What to Do With Bad Dealers

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 05-20-2004, 03:18 PM
  #1  
Instructor
Thread Starter
 
patek007's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 199
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
What to Do With Bad Dealers

Although from the corporate perspective, there is enough 'local' content to shed some light as to WHY 'bad' service is really 'bad' from the dealers we all are well aware of ... Next logical step would be to see percentage of 'bad' service dealers belonging to 'public' as oppose to independents...

Enjoy!
-------------------

What to Do With Bad Dealers

By Steve Finlay

WardsAuto.com, May 17 2004

Auto makers use various rewards and punishments to deal with under-achieving dealers.


INDIAN WELLS, CA – No dealer ever put his or her name on a store, then set out to run a bad business. So says Ford Motor Co. Group Vice President James O’Connor, a former dealership general manager.


Peter Welsh, president of the California Motor Car Dealers Assn.
That said, some dealers unceasingly struggle, score poorly on satisfaction surveys and miss minimum sales targets.

How do manufacturers deal with such under achievers? That was a topic of a lively discussion at the California New Motor Vehicle Board’s third annual roundtable here.

Different auto makers take different approaches. All agree a dealer must be hopeless before an auto company revokes a franchise. Less extreme measures are the rule, ranging from counseling to nixing new franchise opportunities.

“There’s a cost – legal and otherwise – in determining dealers who don’t perform,” says Frank Dunne, General Motors Corp.’s newly retired executive director-sales, service and marketing retail relations.

“GM is taking a very close look with a process that identifies them, helps them and tries to improve the situation,” he says.

For dealers chronically at the back of the pack, GM tries to convince them to sell and urges better dealers to buy them out.

Customer satisfaction surveys, gauges of how well a dealership is doing, are under fire. Many dealers say the surveys need revamping, as they often give flawed feedback.

“We’ve gone away from using customer satisfaction surveys as a performance target,” says Nancy Davies, vice president-retail market development for Toyota Motor Sales USA Inc.

Dealers care about customer satisfaction as much as manufacturers, says Alan J. Skobin, vice president of Galpin Ford in North Hills, CA, the No.1 volume Ford dealer in the U.S.

“That’s why you’re in the business, to take care of customers,” says Skobin, a member of the California board. “As far as weeding out offenders, they weed themselves out.”

But sometimes that takes too long, says Brady Schmidt, president of National Business Brokers, a firm that facilitates dealership buy-sells.

“We see numerous dealers who should have been out of the business years ago,” he says. “It’s frustrating.”

He says the franchise system allows substandard dealers to hang on and “hurt everyone.” He adds: “It’s not unusual to walk into some dealerships with 50-year-old wallpaper and duct tape holding the carpeting together.”

Compliance rewards and punishments vary among manufacturers, notes Peter Welch, president of the California Motor Car Dealers Assn.

Among them: Money.

Dunne says a voluntary standard-of-excellence program – that started with Cadillac dealers and since has expanded to other GM brands – offers retailers generous cash rewards for high sales volumes and customer satisfaction scores.


David Wilson, owner of the 12-franchise Wilson Group.
“A dealer could end up with a bonus check for $450,000 at the end of the year, depending on the size of the store,” he says.

Dealers must do well to obtain additional franchises – or else. Ford last year prevented the Bob Baker dealership group in San Diego from selling a Ford store to Asbury Automotive because the auto maker contended some Asbury Ford stores elsewhere failed to meet standards. (See related story: CA Board Upholds Ford’s Baker-Asbury Veto)

“We always try to buy a store with room to improve and get credit for that,” says Mark Iuppenlatz, senior vice president-corporation development for another publicly owned dealership chain, Sonic Automotive. “If you buy peak performers and they go down, you can be in trouble.”

David Wilson, owner of the Wilson Group, a 12-franchise dealership network in Southern California, notes a fundamental difference between publicly owned dealership groups and independent groups such as his.

He explains, “I’m in business to make a profit based on sales and service, whereas the ‘publics’ are interested in share value and stock prices.

“In some cases, they could be dumping inventory and selling below costs in one city to qualify for getting a platform of dealerships in another. As a private dealer, I can’t do that.”

Adds Welsh: “There’s tremendous pressure with the ‘publics’ to move the metal.”

The opportunity to obtain more stores with manufacturer approval is a carrot to get dealers to meet quality and sales standards, says Davies.

Adds Deborah Goldman, Toyota’s managing counsel: “What better person to give a second store to than a performing dealer?”

Conversely, auto makers agree, what worse person to give another store to than a poor performer.

sfinlay@primediabusiness.com
Old 05-20-2004, 03:25 PM
  #2  
Fell off my Rocking-Chair
 
shaHn78's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: In a different State of Mind
Posts: 1,812
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
Is it me or that article very poorly written?


Anyhow, I'm sure dealers have much incentive in doing well, not only in profits but in bonuses and whatnot. Still doesnt prove as to why some dealers are so terrible.
Old 05-20-2004, 03:26 PM
  #3  
Fell off my Rocking-Chair
 
shaHn78's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: In a different State of Mind
Posts: 1,812
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
And so... what is it exactly which needs to be done with bad dealers
Old 05-20-2004, 03:42 PM
  #4  
Suzuka Master
 
EricL's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Ninth Gate & So Cal
Posts: 7,388
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
Originally posted by shaHn78
And so... what is it exactly which needs to be done with bad dealers
Simple...

Old 05-20-2004, 03:50 PM
  #5  
Banned
 
18anatak's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Orlando
Age: 44
Posts: 11,514
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
^^nice.
Old 05-21-2004, 12:36 PM
  #6  
Instructor
 
carquest's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: baltimore
Posts: 208
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes on 0 Posts
how about starting and maintaining a list of acura "dis-service" dealers on this site?

sounds like we have enough of an acura population on this site to make a reasonable attempt at what acura dealer's to avoid.

just a suggestion.
Old 05-21-2004, 12:40 PM
  #7  
registered pw
 
dallison's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: south central pa
Age: 49
Posts: 38,821
Received 354 Likes on 252 Posts
i'll be 1st, reading acura gets 2 thumbs up for service, just don't let their bumper guy touch your car
Old 05-21-2004, 11:13 PM
  #8  
Suzuka Master
 
EricL's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Ninth Gate & So Cal
Posts: 7,388
Likes: 0
Received 1 Like on 1 Post
Originally posted by carquest
how about starting and maintaining a list of acura "dis-service" dealers on this site?

sounds like we have enough of an acura population on this site to make a reasonable attempt at what acura dealer's to avoid.

just a suggestion.
This was discussed by the moderators and others at one time -- and it has been discussed by the general membership quite a few times. The forum administrators had concerns about being sued.

Just post bad dealer experiences and keep the facts accurate. It's also nice to hear about dealers that care about their customers.
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Type S Zero
Car Parts for Sale
2
02-17-2016 02:37 PM
carz0159
Car Talk
37
09-20-2015 06:11 PM
kuzdu
5G TLX (2015-2020)
3
09-10-2015 08:42 PM
BlueAquarian
5G TLX (2015-2020)
34
09-10-2015 02:18 PM
pizokk1
5G TLX (2015-2020)
2
08-31-2015 09:20 PM



Quick Reply: What to Do With Bad Dealers



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:17 PM.