Look at the capital sitting on your lot and showroom floor and you’ll quickly see that your pre-owned and new-vehicle inventory are your dealership’s most valuable assets. So, is your dealership’s process for converting these assets into profit extracting the maximum value from every vehicle? If not, there’s a four-part inventory strategy that can help jump start growth and ensure your store’s inventory is working for the dealership in the form of more deals, more profit, and less waste.

If your dealership is buying and selling on gut instinct, or you don’t have a handle on which models turn in 20 days versus which sit for 90, or perhaps your trade-in strategy is to get the customer in a new vehicle instead of considering where you can move his or her old vehicle, you’re throwing money away every day.

To be successful in today’s market, dealers need to have concrete inventory strategies and processes in place. This means doing much more than just stocking the correct quantity of vehicles. Managing your inventory for profitability consists of four interlocking pieces that make up a comprehensive inventory strategy: inventory analysis, proactive strategy, inventory sourcing, and inventory management systems. Let’s take a closer look at each piece of your inventory strategy.

   

1. Inventory Analysis

Inventory analysis consists of assessing every vehicle on your lot, including those vehicles you are accepting in trade and those you have planned for disposal. With thorough analysis, you can identify and maintain the right mix of core and non-core inventory. A dealership can also determine the optimal turn cycle to prevent inventory remaining too long on your lot and costing you money, as well as determine the optimal time to buy and sell inventory. It can also help establish pricing parameters that work for your dealership’s market.

2. Proactive Strategy

Once you have a handle on your inventory, you need to create a proactive strategy for actively managing, marketing, buying and selling your vehicles. Your proactive strategy should include plans for buying and selling vehicles that take into account gross profit, return on investment (ROI), days to turn, average cost of sale and seasonality. Your strategy should also include best practices for evaluating and appraising trades realistically, establishing a concrete aging plan, and setting a pricing structure that fits your market and region.

3. Inventory Sourcing

How you source your vehicles is an integral part of inventory management. Your sourcing strategy includes how the dealership determines how often wholesale vehicles are purchased and how trade-in decisions are made. When assessing a trade, many dealerships look at the condition of the vehicle and forget to evaluate the need for the vehicle. A sound remarketing strategy takes into account a particular model’s past sales performance and aging history, as well as the current market demand and residual value.

4. Inventory Management Systems

Inventory management systems were created to help dealerships implement, maintain, and fine-tune their inventory plans. Dealers who use inventory management systems realize quicker vehicle turns and a higher ROI than dealers that don’t. Choosing the right system can make a significant contribution to your inventory management efforts.

Tim Zierden is general manager of inventory management solutions at DealerTrack. He can be reached at [email protected].

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