Cox Automotive has signed a definitive agreement to acquire 100% of Fullpath, adding an AI-powered customer data platform (CDP) and marketing automation product to its dealer technology portfolio. The deal is subject to regulatory approval and is expected to close within 30 days.
For marketers inside dealer groups, this is less about a new point solution and more about how identity resolution, attribution, and campaign execution could be packaged directly into the systems dealers already rely on, especially across Cox-owned properties like Dealer.com, VinSolutions, Autotrader, and Kelley Blue Book.
Short on time?
Here’s a quick look at what’s inside:
- What Cox Automotive is buying, and what stays the same
- Why an automotive CDP matters more now
- How this changes the competitive landscape for dealer marketing stacks
- What dealer marketers should pressure-test after close
What Cox Automotive is buying, and what stays the same
Cox Automotive says Fullpath will continue operating with the same team, products, and service levels immediately after close, with additional integration details to come later. That matters because CDPs sit in the middle of sensitive dealership workflows (CRM, DMS, website behavior, ad interactions), and rushed migrations can break reporting continuity and lead routing.
Functionally, Fullpath brings three capabilities Cox emphasized:
- Identity resolution across dealership history, stitching together shopper identity from years of CRM and DMS records into a unified profile.
- Marketing automation and “always-on” activation, shifting from periodic campaigns to continuous triggers and personalization.
- Attribution from ad click to purchase, aiming to connect media exposure to downstream outcomes at an individual level.
Cox Automotive also highlighted its scale signals, including 40,000+ dealer relationships and 2.3 billion online interactions a year across its ecosystem. That scale is important because CDP value increases as more first-party signals and touchpoints become addressable in one place.
Why an automotive CDP matters more now
Automotive retail is a first-party data heavy environment, but the data is fragmented: website behavior, lead forms, CRM activities, DMS transactions, call tracking, and third-party marketplace traffic often live in separate systems. Marketers feel that fragmentation as duplicated audiences, inconsistent suppression lists, weak attribution, and personalization that stops at the channel boundary.
The acquisition fits two broader shifts called out in the market:
- First-party data infrastructure becomes a prerequisite, not a “nice to have,” as cookies decline and media efficiency depends more on clean identity and consented data.
- AI marketing automation moves closer to execution, where the differentiator is not just generating creative or copy, but orchestrating audiences, triggers, routing, and measurement with less manual work.
In practical terms, an automotive-focused CDP can be more operationally relevant than a general CDP if it is designed around dealership constraints (CRM/DMS integrations, co-op rules, multi-rooftop governance, and sales follow-up workflows).
How this changes the competitive landscape for dealer marketing stacks
Dealer marketing and retail software is already competitive, with stacks often built from multiple vendors across CRM, websites, inventory, and ad tech. The category landscape is also tightening: data and marketing tools are increasingly tied to dealership systems, making “best-of-breed” harder to maintain without integration cost.
Cox Automotive competes broadly as a dealer platform provider, while Fullpath sits specifically in CDP plus marketing automation for automotive. Bringing Fullpath in-house changes how Cox can package data, activation, and measurement across its products, potentially reducing the need for separate CDP layers in some dealerships.
In the wider competitive set, vendors like CDK Global, DealerSocket, and AutomotiveMastermind operate adjacent to the same dealer operating system and marketing intelligence layer. The differentiator here may come down to:
- Distribution and embedded placement (Cox’s reach across dealer relationships and web properties)
- Depth of first-party signals (marketplace and valuation behaviors tied to Autotrader and Kelley Blue Book)
- Workflow ownership (how tightly the CDP connects to lead handling and sales follow-up, not just audience building)
For dealers, consolidation can simplify procurement, but it can also increase switching costs and reduce flexibility if key data pathways become proprietary.
What dealer marketers should pressure-test after close
Dealer groups evaluating the impact should treat this as a measurement and workflow change, not just a new feature list. A few questions to push on early:
- Data ownership and portability: What happens to unified profiles and derived audiences if a dealer changes vendors later?
- Attribution methodology: How does “ad click to purchase” attribution handle offline sales influence, multi-touch journeys, and cross-device identity?
- CRM/DMS integration depth: Which DMS and CRM connectors are supported, and what fields/events are actually read and written?
- Multi-rooftop governance: Can groups manage segmentation, consent, and activation centrally while allowing store-level execution?
- Operational impact: Will lead routing, call flows, or BDC processes change, and how will teams measure whether automation improves outcomes?
Because this is an acquisition, the near-term reality is often “coexistence before convergence.” Marketers should expect incremental integration, and plan for parallel reporting until data models and attribution logic stabilize.


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