I am planning on presenting a meeting dedicated to F&I. The meeting will be for the sales staff, both managers and sales people.
I plan on putting a professional power point presentation together.
I would like to present some statistics on the nationwide trends in F&I, what the national average dealer income is from F&I, how F&I income contributes to the overall dealership bottom line, how service contract sales equate to customer retention etc.
I would also like to discuss with the sales staff the importance of a decent turn over to the finance department when customers are paying cash or arranging their own financing.
I am sure most finance managers agree, this is, and always will be one of our greatest challenges.
Can we all put our heads together here and make some practical suggestions that I can put into the presentation,
What I need is some verifiable statistics and some suggestions on the best techniques in persuading the sales force that we are on their side and our function is to be a support team for the sales force and not a department that just relies on them to make our living.
So suggestions of how we help sales would be appreciated too.
I will be very happy to share the power point presentation with anyone who wishes to use it at their dealership when it is completed.
Thanks
Jed Fraser
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Hi Jed,
I was a Finance Director for 18 yrs. The main thing to remember is make the sales staff feel like they are a part of the equation. If they do a proper turn to the finance dept I always compensated them. I did this as a cash in fist when the deal booked. I paid the salesman 2% of the total backend. I would pass the cash out every morning in the sales meeting. No matter whether it is 20 dollars or 120 dollars they always had cash in there hand. I would have the sales staff come back after the customer left finance and ask how much backend did we do. Our pvr went up as well. so everybody wins. 2% of 1800.00 is not that much when you have someone else helping you sale it.
Good Luck with your presentation
Bill
Jed,
We would like to be involved in this meeting. I am no longer a finance manager but do have 7 years experience as one. We now have a product that can add $200-$800 to your F&I profit. We know that products are being stripped away from F&I managers every day. It will also be a very easy product to get your salespeople excited. If you would like we can disclose all the information about this product and pricing in this meeting.
Jed,
I have attached a Word document detailing an F&I Turnover Procedure that works wonderfully in tranfering trust from the Sales Consultant to the Business Manager. Hope it helps.
Gerry Gould
Director of Training
UDS
I guess as a long time sales person with recent crossover to Sales Manager this topic hits somewhat home for me. When I was selling I would do everything in my power to try to have the finance part of the deal stay "in-house" because I knew that having the customer totally LOCKED UP before they left was way better then "hoping" they can get all them money I closed them at... just have them make it sound like an additional FREE service at no cost to the customer. The easiest way to relate to the salespeople is to paint a picture of each scenario ie: If the customer finances with the dealership your already have everything there. If the customer goes to their bank to obtain financing TONS of things could happen on their way to the bank. For one they could pass 4 other dealerships on their way to the bank and get wrapped up there. They could get to the bank, and the loan officer could disclose to your customer that you may be asking to much for your car. The bank may tell them that the dealership either needs to cut the deal a few thousand or they will have to come up with the difference... ALL of these things do nothing but cost the salesperson money (not to mention your dealership).
The best way to get your salespeople to do a proper TO to finance is to make it "not an option". They are Car Sales Professionals, and need to act like it. People respect professionalism no matter where they are, and if your salesperson has done a proper job up to that point... a proper TO should be second nature. Your salespeople should know where their customers money is coming from LONG before they are introduced to the F&I Manager. If your salesperson finds out that their customer has there own financing arranged they should have already presented their "sales pitch" on how competitive your Finance Department is, and if they have done their pitch properly the customers will be intrigued enough to let you work them just like any other payment buyer... that's what it comes down to 8 out of 10 times anyway.
As far as showing how them getting their customers to Finance at the dealership, I don't think showing the dealership's bottom line numbers is the route to go (personally). I remember being in those meetings and the first thing I thought was "yeah, well what does that pay me". Maybe instead of drawing up how much it contributes to the dealership, show the salespeople the potential that they could make if the take their professionalism to the next level.
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