Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Customer With a Car Fetish

Our dealership has a very good repeat customer who has a car fetish. Every 4-6 months he gets tired of his current vehicle and wants a different one. Getting a new vehicle twice a year has been going on his whole life by looking at his credit report (29 auto loans – all classified individual loans).

I’ve seen him in fast vehicles such as a Ford Mustang Shelby, Pontiac GTO, Dodge Ram SS/T. Lately he took advantage of some Toyota specials on the Tundra and got a loaded extended cab 4X4. Due to its gas mileage, he traded that on an Infiniti G37 coupe.

Each time he finances the vehicle at the MAX advance for 72-84 months while rolling in a staggering amount of negative equity.

Usually, to get a deal done, the dealership has to take a mini-deal and ALL of my negotiation skills with the banks just to help this guy with his impulse purchases and roll a car – because of his negative equity.

Sometimes we couldn’t trade him out with $23,000 of negative. He would go home, think about his decision for a month or two, and come back with a few thousand down at always the right time of the month for us to give a car away.

The funny thing is that he understood the meaning of and always purchased GAP on each vehicle. He won’t be sorry if he ever has to use the benefits.

Obviously, with each new vehicle purchased from my dealership, I would have to cancel the GAP policy from the previous vehicle.

After doing some math, this customer is single-handedly responsible for about 15% of the total GAP cancellations processed in the 4.5 years I have been in F&I at my present dealership.

True Story (He just left the dealership).

Thursday, September 18, 2008

F&I Numbers

This is a column re-printed by permission from Motorcycle Product News. It is interesting to see the actual F&I numbers published. I wonder about the product sales process in the F&I department of a mortorcycle dealership verses automotive.

Life and Disability insurance probably sells well, though I could really see a strong presentation blowing the whole deal - just use the old "put your eye out close". Yes, a motorcycle scares me to death. Give me a big safe SUV!


By Steve Jones
Link to original article:

At GSA we track benchmarks through our involvement with dealer groups such as the Best Operators Club. Some of the members have kindly consented to let us share their numbers from our real-time, web-based data reporting system.

In this column we're going to review the July F&I numbers for one of our member dealers and the related TBOC averages. In 2007, this dealer sold 800 motorcycles, ATV and UTV units, plus 140 trailers and 39 boats. The dealership is located in a town of 22,000 on the outskirts of a city of 180,000 people.

In Chart 1 we see that they have only one F&I person. For July, they captured 90 percent of the financed deals. They had an approval rate of 52 percent. Tracking and following up on "approved but did not buy" deals is also very important. Did they buy elsewhere? Why? What could you have done to get these deals?

Chart 1



LINGO:
CY: current year
PVS: per vehicle sold
TBOC: average of the top five BOC members in this category


In Chart 2 you can see that their overall July finance penetration was just under 60 percent. This is short of the benchmark of 70 percent, but not bad. If you don't get the financing, it is very hard to maximize add-on sales of F&I and P&A products.

Last year at this time, this dealer was averaging just over $300 PVS in F&I GP. This year he has jumped to over $600 PVS! How did he accomplish this? According to the dealer, there were two main reasons: They hired a former auto F&I person who was tired of the long hours and pressure. The five-day week in this powersports dealership was just what he was looking for.(It should be noted that there are quite a few good people leaving the auto business — sales mangers and salespeople as well as F&I managers. This is a good time to take advantage of their current business situation.) They implemented a structured selling process with the correct turnover to the business (F&I) office. They also utilized a four-square worksheet process, and always asked for a down payment amount. This can often be converted to F&I products sales if customers are approved for little or no down payment.

Chart 2



Note: Our data reporting and analysis system is available for any dealership to use for a nominal fee. If you want more info on the Voyager IV data reporting system or BOC, please e-mail steve.jones@gartsutton.com or visit our website at www.gartsutton.com. In the trend analysis in Chart 3, you can clearly see what happened when they hired the right person for the F&I position and implemented the correct processes. In a very short time they were able to nearly double their F&I income.

"If you do not enforce the sales process, the four-square and the consistent turnover to F&I, it is very difficult to achieve big numbers in the business office," notes the dealer. Obviously, having a fully trained and experienced F&I person is also crucial to maximizing your F&I potential. In today's highly-competitive market, it is essential to have an effective F&I department to pick up the margins.

Chart 3



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Friday, September 12, 2008

Paystub

This definitely wins the grand prize for the best looking paystub I've seen:



You gotta wonder why some people have bad credit.

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Thursday, September 11, 2008

Capital One survey: Americans don't know loan rates

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A majority (61 percent) of Americans who currently have auto loans do not know the interest rate they are paying on their loan, a new survey from Capital One Financial Corporation suggests. In a challenging economy, when saving money is particularly important, many consumers may be paying more than necessary and could benefit from a lower interest rate and a lower monthly loan payment by refinancing, the company notes.

Read the rest of the article here

Are you kidding me???

Where is Capital One getting the data for this survey?

I get beat up all the time over the interest rates. The majority of my customers want to know exactly what the rates are before any products are even mentioned.

Does this article suggest that if the customer falls into the sub-prime catagory, the F&I manager might not be practicing proper disclosure? By reading this article, it appears so 61% of the time - right?

Would Capital One be admitting that they are buying paper from automotive dealerships who are not properly disclosing what their customers are signing.

Having a 61% portfolio ratio of customers who have no idea what their interest rate is would scare me to death.

This creates visions of an F&I Manager putting one hand over the truith-in-lending disclosures while pointing toward the bottom of the r.i.s.c. leading the customer to just "sign right here".

Are we back to the "good 'ol days"?

Scary.

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