by KLINK » Fri Mar 13, 2009 9:41 am
Quote
"If I owned the store I would do it this way. A car is worth what a car is worth, what you have in it does not matter to the end customer, its value is its value. The fact that you had to put a set of rotors on it and a transmission in it does not matter to the person buying the car, it has no affect on the value, no matter what he pays he expects the car to go and stop. I would establish a sale price for each vehicle prior to going thru the shop. The car would then go to the shop with parts and service realizing that the less money that is put into the car in recon the more money will go to the bottom line of the store."
This is the way we price our used cars. The only downfall is it can end up putting some cars on our lot that are not up to our reputations standards. If the car is brought into the system at to high of a cost for its current condition, it limits the amount of money available to recondition the vehicle. an example would be a 2008 Caliber with 30,000 miles on it thats averages $10,000 dollars retail on the internet. You buy one at the auction for $7000 and get one traded in at $8,000, If you want to hold your gross profit you are limited to possibly not totaly reconditioning the vehicle, or putting a substandard vehicle on your retail lot.
Now the upside
We sell more used cars!
The fix
We are looking into averaging our used car reconditioning costs. I have have been running a spreadsheet with each cars auctual reconditioning cost a couple of ways.
1. What the used car manager approved and fixed.
2. What I would have approved and fixed.
Then I am taking these averages and sorting them by several different ways and getting a new overall average.
1.By year vehicle
2.By vehicle mileage
3.By vehicle model
4.By car or truck
5. Certified or not, ect.
You would be surprised at the results.
Our only hold up at this point is accounting.