Folks...We all know about ROI...Return on Investment! We are sitting in the conference room at the dealership, entertained by an enthusiastic and powerful presentation by a vendor pitching a service or a new product, and the first question we ask... What do you propose will be our Return on Investment? Right? If we are spending $2000.00 per month to experience an increase of revenue by $10,000.00 sounds like a pretty good idea...right????
Now, how often do we gather in the conference room, with a couple of key employees, or perhaps a representative from each department...a focus group if you will, and discuss Lost Revenue, or Lost Dollars as a result of "Missed Opportunities"? These errors of omission resulting from ineffective advertising, lack of training, improper inventory: parts/new and used vehicles, wrong people in place, hours of operation, etc., cause leaks in your retail operation which if filled can create hundreds of thousands of dollars in new revenue!
This should be an interesting topic and I am eager to hear all of your ideas and thoughts on this subject!
Tags:
Nancy,
What a great idea. It would be a hard one to get your arms around...but once you did...wow!! the results would be certainly be measurable.
The hard part about doing such a thing at the dealership level is the correcting what you find phase. I call this Paralysis by analysis.
How do you fix? Is someone internally available to put together a training process with measurable results? Do you go to the outside? The trick is to DO SOMETHING!!
Nancy,
What a great idea. It would be a hard one to get your arms around...but once you did...wow!! the results would be certainly be measurable.
The hard part about doing such a thing at the dealership level is the correcting what you find phase. I call this Paralysis by analysis.
How do you fix? Is someone internally available to put together a training process with measurable results? Do you go to the outside? The trick is to DO SOMETHING!!
Craig, funny you should say that...In most cases it can't be corrected internally. You need to go to the outside. You need the help of a outside training company to come in, evaluate what you're doing right and what needs help. Someone who's turned things around before to work side by side with you. Someone who will build a process for you and help you along the way.
Craig Lockerd said:
Jim how can that be done at the store level without...yes I said without the use of a training comapny....did I say that out loud?
Jim Washam said:Nancy,
What a great idea. It would be a hard one to get your arms around...but once you did...wow!! the results would be certainly be measurable.
The hard part about doing such a thing at the dealership level is the correcting what you find phase. I call this Paralysis by analysis.
How do you fix? Is someone internally available to put together a training process with measurable results? Do you go to the outside? The trick is to DO SOMETHING!!
I KNOW your pain! Coaching is the missing link in leadership. Too often we've pointed the finger blaming management for this condition, but this is solely a leadership condition. The benefit of coaching "The Better Way" embraces the simple, bettering the leader that exists in everyone, management included!!! Smile!
Hi everybody,
Great topic Nancy and in my mind there are three parts to the answer. I firmly believe in the use of outside training on an ongoing basis as a way of increasing ability and maintaining focus. Not just for salespeople either. All of a stores management can benefit from continuous training.
The review you are suggesting should be a normal part of a weekly department head meeting that is being pushed up from a weekly departmental meeting involving front line employees and their direct reports. Once it is in place it takes about five or ten minutes once a week at the department head level and like you suggest is phenomenally helpful in terms of refining processes and increasing profits.
The third part is to have all department heads responsible for reviewing exception reports each morning to spot trends, remediate unsatisfactory results immediately and manage the activities necessary to achieve the forecasts. Service should be looking at one line RO’s and tracking each salespersons hours per RO. They should also monitor the effective labor rate and gross as a percentage of the goal on a daily basis.
Sales and Finance should be looking at deal grosses against a per model target and average gross forecast new and used. They also need to review traffic counts, write ups, demos, to’s and delivery’s against an agreed upon performance model. Penetration of finance products should be reviewed daily as well as average gross against a per product goal.
Obviously all departments should be tracking their performance against the monthly goal but the real value of looking a little deeper is the ability it gives to reverse negative trends before the month ends and everybody starts wondering why we missed the number. If the exception report is formalized by the GM and controller then every department head can just fill it in and make some notes regarding any remedial actions or atta-boys and pass it to the GM for review.
The one other thing I always did was keep a white board in my office with the daily doc laid out on it. All department heads were responsible for posting their numbers on a daily basis as they turned in their exception reports. It might sound hokey or over controlling to some but I found that it helped everybody keep their eyes on the ball and problems got identified and solved before they hit the statement.
This process also avoids the routine some stores fall into where the managers get lost in the minutia of their daily activities and never talk to each other except in passing or during a crisis. The typical store has a lot of mental horsepower available but to benefit from it, it has to be harnessed.
Thanks so much Dan!
What an enlightening and informative contribution! Not only did you suggest what needs to be done, you told us how to do it...That is a true leader! Absolutely wonderful portrayal of accountability and credibility by all! Sure beats everyone just looking at there DOC each day and wondering why they are not close to their projections!
Looking forward to more from you down the road! This is why I love dE!
Dan Creamer said:Hi everybody,
Great topic Nancy and in my mind there are three parts to the answer. I firmly believe in the use of outside training on an ongoing basis as a way of increasing ability and maintaining focus. Not just for salespeople either. All of a stores management can benefit from continuous training.
The review you are suggesting should be a normal part of a weekly department head meeting that is being pushed up from a weekly departmental meeting involving front line employees and their direct reports. Once it is in place it takes about five or ten minutes once a week at the department head level and like you suggest is phenomenally helpful in terms of refining processes and increasing profits.
The third part is to have all department heads responsible for reviewing exception reports each morning to spot trends, remediate unsatisfactory results immediately and manage the activities necessary to achieve the forecasts. Service should be looking at one line RO’s and tracking each salespersons hours per RO. They should also monitor the effective labor rate and gross as a percentage of the goal on a daily basis.
Sales and Finance should be looking at deal grosses against a per model target and average gross forecast new and used. They also need to review traffic counts, write ups, demos, to’s and delivery’s against an agreed upon performance model. Penetration of finance products should be reviewed daily as well as average gross against a per product goal.
Obviously all departments should be tracking their performance against the monthly goal but the real value of looking a little deeper is the ability it gives to reverse negative trends before the month ends and everybody starts wondering why we missed the number. If the exception report is formalized by the GM and controller then every department head can just fill it in and make some notes regarding any remedial actions or atta-boys and pass it to the GM for review.
The one other thing I always did was keep a white board in my office with the daily doc laid out on it. All department heads were responsible for posting their numbers on a daily basis as they turned in their exception reports. It might sound hokey or over controlling to some but I found that it helped everybody keep their eyes on the ball and problems got identified and solved before they hit the statement.
This process also avoids the routine some stores fall into where the managers get lost in the minutia of their daily activities and never talk to each other except in passing or during a crisis. The typical store has a lot of mental horsepower available but to benefit from it, it has to be harnessed.
Parts Advisors
This is not a new subject however it gets put on a back burner and every couple of year’s pops to the forefront. Yesterday a gentleman came in to install rear mud guards on his new Buick. They were special ordered by our parts department. I ask the man why only 2? He said I don’t know, I thought that’s really all I needed. I ask the Parts Manager why he only ordered two; he said that’s all the man asks for. Shoot that’s the same as a customer with 50K coming in for just an oil change. There is nothing wrong with a true parts advisor asking why just two? Most people install all 4 mud guards. They should make that recommendation.
A true Parts Advisor would not just sell a water pump but coolant, new clamps (why re-use the old ones?), ask the condition of the hoses. That’s just one way of getting a $75 sale and moving the needle to a $100+ counter ticket. These are needed item, It makes sense to the customer; you are actually doing people a favor.
Oh by the way, we ended up putting all 4 flap on.
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