Business Office Blueprint
Try following these 20 steps to greater success in the dealer F&I office this year.

Customers want clarity, options and someone who will listen, not lecture.
Pexels/Mikhail Nilov
A true F&I professional is the dealership’s quarterback, compliance officer, customer advocate, detective and babysitter in one chair. The best don’t run numbers or pitch products. They follow a clear process, honor a strict code of ethics, and help customers make informed decisions.
At Reahard & Associates, we have spent decades proving a simple truth: Change the experience, and you change the result. Today’s customers are better informed and less tolerant of pressure. They want clarity, options and someone who will listen, not lecture.
Here is a 2026 daily playbook built on that mindset.
Arrive early, stay sharp: Be first in the front end. Review delivery schedule, funding status, and deals-in-transit so you start ready instead of reacting.
Know every car on the line: Walk the lot weekly and know which units are aged, high-gross, certified preowned or packed with risky technology.
Audit yesterday for training, not regret: Pull every deal from yesterday and decide what you would do differently next time. That turns every stumble into coaching material.
Commit to continuous improvement: Read an industry news article daily and look for other ways to expand your knowledge and sharpen your skills. Growth is a habit, not an event.
Review the factory warranty and watch an “Ask an Expert” video: Spend two minutes on autoconsumerinfo.com, then watch an “Ask an Expert” video. A strong factory warranty review helps customers see the gaps.
Master lender relationships: Call buyers weekly so they know you as the professional who sends clean paper, structures deals, and calls before there is a problem.
Partner with service: Meet your service manager weekly, talk real claims, and use those stories to make protection tangible in the business office. Spiff service advisers for vehicle service contract referrals; they already have the relationship.
Be the bridge, not the barrier: If sales sees you as an obstacle, work on structure, language and trust until you feel like one team. Super teams beat superstars.
Meet with sales: Hold a five-minute huddle before delivery to confirm the buyer, the payment and the plan. One team, one process, one customer experience.
Run a daily save-a-deal review: Get the customer’s story. Sit with them to review the credit application and bureau report to build a case for approval with the lender.
Effectively use a menu, preferably on screen: Build a compliant menu, then first simply explain what each option is and what it does, with no selling. Customers relax when they feel informed instead of ambushed.
If possible, record every transaction: If your store records transactions, record every delivery and review one recording each week like game film.
Manage compliance: Treat the Patriot Act, Office of Foreign Assets Control, Equal Credit Opportunity Act, Safeguards, privacy, Red Flags, menu documentation, and adverse action as non-negotiable.
Call customers after delivery: Thank three customers each week and check on them so you catch issues before they become problems.
Track and know your numbers, because F&I is a very measurable activity: Know your per-vehicle retail, products-per-deal, per-unit-transacted, finance-to-cash mix, product penetration, and chargebacks before your general manager asks. When you measure the right things, you can coach and correct with confidence.
Audit the desk: Review the last 10 deals you were handed and discuss desking rates, terms and communication. Fix issues together before they show up in your chair.
Review chargebacks weekly: Use chargebacks to see where expectations were unclear or follow-up failed, then fix that weakness in your process.
Own your office environment with the five essentials: Keep your office calm and professional with a live plant, a candy dish, a family photo, a scenic picture, and a conversation starter.
Hold a weekly one-on-one with the GM: Schedule 15 minutes and bring performance, funding, training activity and one clear action item for the week.
Guard your mindset and never stop learning: Read, watch, attend and surround yourself with people who pull you forward and protect your energy.
Real F&I professionals do more than sell products. They run a customer-focused, ethical, measurable process that protects the dealer, guides the customer, and keeps the store out of trouble. Do those things with discipline in 2026 and you will be the master-level connector your dealer cannot afford to lose. And remember, It’s a beautiful day … to help a customer!
DIG DEEPER: A Better Way to Measure F&I Performance
Justin B. Gasman is a senior training consultant with Reahard & Associates whose father was an F&I manager. He’s a past first-place winner of F&I and Showroom’s F&Idol contest and helped his dealer earn F&I Pacesetter status, putting it on the map. Justin is AFIP Master- certified and ACE-certified.
More F&I

Smaller Loans, Longer Terms
The youngest generation of car buyers is more likely to finance less expensive vehicles, more than half of generation Z consumers borrowing less than $25,000.
Read More →
New Lifetime Battery F&I Product Meant to Drive Dealer Traffic
EFG Cos. offering is intended to create lifetime auto dealer engagement with customers.
Read More →
The Psychology Behind Menus That Increase Add-On Sales
There is a science to crafting a menu that gives customers confidence in the choices presented, and moving the process outside the F&I office can further boost results.
Read More →
Why Your F&I PVR Is Misleading You
Here’s a handy checklist of the numbers to track in 2026 instead.
Read More →
Auto Consumer Anxiety Presents Opportunity
A survey of U.S. drivers found the majority are concerned about finances and the economy, but those fears make many ready to buy vehicle-protection products.
Read More →
Humble and Hungry: 12 Rules for an F&I Life
Dustin Gingerich, with a decade in the F&I business under his belt, shares his thoughts on leadership, building trust with customers, and the importance of learning and innovation.
Read More →
Focus on the Opening
F&I managers must learn as much as possible about their customers, starting before they walk into their offices. The bulk of today’s consumers expect that, and good results will follow.
Read More →
F&I Reaches for the Sky
The increasingly important profit center continued making gains in the first quarter, according to StoneEagle data, ancillary products proving more popular as consumers hold onto their buys longer.
Read More →
What Market Timing Mistakes Mean for Your Reinsurance Program
When volatility hits, dealer-owned reinsurance programs face a familiar temptation: pull back and wait for calmer waters. New data from BOK Financial shows why that instinct can quietly cost you years of surplus growth.
Read More →
The 90/10 Rule
In this video, Ryan Ruff explains the rule that elite sales professionals use to turn ordinary conversations into unforgettable customer experiences.
Read More →