In the December 2025 strategy session, Sam (Flynn Audio) and Karly (Asymmetric) identified classic car audio as a priority growth vertical for 2026. With the CarPlay market in structural decline, high-ticket classic car builds ($5k–$9k) represent a natural hedge: strong margins, creative differentiation, and a well-defined buyer profile that skews older and wealthier.
This article captures the strategic rationale, target customer profile, and planned execution steps.
CarPlay radio upgrades remain Flynn Audio's most profitable single service, but the addressable market is contracting by design:
Classic car audio is positioned as the long-term replacement for CarPlay volume — a category that does not face the same structural ceiling.
Flynn Audio completed a meaningful number of classic car projects in 2025 — either replacing outdated systems installed 15+ years ago or doing first-ever audio installs on restored vehicles.
The ideal prospect is not a car show competitor or a DIY enthusiast. They are:
"Those people are older. I mean, it's — if you've bought a fun car, you could throw five grand at it for a stereo. That's not a big deal." — Sam, Dec 2025
Current sweet spot is 1950s–1970s muscle cars and American classics. The 1980s–1990s vehicle cohort is beginning to enter collector territory but is not yet the primary target. This may shift over a 3–5 year horizon as nostalgia demographics age into peak spending years.
Classic car audio is a natural moat for Flynn Audio:
| Competitor | Classic Car Capability |
|---|---|
| Tint World (Verona) | Explicitly avoids custom work; requires direct-fit installs |
| Best Buy | No custom fabrication capability |
| AMS | General competitor; custom capability unclear |
| Radio Doctor | General competitor; strong website presence |
Flynn Audio's willingness and skill to do full custom builds — including fabrication for vehicles with no modern mounting points — is a genuine differentiator that franchise and big-box competitors cannot replicate.
A dedicated landing page for classic car audio services does not currently exist. This is the primary near-term action item.
The page should:
- Speak directly to the turnkey buyer persona (not the DIY enthusiast)
- Showcase past classic car builds with photography
- Emphasize the full-service, no-hassle experience
- Include a clear call to action (consultation booking or quote request)
Owner: Karly / Asymmetric web team
Status: Planned — not yet started as of Dec 2025
Once the landing page exists, Google Ads campaigns can be pointed at classic car audio search terms. This should be coordinated with the broader Google Ads budget audit already planned for early 2026.
Derek already attends higher-end car shows. The strategic opportunity is to shift focus from sound competition events (attendees are DIY builders, low conversion) to classic car and restoration shows (attendees are more likely to be turnkey buyers).
Sponsorship or gear giveaways at sound competitions have historically shown no measurable return. Car show presence as a networking and brand-building channel for the classic car segment warrants a separate evaluation.
High-ticket, custom-work verticals insulate specialty shops from commodity price competition. When a shop's primary volume driver faces structural market decline (CarPlay), the strategic response is to double down on work that big-box and franchise competitors structurally cannot do — not to compete on price in the declining category.
This pattern applies to any specialty service business where a "convenience" competitor (Best Buy, franchise chain) can undercut on standardized work but cannot replicate custom capability.