Auto Retail Live Articles Video Articles Sign in
Articles Video Articles Sign in

Cambria


Featured Marketeer
Ian Godbold

Responsible for developing and executing an aggressive digital ROI focused business strategy for profitable growth and increase market share in the automotive dealer sector, whilst effectively integrating online with the core business



About

Auto Retail Live is a leading resource for automotive retail management strategies and best practises. Automotive retail is changing fast around the world as new technologies and innovations enter the fray and customer expectations rise.


Register

Please feel free to register to become a member of this Auto Retail Live blog site . Members can participate by commenting on articles and will also benefit from members only content. To register simply go to the 'sign in' and register.

Article Search


3 Best Practices To Beat Used Vehicle Margin Compression


According to leading Automotive society’s, used vehicle gross profits as a percentage of transaction prices has been shrinking, bit by bit, for nearly the past decade.

The challenge, and opportunity, for dealers rests in how you contend with margin compression.

The fix isn’t as simple as selling more used vehicles. In a margin-compressed environment, you have to sell more used vehicles more efficiently to maximize an ever-smaller return on an ever-larger investment.

To achieve a higher level of operational efficiency and sales, the following best practices for dealers:

A consistent sourcing pipeline. You can’t retail vehicles you don’t have in stock. More and more, dealers are employing full-time, technology-enabled sourcing specialists to maintain a steady supply of incoming auction stock . The specialists free up managers who previously found themselves lacking sufficient attention and time to selectively acquire the right auction vehicles, with specific Cost to Market and Market Days Supply metrics, to fill stocking needs. It’s not uncommon for these time-addled managers to just buy cars because their inefficient sourcing methods lead to frustration and less-than-optimal decisions. Similarly, the specialists give managers more time to oversee appraisals and maximize every trade-in opportunity.

Faster retail-ready turnaround. It’s still fairly common for used vehicles to spend five, seven or even 10 days in service before they are reconditioned, detailed, photographed and posted online. An Essex based volume dealer found that by trimming three days off his dealership’s seven day retail-ready average, he realized an additional £300 per vehicle in front-end gross profits. The dealer is now working to consistently meet a 36-hour turnaround, and anticipates the improvement will generate an additional £200k in front-end gross.
The example highlights the “time is money” axiom of retailing vehicles in today’s margin-compressed market. I would also note that top-performing dealers set aggressive benchmarks of 24 hours or less to complete detail and reconditioning work—a goal that typically requires automotive RO approvals when repair estimates fall within expected ranges, and dedicated recon teams in service.

Reduced inventory age. Market leaders currently recommend that dealers strive to retail at least 55 percent of their used vehicle inventory in less than 30 days. Dealers who achieve this objective, which requires a Velocity-oriented pricing strategy, are doing all they can to minimize margin compression and take advantage of retailing vehicles when they are fresh and stand to deliver maximum gross profit. To understand why reducing the days to sale of used vehicles is so important, I encourage dealers to do a quick study of the gross profits they achieve on vehicles retailed in less than 30 days compared to vehicles retailed after 30 days.
In most cases, the results show the average front-end gross profit declines by at least 50 percent once vehicles cross the 30-day line. If you segment vehicles retailed after 45 days, it’s not uncommon to see a roughly 50/50 split between vehicles that make a little money and those that lose a lot more.

This analysis often leads dealers to agree with the assessment that any vehicle that you don’t retail within 45 days represents a failure of management. For some reason, right or wrong, someone turned their back on these units, when they should have been working harder to sell them.

It should be noted that none of these best practices represents an easy fix. Each requires dealers, managers and team members to think and do things differently, sometimes in a manner that’s contrary to what they’ve been taught.

But dealers who get past these hurdles find their reward. It comes in the form of improved used vehicle performance and profitability in an era where neither can be taken for granted.


dalepollak.com


BackComment


1 Comments

Clive Anderson  2924 days ago
Old habits and expectations are hard to break. More profit made because the sale price increased. I know, short sighted thinking but is it what some managers would look at?


A Closer Look at an Uncertain, Unpredictable Used Vehicle Market

More


Are Car Dealerships the Safest Retail Experience?

Cambria More


Digital Marketing Strategy - A return to a traditional KPI

More


Desire, Commitment Drive Impressive Used Vehicle Turn-Around

More


A 2019 Priority: Managing Your Inventory Investment Value

More


Independent Dealer Realizes His Car Business Dream

More


4 Misunderstandings About Price In Today’s Auto Retail Market

More


3 Best Practices To Beat Used Vehicle Margin Compression

More


3 Takeaways to retail a larger share of vehicles in less than 30 days, and improving overall profitability and ROI in used vehicles.

More


Key Benchmarks Top Used Vehicle Dealers Achieve to Outpace Others In The US Market

More


Articles Posted


Category Search



Comment: 2924 Days Ago

3 Best Practices To Beat Used Vehicle Margin Compression
Old habits and expectations are hard to break. More profit made because the sale price increased. ..

LinkedIn