“Must-Dos” to Find Efficiencies in Even the Most Routine Tasks and Costs

This article originally appeared in Digital Dealer here.

Back in August, we started our article series of “must-dos” by looking at the overwhelming weight of dealer expense structures on gross profit margins.

In Q1 2019, an average dealership’s expense structure was 106 percent of its gross profit, while in Q2 2019, it was 98.5 percent, according to data from NADA’s dealership financial profile series.

So, how did automotive dealerships fair overall last quarter? Marginally better. NADA’s Q3 data now puts the average dealership’s expense structure at 98.3 percent of gross profits. While we’re seeing movement in the right direction, the average dealership’s gross profit margin continues to fall below two percent, indicating there’s still a great deal of work to do to get costs down and profitability up.

Despite these findings, a small poll we conducted recently, suggests controllers remain optimistic about their dealership’s ability to generate profits. Results from the poll showed 50 percent of respondents reported they were confident in their dealership’s ability to generate profits today, while approximately 73 percent were confident in their ability to generate profits in the next two to three years.

Although we just captured a small pool of controllers with 26 respondents, the message seems as clear as the opportunity for dealers. The ones who handle the finances, the accounting, the general ledger, the “beans” themselves, feel positive about the direction their dealerships are heading in.

But with gross profit margins sitting where they are, how do you take action to maximize profitability? For the controllers we polled, increasing operational efficiency and reducing expenses rose to the top of the list. While these tactics can get accomplished in several ways, we recommend first doing a deep dive into the most commonly completed tasks and recurring costs at your dealership.

As the adage goes, what you do every day matters more than what you do once in a while. Because the DMS is the daily hub of your dealer operations, it’s a great place to begin mining for additional time and cost savings that will pay you dividends down the road.

To help you get started, we compiled the following list of tips and must-dos from controllers who have experienced firsthand the benefits of increasing efficiency in their daily dealership operations.

1) DO look for ways to automate or streamline repetitive tasks to help reduce non-value-added time. Eliminating non-value-added time has become a focal point for Joe Burris, corporate controller and chief accounting officer at Lou Fusz Automotive Network.

“I’m constantly looking for ways to automate or reduce non-value-added time across my dealer group when it comes to tasks and processes we do daily, such as billing, paying and processing vendor invoices, stocking vehicles, paying out warranty claims, and processing parts,” says Burris. “While I can’t control sales volume or gross profit, I can control my costs, including ones I’m responsible for to positively impact profits.”

2) DO give your staff a platform to voice their suggestions. While keeping a close eye on industry benchmarks and data is crucial, Burris urges that the most effective way to find wasted dollars is by looking through the lens of your team. Observe your staff and talk to them about their day-to-day jobs and processes. “By listening to their suggestions and ideas, you can find new and improved ways to do more with less,” Burris notes. Make sure to reward those individuals who offer recommendations and actively participate in the process of improving and streamlining dealership operations.

3) DO divide big quarterly or annual tasks into smaller weekly or even daily items. Breaking down the quarterly or annual tasks into smaller, more digestible ‘to-do’ items is key for Lori Garrison, the controller at Huffines Auto Group. “This not only saves you from being overwhelmed at crunch time but also makes it easier to find and correct problems/errors before they get worse or cause your dealership penalties,” notes Garrison.

With account payables, there are hundreds of vendors to keep tabs on. To tackle this, Garrison maintains a spreadsheet tracking the dates and amounts with each payment made, which helps her to easily spot anything outstanding or incorrect. Garrison also reconciles every day. “Whether it’s last in, first out reports or payroll accruals, there are a million things that can go wrong in a week and a billion that can go wrong in a month. If I reconcile every day, it’s easier to find and resolve issues and I sleep much better at night,” she explains.

4) DO use technology to your advantage. Garrison uses the general ledger import function for everything. “I tell my team that if it’s more than three lines of information, import it, don’t rely on rekeying the data. It’s faster and creates less room for error,” she notes. “There are so many helpful tools and features in our DMS that I try not to do anything by hand anymore. The same goes for stocking in inventory. We pre-stock vehicles into the system using our OEM invoices. We keep them marked as ‘in-transit’ until they physically arrive, but we get them all set up ahead of time.”

5) DO keep a close watch on your managed accounts. Lisa Feagin, the controller at Tom Bush Family of Dealerships, suggests checking each managed account at least three times a week to ensure contracts are being funded and departments with different P&Ls are splitting funds properly. She uses a combination of financial reports from her DMS to visually scan for abnormal amounts or duplicate entries and trains her finance managers and bookkeepers to study trend reports across the new, used, parts, and service departments weekly.

6) DO stay proactive even when your business is in a good place. “Dealers can’t get complacent when things are good,” cautions Feagin. “We’ve had a fairly strong growth year, and it’s easy to let expenses get out of hand if you loosen the controls.” To stay ahead, Feagin closely monitors expenses by cross-indexing them against volume. Did employee overtime and staff hiring go up to accommodate higher volume? Was that necessary? What about tools and supplies? Are rising costs due to price increases or a result of waste or misuse?

Stay tuned for more “must-dos” to keep your dealership running efficiently all year long.

About the Authors
Susan Moll is Senior Director of DMS Field Services for Cox Automotive, and Matt Hurst is Senior Director of Client Services for Dealertrack DMS.

This article originally appeared in Digital Dealer here.

Beyond The Contract

Finding the right technology partner for your dealership takes more than a solid contract or a good deal to secure your trust. When it comes to choosing the right Dealer Management System (DMS), you deserve a partner, not just another provider. Here’s what you should expect from your DMS partner when you go beyond the contract.

Discover more from your technology investment

Signing a contract can feel like a serious investment—and it is. Yet, often for dealers, before the ink is dry, the relationship between your DMS provider is out of sight and out of mind. A truly vested partnership should help you and your team uncover the true value of your technology investment. Learning a new system has the potential to help your team uncover more productive process improvements, learn new ways of analyzing data, and change the way your business operates.

Partnering with true experts

Getting advice from your vendors in the past has probably felt like a sales pitch. And those “trusted experts” have probably had their own sales goals to meet. What if your new DMS partner came with a team of industry pros, with real field experience, who had your goals, values, and aspirations in mind? Partnering with Performance Managers is like having a trusted advocate in your corner to help level-up your goal-setting game. After all, when our partners do well, it makes everyone look good.

Trust and transparency are the new customer service model

Your dealership goes a long way to deliver top notch customer service to your buyers. So you’d expect nothing less from your partners, right? Then why do so many dealerships tolerate customer service that fails to meet the needs of their team before, during, and (especially) after a technology transition? With the introduction of DMS 360, our DMS users have access to an online community of peers for faster problem-solving that delivers a new level of transparency.

Choosing a new DMS is the first step, but discovering a true partner who can help ease the pain of a transition to your new, improved DMS and deliver better customer service is the future of dealership technology. Learn from real-world dealers, like you, who have made the transition by watching the video below.

 

Watch now >>

 

“Must-Dos” to Equip Your Dealership for Today’s Tech-Centric Workforce

This article originally appeared on Digital dealer here.

By Susan Moll & Matt Hurst

While Halloween is known for bringing a month of frights, constant employee turnover haunts dealership efficiency all year long. According to the 2019 Cox Automotive Dealership Staffing Study, approximately 20 percent of dealership staff are likely to look for another job in the next six months. On top of this, NADA’s 2018 Dealership Workforce Study found dealership turnover reached a new high of 46 percent last year. So, how can dealerships reverse this damaging trend? Well, it all starts with taking stock of the changing talent pool.

A younger generation is entering the workforce and bringing with them a greater interest in dealership jobs than older generations, opening dealerships up to a new audience with a fresh point of view. Among Gen Z and Young Millennials, more than 30 percent are interested in working for a dealership, according to the 2019 Cox Automotive Dealership Staffing Study. This rate was even higher when roles other than sales were presented to them. However, appealing to this audience requires a cultural and technological shift.

Just as car buyer needs evolve, so do those of your employees. Here’s a list of “must-dos” to attract and retain this younger, tech-savvy talent and meet their changing needs head-on.

DO foster an environment that makes employees feel valued and show them there is an opportunity for future growth.

For Jennica Krebsbach, controller of Van Horn Automotive Group, creating a collaborative and engaging culture has been critical to her dealer group’s success. From instituting more flexible work hours to investing in training programs that help employees grow their careers and rise through the ranks, Van Horn understands employee satisfaction is vital to customer satisfaction.The auto group recently reimagined their on-boarding process for their sales staff to now require new hires to spend a week off-site to learn how to effectively communicate with customers, talk through word tracks, and gain a better understanding of what the sales process looks like. In addition to this, Van Horn also offers an advancement program, which is for anyone who wants to reach the next step in their career, whether as a finance manager, sales manager, etc. At Dealertrack DMS, we use individual development plans, which can be easily adopted in a dealership environment too.

DO engage your employees and ensure everyone feels like they have a say in the future of the business.

“We are 550 employees strong, so to keep everyone motivated and on the same page, communication and transparency are key,” Jennica notes. This perspective is also why Van Horn employees currently own approximately 30 percent of the dealer group and why town hall meetings occur the second week of every month. It’s all about making employees feel like they have a voice and a stake in the dealership and its success.

DO perform intermittent talent audits and “stay” interviews rather than just exit interviews.

A talent audit will help you review your workforce engagement strategy and address any needs for a specific skill set. Meanwhile, interviewing employees about why they choose to stay at your dealership and what improvements they would like to see, offers a unique point of view that’s hard to get from an exit interview.

DO evaluate the efficiency and simplicity of your dealership’s technology.

For Gen Z and young millennials, technology is more than a tool, it’s who they are, how they work, play, and communicate. These younger generations expect dealerships to equip them with the digital tools necessary to work more effectively and efficiently. That’s why leveraging a modern, open, and easy-to-use DMS system, along with a dedicated technology partner is a must-do. Plus, by not being locked into a rigid platform, dealerships have the flexibility of hiring to fill business needs rather than cater to the needs of their technology choice.

DO highlight training opportunities that are tech-centric.

Faced with the weight of high staff turnover, having intuitive technology and a provider that offers ongoing training opportunities and support is critical to bring greater productivity and speed to the new hire on-boarding process. Look to your technology provider for digital training functionalities and ask about access to peer-to-peer forums, self-service support, and virtual training and webinars.

A new, younger generation of workers is out there, and many are interested in dealership jobs. It’s time to take a look at your current technology and talent strategy to see if they make sense for the needs of today’s consumers and a changing workforce.

(Stay tuned for more, as this is part III in a monthly series of must-dos to keep your dealership running efficiently all year long.)

About the Authors

Susan Moll, Senior Director of DMS Field Services, Cox Automotive.

Matt Hurst, Senior Director of Tech Client Support, Dealertrack DMS.

This article originally appeared on Digital dealer here.

PAYROLL: DISCOVER THE COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE HIDDEN IN YOUR BIGGEST EXPENSE

Dealership managers are laser-focused on procuring vehicles and parts inventories with margins in mind. Marketing campaigns are carefully scrutinized to make sure every dollar produces results. Yet, dealerships’ largest operational cost – payroll – is often thought of as a “necessary evil” and gets little attention. As long as checks get cut on time, everything is OK, right?

Not necessarily.

Payroll can account for an average of 60% of a dealership’s total expenses.¹Payroll systems are typically viewed as simply a way for the human resources (HR) team to administer employee compensation. Some rely on outdated spreadsheets to manage the process. Others wrestle with large enterprise-level systems that have too many bells and whistles and not enough auto-industry-specific features.

What many dealers do not see is the opportunity hiding in payroll and benefits management to create competitive advantages by streamlining inefficient processes, realigning human resources to focus on talent retention, and reducing compliance risk.

Payroll can account for an average of 60% of a dealership’s total expenses.

Breaking the Stereotype

It’s no secret that dealerships struggle to hire and retain qualified employees. In a market where unemployment is low, the pool of candidates is already limited. Plus, a Hireology / Cox Automotive study reveals that only about one in 100 people would consider working for a dealership because of their perceptions of what it’s like to work in the industry.²

The only way to solve the issue it to address it head-on. Dealers develop strategic plans to manage margin compression, customer loyalty, and F&I efficiencies by leveraging data from their dealership management system (DMS). Now it’s time to use the same approach to improve employee relations.

By integrating the DMS with the HR management system, dealers get more accurate visibility into how employees are compensated, with which they can make better long-term decisions.

And the payroll process is greatly simplified, freeing the human resources team to focus more on culture-building initiatives that appeal to current employees and potential recruits.

Building a Competitive Advantage

The automotive industry is evolving along with changing market forces. Younger generations are less interested in commission structures and want the comfort of pay stability, benefits, and work-life balance. Dealerships seek ways to respond that address these desires that workers can find in other industries, but still motivate employees to meet sales and service quotas. It’s a fine line.

Integrating the HR system with the DMS can help find a balance that works for dealership management and team members while creating a competitive advantage in the following areas:

Streamline operational expenses and tasks
Most human resources teams pull double duty entering data about commission plans / pay structures, schedules, time off, tax withholding, and other key data into multiple systems. It’s a never-ending, time-consuming process that is prone to error. The American Payroll Association estimates an error rate of 1–8% of gross payroll.³

Dealer managers usually have little visibility into how the process is managed because they rightfully rely on comptrollers or payroll management personnel to handle the function.

The integration of the DMS with the HR system streamlines how data about sales is filtered into the commission equation, minimizing the impact of human error from duplicate data entry.

Overall visibility into employee management is improved, enabling managers from multiple teams to more easily pinpoint operational inefficiencies by assessing metrics that are valuable to them. For example, sales managers can see which team members are nearing overtime. HR leaders can evaluate what benefits are not being used and adjust plans. General managers can see trends in turnover based on a number of factors such as role, manager, and commission structure.

Also, it’s not uncommon to hear horror stories from payroll managers about the excessive amount of time it takes to process checks every two weeks. Many note they spend 60–75% of their time every month just making sure payroll is accurate and issued on time.

HR systems that are integrated with the DMS can greatly reduce the amount of time spent on processing payroll and managing benefits. The HR team can then shift their focus to creating much-needed employee engagement programs.

For example, the Kingman Honda dealership in Kingman, Arizona, reports recouping about one day worth of work every week after switching to another DMS. The efficiencies come from more straightforward car deal posting processes and bank reconciliation, easier accounts payable, simplified cashiering, and faster, more direct vehicle stock-in processes. Essentially, updating data in one system automatically syncs data with other systems such as payroll.

Boost talent retention
Employees want to feel like they are in control of their careers. Dealerships that proactively address talent retention are more likely to see better overall results because employees are satisfied, motivated, and understand what is expected of them.

The integration of the HR system with the DMS enables dealerships to provide transparent views into their schedules, compensation structures, and benefits from personalized dashboards that they can log in to and view. Managers and employees have access to the same information and can have open conversations based on data if questions or discrepancies arise.

These types of solutions are commonplace in other industries where companies compete for qualified candidates. New employees will expect technology-enabled onboarding, the ability to check their benefit status online and a user-friendly interface for HR-related tasks. Dealerships need to provide this type of solution for employees to stay current with workplace trends.

Accurate performance and compensation data is also a valuable tool for managers to review and proactively facilitate conversations with employees about what’s going well and areas for improvement. It’s an opportunity to shift the culture to a spirit of coaching and feedback.

Reduce compliance risk
Are you 100% confident your payroll system is 100% accurate all the time? If not, you have a compliance risk. Keeping up with constantly changing state and federal regulations is challenging. Dealerships are open to steep fines or lawsuits, even for what may seem like simple mistakes.

The probability is so high that many dealerships keep a law firm on retainer just in case compliance issues arise.

By integrating the DMS with the HR system, you eliminate the need to manually track compliance updates. An integrated talent management solution automatically populates the relevant modules with updated information such as tax compliance, minimum wage, overtime regulations, equal employment opportunity compliance, employee verification, and other important compliance directives.

Get More Information
When so much of your capital is invested in people, shouldn’t you be 100% confident that the systems used to manage payroll and benefits are accurate, streamline processes, and provide insights that enable the dealership to build a competitive advantage?

To learn more about strategies for recruitment and retention, read “8 Keys For Hiring & Retaining Staff at Dealerships.

1. NADA. “NADA Data Annual Financial Profile of America’s Franchised New-car Dealerships.” 2018.
2. Hireology. “Cox Automotive Dealership Staffing Study.” 2017.
3. Katz, Eyal. “Payroll Errors That Cost You Money and How to Fix Them.” Business 2 Community, 2017.

Ask Better Questions. Get More From Your DMS.

Have you ever heard the phrase, “There are no stupid questions?” Of course you have. Yet a fly on the wall of any corporate business meeting will tell you that, certainly, it would seem the people in the room are afraid of proving that statement wrong. In a Harvard Business Review poll, readers estimated 70-80% of their children’s dialogue was comprised of questions. (Anyone with small children is likely not surprised.) Yet, by the time we grow up, those same readers estimate their inquisitiveness drops as low as 15%. So, what happened?

Does everyone at your dealership have all the answers? Do you fully understand the scope of implementing a brand new Dealer Management System into multiple dealership locations? Odds are, no. Yet, knowing which questions to ask can be difficult. Here are three reasons why you, and your entire team, should get together more often and start asking…”why?”

Having a Growth Mindset

About 40 years ago, a Stanford University Psychologist named Carol Dweck uncovered the science behind the growth mindset. Now, businesses like Microsoft are famously adopting the principles defined in this research to unlock hidden potential in their teams. By removing the fear behind failure, employees and organizations are driving higher innovation, reaching their goals, and pursuing bigger projects. Research shows that it’s worked for very large enterprises. Is your dealership ready to ask more questions, even if you don’t have all the answers?

Becoming a Better Leader

Making a technology switch is a big deal. Months of planning can suddenly grind to a halt when things go wrong. Although “resistance to change” is often cited as a major delay in a technology switch, people will always look toward leadership to guide a technology transition smoothly. In other words: It starts at the top. The CEO of Google, Eric Schmidt is quoted, “We run this company on questions, not answers.” Having an open forum where you and your team can freely discuss the unknowns can keep everyone in learning mode and help you become a better leader, according to professional development experts. Make sure your door is open and your dealership is a safe space for questions about any changes.

Discovering the Unknown

It’s tempting to ask safe questions and end each day with definitive answers. Yet, collaborating with your team leads and asking the right questions—more questions—is a start in the right direction. “How will this impact our work load?” “Will we lose our data?” “Who will own this project?” Sometimes, knowing what you don’t know can help you discover the important steps you’ll need to take before you make the next move. It can also help you identify roles and responsibilities your internal team will need to assign, as well as uncover the gaps your potential vendors should support. To get started, get your copy of the DMS Checklist here.

 

Begin your journey by asking the right questions. Get the DMS Checklist.