outlined above with respect to AOA process 200, generation and updating of GUI's, presentment of images, and data transmission to and receipt from remote devices 660, 670, 680. In certain embodiments, AOA process server may retrieve all or part of the vehicle image database and the accessory database and store the images on the non-transitory computer readable medium of AOA process server 630. In certain embodiments, retrieval of all or part of the vehicle image database and the accessory database may be performed on a periodic basis. Remote devices 660, 670, 680 include, for example and without limitation, desktop computer 660, lap top computer 670, and mobile device 680.
This application is a nonprovisional application which claims priority from U.S. provisional application No. 62/237,921, filed Oct. 6, 2015, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62237921 | Oct 2015 | US |