Stop Hiding In The Closet

Are you running a business or a democracy?

I’m a big fan of making the team inclusive of what’s going on. I’m a big fan of educating the team. I’m a big fan of getting insight from those who are in the trenches. I’m a big fan of listening to the troops.

But, I’m not a big fan of rule by committee. Ruling by committee is an easy way to avoid accountability.

Ruling by committee allows us to blame no one when it fails. Ruling by committee is a sickness designed to allow those in charge to accept responsibility for nothing.

Ruling by committee is a way to hide in the back room. Rulling by committee is peeking through the closet door.

Step out of the closet, come into the room and be counted. If you’re ruling by committee, stop it!

You’re not running a democracy, you’re running a business. That’s all I’m gonna say, Tommy Gibbs

Do The Math Rock Star

Once in a while I run into dealers and managers that struggle with how long they should keep units. It can create conflict so severe that someone (the manager) ends up losing their job.

Over the years I’ve run into a few people that are adamant that it’s ok to keep units past 60 days. I’m ok with someone having a different business model that really works. But, I question if it’s really working when you do the math.

Take a look at the chart and the bullet points below:

1. The first one is a car that you make $1200 on, hold 25 days and end up in the sweet spot of 117% (Sweet spot 110 to 120%)

2. The second one shows that if you keep that same car for 60 days, in order to achieve the same ROI you would need to make $2900 in order to get to the 118%. Is that doable?

3. The 3rd example shows that if you hold that same car 60 days, make $1200 on it, you end up with an ROI of 49%…not good, but if you held it 60 days you are probably happy to make the $1200.

4. The 4th example shows that if you make a $1200 gross on a car that you hold for 90 days you end up with a horrible 32% ROI…is that a good use of your money?

5. The last example shows that if you hold that same car for 90 days, in order to hit the sweet spot you would need to make $4300 gross. Can you really do that after 90 days?

Holding cars based on the theory that you can’t replace them is “false justification.”

You might be a rock star, but unless you do the math you might be living under a rock. That’s all I’m gonna say, Tommy Gibbs

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Who Eats First?

Yep, the holiday season is here. For sure many of you will be having holiday parties, luncheons and the sort with your team members.

Isn’t it funny some of the life lessons we learn by observing along the way? There are some things you don’t actually have to be told. You see it and it registers in your mind forever.

For me one of those lessons is about who eats first. Early on in my Marine Corps days I recognized that the highest rank in the tent ate last.

I’ve always applied that discipline in my business career.

Not only is it a good practice to feed the troops first, it’s a good
practice to sit with the troops. If you’re having a function, you should encourage your leadership team to scatter and not sit together.

It’s amazing what you can learn when you observe, sit and listen. That’s all I’m gonna say. Tommy Gibbs

What Time Is It?

It’s Thanksgiving and time to give thanks. If you’re like me for sure you have a lot to be thankful for. Among many things I’m thankful for are your friendship and support.

Thanksgiving also starts the close out of the year. It centers around Black Friday and rolls through the last week of the year. Like it or not, 2017 is already here. I’ve listed some very basic ideas you need to take into consideration that will help you finish strong and get ready for your best year ever.

A. Re-commit yourself- and your thinking towards being the very best you can be. Take stock of all those great ideas running around in your head. Write them down and make a commitment to get them done by certain dates. Post it on the wall in several places that you will see frequently. If you have a private restroom, put it on the mirror.

B. Re-evaluate-the appearance of your inventory. Let’s do a little checklist:
1. Look at your inventory online. Are they all there? 40 + pictures & prices posted?
2. Take a lot walk. Are the vehicles in straight lines?
3. When was the last time the entire lot was rotated?
4. Are you using angles to display your inventory?
5. Do you have hang tags? If so, do they all have hang tags?
6. Are they nasty, dirty on the outside?

C. Refocus-To be successful in the used car business (or any business) you have to be focused and be totally committed. Your entire management team has to understand your commitment to the business. Make sure a weekly lot walk is part of your routine. Every car in your inventory must be touched. If it’s in service, touch it. If it’s in prep, touch it. If it’s in the budget center, touch it. Everybody touches it.

D. Re-Recon-Take every unit over 30 days old back through a recon process. (You’ve already missed your best window of opportunity to make gross; that would be the first 20 days.)

E. Re-Invest-in yourself and your management team. Do something to gain some knowledge. Hire me, visit CarMax, or visit a dealer friend in another state that does a good job in used. Attend a workshop. Join a Twenty Group. Join a Used Car Twenty Group. (Hire me!) Do something besides sitting there and waiting for something to happen.

F. Re-think- your management team. Do you have the right person running your used car operation? Yes, that person may have been with you for years. Loyalty sometimes equals mediocrity. Maybe they have some great skills, but the fact is that you may not be making the best use of their talents. Used car managers today have to be “Asset Managers.”

The dealers with the most successful used car operations are those who have taken ownership of the used car department. The more involved you get, the more success your dealership will have.

I’m thankful for lots of things this holiday season and I’m especially thankful that you’ve taken the time to read my little Zingers. That’s all I’m gonna say, Tommy Gibbs

A Business or Democracy?

I’m a big fan of making the team inclusive of what’s going on. I’m a big fan of educating the team. I’m a big fan of getting insight from those who in the trenches. I’m a big fan of listening to the troops.

But, I’m not a big fan of rule by committee. Ruling by committee is an easy way to avoid accountability.

Ruling by committee allows us to blame no one when it fails. Ruling by committee is a sickness designed to allow those in charge to accept responsibility for nothing.

Ruling by committee is a way to hide in the back room. Ruling by committee is peeking through the closet door.

Step out of the closet, come into the room and be counted. If you’re ruling by committee, stop it! You’re not running a democracy, you’re running a business. That’s all I’m gonna say, Tommy Gibbs

I Don’t Hate Packs

Ok, I don’t hate them, but I’m becoming less and less of a fan of them for sure. As a new car dealer for over 20 years I found packs to be a useful and profitable tool to increase profits and flexibility.

As for being against packs, if they are still working, stay with them. I just question if they are working as well as some dealers think they are.

I believe that in the big picture they have outlived their usefulness. If you review the history of packs, they came about in part because managers worked from cost up. Dealers figured out that if the manager’s target for front gross was $1000, that they would hit that number if they had packs or not.

It’s very much in the family of why we charge full retail in the service department to the used car department. Over the course of time charging full retail and packs didn’t hurt front gross and it actually made the dealership more money. Over time packs have become their own profit center.

These theories and concepts have worked well for a long period of time. The Internet has dramatically changed the game. More and more dealers are pricing to market vs pricing based on what they have in the car.

They are not working from cost up like they did in the good old days. And, the sales person has very little control over grosses, as the price has been set before the customer even shows up. The reality is it makes very little sense to pay sales people on gross profit in today’s market.

As my good friend Dale Pollak likes to point out, packs are nothing but a tax on your vehicle. You are taxing yourself and making it that much more difficult to be competitive.

As more and more CarMaxs, Varooms, Echo Parks, Texas Directs, Carvanas, Auto Nation USA get into the game, the less relevant packs (taxes) will become. When you’re being charged full retail in service and you also have packs, you are adding additional cost to your inventory that others don’t have.

Every time you go to appraise a unit or go to the auction, those additional charges are running around in your head and are making it that much harder to acquire inventory. I do believe that with better strategies dealers can improve their average gross profit…but, not by much…thus the only way to win the game today is to sell more used cars. To sell more used cars you have to be able to get more used cars. To get more used cars you have to have an acquisition advantage.

If you’re still using packs keep using them if they are working. But, you should keep asking yourself if they are really working as well as you think and if they are putting you at a disadvantage in the marketplace.

I don’t hate packs, but I do hate it when we lie to ourselves. That’s all I’m gonna say. Tommy Gibbs

Are You Serious?

I had great mentors when I first got in the car business. One of the first things I learned was that when a salesman was working a deal the whole world stopped.

Most of us are familiar with the tower or desk concept, the area where deals are worked, which can at times be like Grand Central station. It’s the nerve center. It’s the airplane control tower. It’s the emergency room and ICU all rolled into one. It’s serious business. You need to be serious.

What it’s not, is a place to socialize, but socializing does happen there. With that being the reality, the management staff has to have the discipline that all silly activity stops when a sales person walks in the room. To this day, when I’m in a dealership and a sales person walks in the tower I want to say, “Whatcha got?”

Sometimes they have a deal. Sometimes they have a question. Sometimes they need encouragement. Sometimes they are

looking for a little push. Sometimes they are just lost. But at all times I want them to know I care about them and I’m there to help them do business.

Maybe you should be just a little more serious. If you’re not already using the term “Whatcha got,” maybe you should.

By saying “Whatcha got,” you will get a lot. That’s all I’m gonna say, Tommy Gibbs

What To Do Next?

By now you’ve closed out October, twisted over the numbers and gone back to work. Not so fast.

October is the perfect month. “Perfect for what?” you say. Perfect for figuring out where you’ve been and where you want to go.

I can’t say that math was one of my best subjects, but I can divide by 10 real easy. At a glance I know what the averages are for any line item expenses, sales volume and gross profit.

What also makes October a perfect time is it sets the stage for the next year. Now is the time to start planning for 2017. Waiting until the last week in December to get your plan together is a really bad strategy.

This is the perfect time to dig in and firm up your fundamentals in all departments. This is the time to get back to basics. This is not the time to cut back on your training.

This is when you need to amp up your thinking, stretch your organization and stretch your imagination. If you don’t have a solid foundation of basic processes you will never maximize
your success.

This is the time to take control of the “evaporation factor” that’s been occurring all year long. This is the time to stop the “process bleeding.”

Your long term plan should include joining a Twenty Group and attending the NADA convention.

We all get lazy, and get caught up in our daily routines. Attending these meetings gets you revitalized. It gets you outside of your daily box and opens your eyes up to what the possibilities might be. Seems like a no brainer.

This is the time to make those plans. Teamwork is critical if you’re going to maximize your bottom line. To keep your team on the same page you have to constantly communicate to them what the expectations are and what processes they are expected to follow.

There is no “shake ‘n bake” solution. You don’t fix it and walk away. You fix it and re-fix it.

What to do?

1. Ask yourself if you can improve your processes? If you focus on revamping your processes, what effect do you think it will have on your business? It is an absolute fact that regardless of how well disciplined you are, over time your processes are going to evaporate. The best piece of advice I can give you is to lock yourself and your management team in a room and review every detail of your selling processes. Be brutally honest with yourself. Then take the necessary action to get yourself back on track.

2. Can you improve your team? Got the wrong players? Now is the time to make the changes. If you already have the right team in place then it’s time to let them know what your expectations are and show them the plan and the path to achieve those expectations.

3. Don’t think of your planning as “you now having a plan.” Think of it as a “mission.” Plans can fall apart. When you’re on a mission you stay after it until you succeed and then you stay after it some more.

I’m on a mission to get you to re-think what you’re doing. I’m on a mission to get you ready. That’s all I’m gonna say, Tommy Gibbs

You’re Not That Good

Just kidding. I’m sure you’re pretty good at what you do or you wouldn’t still be doing it.

I have a saying I’ve developed over the years and it goes like this. “You never get it right and there’s always more and something else to do.”

In a recent article in USA Today, Bill Parcells, former New York Giants coach says of Bill Belichick, the New England Patriots coach, “Sustained excellence is not something that’s easily acquired.”

So there you have it, I’m on the same thought wave as a couple of great NFL coaches.

Pause and think about it for a minute. Think about how hard “sustained excellence” is to achieve.

The word sustained: continuing for an extended period or without interruption.

The word excellence: the quality of being outstanding or extremely good.

Being able to do something day in and day out without evaporation is the single greatest challenge any leader faces.

Maintaining discipline is the key to obtaining “sustained excellence.” When you maintain discipline you have a far better chance of sustaining excellence.

Sustaining excellence doesn’t happen by osmosis. It happens when leadership creates a laser focus on all those things we know to be important.

Sharpen your laser. That’s all I’m gonna say. Tommy Gibbs