BCBusiness

October 2018 - The Wheel Deal

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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32 BCBusiness OCtObER 2018 e n T r e P r e n e u r o F T H e Y e A r 2 0 1 8 / B U S I N E S S T O C O N S U M E R Bells have been tolling for car sales of late; even General Motors Co.'s former vice-chair, Bob Lutz, has warned that the rise of autonomous vehicles spells the end of the automo- tive industry as we know it. But Christian Chia, presi- dent and CEO of OpenRoad Auto Group, isn't putting on the brakes; the company he formed in 2000 is going pedal to the metal in pursuit of opportunities that he insists are emerging from the chang- ing landscape. Case in point: luxury vehi- cles, which the Amsterdam- born, Jakarta-raised Chia is convinced are the future of his business. "Autonomous vehi- cles are going to completely turn the industry upside down, and it's going to be a boon to luxury cars," he asserts, a trace of a Dutch accent inˆecting his speech. "An autonomous car will become an extension of your home—something that you really want to socialize in, shop in, work in. And that's why we made a concerted eŠort to focus on the luxury sector." In 2014, Richmond-based OpenRoad purchased the dealership rights to the BMW'Store,'the Rolls-Royce Motor Cars'store and'Mini' Yaletown, all in Vancouver. A year later came the Langley Auto Collection, Canada's –rst luxury auto mall, where moneyed shoppers can roam Audi, BMW, In–nity, Jaguar, Land Rover, Mini and Porsche showrooms. Chia is now plan- ning an expansion into the U.S., where he aims to open a supercar destination centre in Bellevue, Washington, show- casing Bentley, Lamborghini, McLaren and Rolls-Royce. He's also exploring other avenues for OpenRoad, which over the past two decades has grown into the province's largest auto retailer, with 23 dealerships and three collision centres. This –scal year, the company is expecting about $1.3 billion in revenue from new and pre-owned car sales, as well as service and repair orders—up from last year's $1.15 billion. "Gen Y, Gen Z, they don't necessarily view car ownership as a goal," Chia acknowledges. Still, he says, car- and ride-sharing compa- nies need to be maintained and managed. "Could OpenRoad be one of the ˆeet management companies for these –rms that are going to emerge?" he asks. Instead of investing in "bricks and mortar," Chia envisions a future "in mobility services, in ˆeet management, in technolo¢y, in autonomous, in car- and ride-sharing." Forget the doomsayers: "It's actually going to be a golden era for mobility and the auto industry," he says. —J.W. W I N N E R Christian Chia p R E S I D E N T a N D C E O , O p E N R O a D a u T O G R O u p Finish this sentence for us: "Entrepreneurs need a lot more…" Confidence to become bigger, better and more successful before they transition out of their business. Too many entrepreneurs exit their businesses too early. They shortchange themselves and their organizations. We see that a lot in B.C. P A C I F I C R E G I O N W I N N E R 25th a n n i v e r s a r y

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