Paul J Daly

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The Greatest Inefficiency of the Car Business Today | Dealers Compressed Episode SIX

It might sound corny, but when employees are treated like a team and not like a number, you can FEEL the difference in the way they do business. Trust us.

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Dale comes out swinging in this chapter as he calls dealers' human capital management strategy "The Greatest Investment Inefficiency of the Car Business Today". And the data backs him up.

Citing 2015 NADA reports, turnover for sales associates is 71% and service advisors came in at 41%. To Dale, this borderlines being an industry embarrassment and is the single biggest issue facing dealers who are operating in a market with increasingly compressed margins. With the average dealer payroll at $3.5 million, most dealers agree that it's their single greatest operating expense and an even greater burden on cashflow.

When was the last time you could push your payroll expense by a week? NADA offers a possible answer for the turnover, but Dale quickly dispatches it saying the real answer suggests several things: The need for increased attention an accountability to the manager who made the hire, the systems of on-boarding, and the clarity of the career advancement track. Revisiting his own personal hiring experiences as a dealer,

Dale recounts situations where he ignored hiring best practices. He hired charmers who turned out to be chumps and accepted the extremely high turnover as the nature of the car business. 20+ years later, Dale recognizes and laments the opportunity to have been a better boss AND a better businessman if he had only paid attention to human capital management.

Because of this, Dale is committed to sounding the alarm to help dealers more toward a tighter process which creates a desirable culture of advancement for employees who will in turn provide a better experience for customers and a great ROI for everyone. Acknowledging that dealers have typically considered this the "soft-stuff" of running a dealership, Dale says that investing in the discipline of sound hiring practices, company culture, and career advancement generate the fullest possible return on their dealership investments.

Culture matters! I see the evidences within our company and within the many others we help through our creative agency, Congruent Story as we produce creative content and branding material that help communicate value, hire better, and bring value to employees.

It's a greater ROI all around. Dale turns to Adam Robinson, founder and CEO of Hireology, the forefront hiring platform for dealers, for some clear direction. Mr. Robinson says that self-assessment is a critical first step for every dealer to make progress in hiring, retention, and employee satisfaction.

He goes on to say that hiring process is no different than pricing used vehicles. Specific methodology and process increase your chances of being better off. Dale concludes by highlighting the fact that nearly every dealer represented by Automotive News "Best Dealerships To Work For" event pointed to defined career paths and related training opportunities as critical to their success. These opportunities are especially welcome amongst millennial employees.

The closing question is how soon can you turn your dealership into a truly "people-first" organization? What will the consequences be in terms of missed opportunity, ongoing headaches, and less-than-optimal performance the longer it takes to get there?

What is YOUR answer?

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The Greatest Inefficiency of the Car Business Today | Dealers Compressed Episode SIX Paul J Daly

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