We are where we are today, which has been very helpful. And our focus is really kind of shifted a little bit towards being more of a powerhouse in the used car department. And in order to do that, you know, you got to be priced right, you got to be merchandise properly. And then of course, you got to be able to make a few bucks with each transaction. Otherwise, it doesn't make dollars. It doesn't make sense, right? Today, I'm thrilled to chat with Dennis Gingrich, sales and finance director at the Nilo Company, a top tier 10 rooftop luxury dealer group in California. We dive into the latest trends in dealership finance products and uncover how he managed to literally double profits while improving the customer experience. A big thank you to our sponsors for making today's episode possible. CDK Global, Cars Commerce and Dealer Image Pro. And now let's get into the show. Dennis Gingrich on the CDG podcast.
Dennis, welcome. Yeah, thanks for having me. It's great to be here. Appreciate you. Pumped to have this conversation. I was doing my normal course of research prior to the episode, as I always do. I started noticing that where you came from into the industry. So you were on the vendor side at Zurich, which you can provide background on what Zurich does and how it's involved in industry. But you guys have bred some, you know, a little mafia over here. I mean, I know the COO of Ziegler on a motive is a, you know, Sam Dark. He's a, he's a Zirica. You're a Zirica. What's going on with that? What do they have in the water at Zurich? Well, I don't know, man. I had a great eight years at Zurich. You know, and honestly, I would give them a lot of credit just for my professional development.
You know, I think Sam, who's a great guy, a good friend of mine would probably say the same. But, you know, really a great company and gave us a great opportunity to, you know, work with dealers on finance and insurance products, training, you know, and a little bit of compliance. But great company. I don't know what's in the water, but I'm glad I drank it for eight years because it led me here to the Nilo company.
Well, you've done well for yourself. Tell me a little bit about something that I personally haven't experienced, which is going from the vendor side to the dealer side. I always, I always view these two things as like two completely different worlds, right? The dealership is this super entrepreneurial organism where, you know, you're only as good as the next car you sell, right? It's, you have to put cars in the road. Of course, let's not forget about service and fixed ops, but it's this, you know, kind of you eat what you kill type of mentality. Corporate side, much bigger typically with many different processes. At least I usually perceive it less as something is less entrepreneurial, which I'm sure some people would argue that that's not the case on some companies. Needless to say, how did you make that transition? Why did you make that transition? Why get into retail?
So, while prior to joining Zurich, I was in the retail space. I started as a car salesman at 97. I was making me 18 back then and things got really real. I found out I was going to have my first kid about 20. So, I got really serious and buckled down about the car business. And then, you know, I moved over to California from Reno to chase my now wife. And, you know, we had our own, we had some more kids. And then I just, you know, was starting where I was at. I felt like I just wasn't growing or developing. I was a finance manager and I had a good friend that used to call on me. He worked for Zurich at the time, still a really good friend of mine.
He reached out and said, Hey, do you have any interest in this role? And just out of, you know, curiosity, I said, yeah, I'd like to talk about it. And really, the role was, I would say it wasn't too much different than my role as a finance manager. And that, you know, I still had to not sell a lot of F&I products, right? But I had to help other people sell more F&I products, increase their penetration profitability in the back end. And I also learned, you know, about the reinsurance piece.
So for me, the transition from retail out of in into the Zurich role was was pretty comfortable for me because training was something I did in my earlier role. So, you know, it was good. And the better my dealers did, the better I did. So it was all about sales, but it was really getting things done through other people and, you know, being a trusted partner with the dealers to help them move, you know, as you know, a very important profit center in the dealership forward. So I would say it was not too much different, but it was definitely a competitive environment.
And it was just about helping dealers sell more F&I products, which is a good thing all the way around. Okay, so you've clearly had lots of exposure to retail by this point. And what why take the plunge and go retail? I was just, you know, my boss where I was working out prior to joining Zurich, I had a conversation. It was a difficult conversation. I don't think he appreciated it. But, you know, I told him because I was in finance, I was a finance manager, I did well, and I just, I told him, man, if I don't move up and do something different, I am going to move out, right?
I just needed something new in my life. I'd been doing finance since I was 20. And it was just, it was just time. I didn't feel like I was growing professionally anymore. So, you know, that is really what piqued my interest. And getting in dessert just really opened my eyes to, you know, so many different parts of the automotive world. You know, so really for me, it was just looking for growth in a different way to grow my career.
And I did say early in my career, I'm never going back to retail. Well, never the world. Yeah. So tell me, before we hop into the nitty gritty, I don't want to talk about Nilo as well, but what you're doing today, you've, I love talking to people like yourself because you've seen so many different businesses across the country. What are some, and again, you train dealerships on F&I, right? So you were doing this daily. What are some of the best performing dealerships in the country doing when it comes to F&I? Like how, what separates the over-performers and the under-performers? In my mind, I think it's just, you know, individuals that are open to looking internally, right? Just saying, you know, I always use the example, finance managers typically if they're having a tough month, while it's, it's cash, it's leases, it's, you know, all the things we've heard in this industry for a long time.
But I think the individuals that just take some accountability and understand there are certain things we can control in this business and there's other things that we can't control. And I think the, the dealerships that have employees that are able to really put those two things in different buckets, allows them to be open and really engage and find in a way to do things better. And, you know, and better means, yeah, profitability, but I think better also means a better customer experience, right? Because the better we do in offering these products and, of course, trying to sell more, but the customer is buying them for the reasons they believe they need them, it just keeps them coming back into the dealership for parts and service and, you know, ultimately another car deal down the road.
So, you know, that is the biggest thing is, you know, not sitting around pretending that you have all the answers. And the companies that I dealt with that had that type of mentality every day of the week would eat the others lunch. Okay, so for anyone that doesn't understand, you were saying, what separates over performance under performers, you were saying cash leases, which you were essentially alluding to the fact that if a dealer is doing lots of leases and selling lots of vehicles cash, there will be less, you know, lower attach rate, less people, fewer people are going to be buying these F&I products, right? Which it's pretty, pretty obvious.
Tell me a little bit about Nilo. So how many stores, how many cars selling per year, give us some context about the size and scale of your current organization? Yeah, so the Nilo company was founded in 1921 in the Bay Area. Our entire platform consists of currently 10 rooftops here in Sacramento. We've got a couple of Porsche stores, two JLR stores, Acura, Audi, two BMW stores, Mini, Volkswagen, and Volvo. We're predominantly in the high line. All of our dealerships as the crow flies are within about a 30 mile radius. Currently, we're selling right around 1100 retail units a month and we do about $725 million a year in sales, looking to grow. So, but family owned, family operated, and I tell everybody this, all 650 people that work here, I think, I don't want to say everybody, but the vast majority would believe that we really work for good kings at the Nilo company. They're like amazing human beings and we're in the auto industry. That's crazy. Before I add another question, but what does it take to have someone in your organization say that about you? What have they done? How do they brand themselves so well that you're speaking so highly of them? What do they do? It's funny. The Nilo company was my largest account while I was at Zurich or a top two, depending upon the month. Whenever I would come to the Nilo company, it was the weirdest thing. I would come in here and everybody's like, God, I'm just so grateful I work here. This place is great. I've worked at other places. Rick Nilo, our president, he's here. He's just always thankful for what I do. Rick will pick up the phone regarding if he hears somebody doing something greater amazing. He will literally just call and people go, what's he calling me for? He just wants to tell you you're doing a good job. It's not the norm.
On all the dealership walls, we have our core values. I think a lot of companies have core values. They post them on the wall and they're just kind of there. They just send us signs on a wall. They don't mean anything. They don't mean anything. I will tell you these things. If you come into our dealership as a customer, we get customer feedback about them, the employees. We lead with we're a team. We respect one another. We encourage self-improvement. We have high expectations. We embrace change. We enthusiastically value our customers and we do support our community. I think if anybody were to walk into any single one of the dealerships, they would see that on the daily basis and they would feel it from our employees because they're all treated with those running in the background, which is great. Obviously, we're compensated well. They treat us great and they thank us for a good job. If there's a challenge, they can articulate it. We're just two civil human beings having a conversation about how to get better. I think that's how they get all the fan base they have about people working here.
I want to break down a little bit about a little bit of your sales process. You oversee the sales and FNI. You are really driving a lot of these decisions behind the scenes. Tell me, let's just start. You mentioned all the brands under your roof. I want to pull back to curtain a little bit here. What are some of the brands where you see the best FNI profits versus some of the brands where you see the worst FNI profits? Can you give us a little overview? It goes in line with the overall price of the car. We're fortunate. We do very well with Porsche and the JLR brand. Then probably BMW, Audi, Volvo, Acura, and then Volkswagen. I think I hit them all. That's the order they go. People that buy these type of vehicles, nobody needs a Porsche, nobody needs a Land Rover. It's definitely. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. I need one. I feel that way sometimes too. I can't quite convince Mrs. Gingrich, but I'm working on it. I'm like the worst clotheswear in the history of the car business, I think. I used to have this. Well, actually, this is going to be pretty shocking to some that know me and I'll listen to this. The only car I ever said, oh, I actually won that car, desired it. It was the two-door Porsche. Every guy wants that at some point. Then my dreams got shattered. Having kids, you're like, this is not that practical right now. Let's delay this a little bit. Adulting facts sometimes. You got a sack of advice, but the long-term gains are there. I've been told, and I'm starting to see it. Right. Okay, so now, are the margins the same? Is it just.
We're talking about the absolute profit is maybe higher on those, or are the margins actually. Do you see a big variance of the actual margin percentage on the different brands, whether it's Highline Luxury or Basic? Yeah, it's a larger per car, the margins higher on each transaction. Porsche stores are incredibly valuable. If you look at the Hager Report, I think they're at the top of the list of the most desirable franchise for an auto dealer to want to own. Land Rover is up there as well, so margins are good, but I think it stands to reason. It's probably the same with almost any business. The higher the price of whatever the item is, the more margin you would expect to be in there. When you go down maybe more towards the domestic that's more a volume-based or a need-type car. The margins aren't quite as good. It would be pretty common. This episode is brought to you by CDK Global, who will once again be streaming its annual Industry Conference CDK Connect 2024 on October 22nd. This year's Virtual Connect Conference will feature CDK's latest product innovations, a keynote from CEO Brian McDonald, and live breakout sessions focused across all operations of the dealership.
我们在讨论的是绝对利润可能更高,还是利润率实际上更高。您是否看到不同品牌在实际利润率百分比上的巨大差异,无论是高端奢侈品品牌还是基础品牌?是的,每辆车的利润更大,每笔交易的利润率更高。保时捷经销店非常有价值。如果查看《Hager报告》,我认为它们在汽车经销商最想拥有的特许经营权名单中位居榜首。路虎也名列前茅,所以利润率很好,但我认为这是理所当然的。这几乎适用于任何业务。无论是什么商品,价格越高,你期望利润空间就越大。当你转向更偏向国内市场,主要卖量或以需求为导向的车型时,利润率就不那么好了。这很常见。本集节目由CDK Global赞助,他们将于10月22日再次在线观看其年度行业会议CDK Connect 2024。今年的虚拟连接会议将展示CDK的最新产品创新,由CEO Brian McDonald发表主题演讲,并设有涵盖经销店各个操作方面的实时分组讨论。
You can register for CDK Connect at the link in our show notes below, or by visiting CDK.com slash connect. That's C-O-N-N-E-C-T, CDK.com slash connect. Can you explain to us and share what were, I would have to assume that you're brought into grow margin and improve it alongside other things. What were the margins before you entered Nilo? What are they now? Because I want to break down what you've done to drive improvement at one business or one dealership in the country. Without, I know the public's doing a good job of putting out their average margin in the back end. You can use public proxies. That's fine. Just because ballpark ranges. But we perform better than some of the best performing publics.
I also understand that we're more in the luxury ballpark in terms of which those like we just talked about, the margins are going to be higher. But from when I came on as the finance director, I had a role as a finance director in the mid-2000s. That role was more to chase around subprime loans and drive the per car. But this role, when I joined the Nilo company after being was predominantly to improve our F&I PVR. Because front end margin isn't there. And that's been the case for a long time with the exception of COVID. Dealerships have to make it somewhere. Parts and service, finance. So my role was to move the F&I PVR.
And from when I joined where we're at now, we nearly doubled in a relatively short short time frame. And I don't, you know, I'm not going to be the guy. Oh, that's all me. That's all me. Because that's not, yeah, we did training. Yeah, we did support. You know, I think just rising, you know, increasing awareness about how important it is to the financial health of the store was part of it. You know, being in this industry for a long time, I have a pretty good network of people that I just kept in contact that I had great relationships and jobs prior to Zurich and, you know, was able to recruit, you know, a handful of top tier performers.
So I think between getting some great talent that fit the Nilo company mold and just keeping it top of mind and, you know, obviously having incentive programs to drive that type of behavior, we are where we are today, which has been very helpful. And, you know, our focus is really kind of shifted a little bit towards, you know, being more of a powerhouse in the used car department. And in order to do that, you know, you got to be priced right, you got to be merchandise properly. And then of course, you got to be able to make a few bucks with each transaction. Otherwise, if it doesn't make dollars, it doesn't make sense, right?
Yeah. So yeah, many of the publics are their F and I profit is typically around, again, plus minus 50% of their margin on the vehicle. And in many cases, nowadays, it's sending the load amid 2000s per car. Right. So I'm going to assume that you're over performing there. Now, okay, cool. Now tell me, tell me a little bit about you mentioned a couple things here. You mentioned merchandising. What were the two? What were the other two? No, just, you know, merchandising, you know, getting focused on our used cars and just making sure that we're able priced price market, right? If you're not competitively priced, you're not merchandise, you're just not going to sell cars, right? Because of all that information available.
好的。 所以,大众的 F 和 I 利润通常约为其车辆利润的正负50%。而且,在很多情况下,如今每辆车的利润可以达到2000美元左右。所以,我假设你在这方面的表现超出预期。那么,好吧,现在告诉我,你提到了几件事。你提到了商品销售,还有什么呢?哦,只是关于商品销售,专注于二手车,并确保我们的定价符合市场。如果你的价格不具竞争力,你就无法进行有效的商品销售,也就卖不出去车,因为信息都很透明。
Neil has a really strong reputation yet you're holding really strong profits. I want to, I want to bridge this gap, right? Take us like one by one, right? So what has been your process, like very, very specifically, I want to dissect this, we can start with merchandising or anywhere else you'd like to start, but I want to sort of break this down into what you've been like, how your, your and your team have been able to do this very specifically. Well, I think, you know, when you get into merchandising, if people don't know you have a good or service, you're just not going to sell it. You don't want to be the best kept secret in town when it comes to selling anything.
So from a merchandising standpoint, you know, it's, I think it starts with just the, the Nilo family's philosophy that we would rather have, we would rather not have a car deal at the risk of maybe losing a customer because we didn't treat them right or give them a good product, right? Every, every pre-owned vehicle we sell, we give everybody a seven day, you know, no questions asked return policy, right? Because that's just something we believe in. If we can't get you the right deal on the right car, it's the wrong deal, right? Both those things have to be present, you know, and I just think it starts with making sure we're putting out a quality product.
We're very meticulous when it comes to reconditioning our car. So when people leave a Nilo company dealership, it's not just a car going over the curb, it really is our reputation. The family's been in this community for over a hundred years and they really, that's more valuable to them than I think them the dollars and cents. They want to have a good name in the community, they support the community. So I think it starts there. And when it comes to merchandising, one thing that we, we really push with our stores is, you know, when we take a, take a vehicle in on trade, or maybe we get something from the auction, which we try to stay out away from there as much as we can, or we acquire a vehicle out of our service drive, you know, it's a full push to get that car photographed, put through the shop and priced in line with the market as quickly as possible, because with used car values diminishing the way they are, time is not on our side.
So merchandising is good, is a big focus for us because we know the better we do there, the quicker we do it, the more success we're going to have. And it's really played out over these last several months. That way. A couple questions there. First of all, you mentioned seven neighbor return policy. How many people exercise that return policy? Like, or percentage less than 1%. You know, the sales people, if it happens to them once, it happens all the time, but it like seldom happens. You know, if we sell 1100 cars, I would be surprised if we had more than five in any given. I think that's the best kept secret.
I've actually experienced a similar thing, right? We found ourselves in a situation, right, at our use car lot where we were taking cars back anyways, because we would just not argue. It's literally not worth it. Anyone who's been in business for any amount of time knows that it's, it becomes a war. It's just, it's a dumbest thing you could do is keep someone hostage in a vehicle that they don't want. And then it came to appointment, they were like, wait, why are we not marketing this if we're anyways doing it? So to your point, I have experienced the same exact thing. It's almost no one, almost ever returns their vehicle. No, they don't. And you know, I mean, hell, at the end of the day, we have people that return their vehicle for good reason. And it, you know, it, maybe it's not now, but it's certainly not never to where if you hold their feet to the fire, chances are you're never going to see them again.
We do have people, hey, you let us out of a car three months ago, thanks, we just had something come up, we got it all sorted. And now they're back and we got a customer for life, you know, and theory. Third question is you spoke about merchandising photos, getting those cars on the website, just get, take us, explain that a little bit more to us. I mean, are you doing anything unique? Again, I'm scrolling through your inventory here. I looked at it a second ago. And so it seems like, you know, you, you invest a lot into your merchandising in general. What do you do there? We have individuals in house. We use a platform called dealer image pro. And you know, we have an individual or two individuals at each store that uses this technology and hardware to photograph every single vehicle as it comes into inventory. Right.
And you know, they do a good job from in terms of making sure they're consistent. You know, I kind of equate it. If you've ever deposited a check on your mobile phone, it's really not any different, right? It just shows these little wire frames around the car. So the, so the individual taking the photos just goes bing, bing, bing, bing around the car. That way they all show up consistently. And we get a consistent look and feel across the group. You know, they do some backgrounds, but you know, we really weekly, you know, twice a week, we really measure, you know, what percentage of our inventory new and used has photographs, because if it's not photographed, chances of somebody clicking on that vehicle, submitting a lead, just plummet significantly, right?
So we really lean into our team and track and measure what percentage of their inventory is photographed and online. Because if it's not online, it might as well not exist. I believe if you do not have photos, like, well, you're not going to sell that car. I know for me personally, I was shopping for a truck. And I had zero interest in looking at anything that did not have real photos because the, you know, the jelly beans, as they call them, those little CGI images, like it could be blue, but that blue does not look like the blue you're buying. Yeah. Well, first of all, I know dealer image broke very well. They are a partner of the podcast, a sponsor of the podcast. So super familiar with the product. Second of all, I'm curious about, you mentioned putting pictures on, you measure your, how many vehicles have pictures on the website twice a week. How do you balance this equation of having pictures on vehicles? Is that only like post reconditioning pre? I always found that in our industry. You know, we used to put pictures right away for everything.
And then we ran into a situation where people would come in for vehicles that weren't ready. And they wouldn't want to buy what's already available. And then we hired someone from drive time, believe it or not, who really was a gun call about deploying the drive time model, which is like, hey, like, I rather have a little bit more inventory. Let's recondition at all. Let's make sure it's perfect, then put a picture is when it's ready. So we'll always have, you know, a certain percentage of our inventory and what's called like work and progress. And that is actually not merchandise debt or visible on a site with real life images. And maybe it may be there potentially as a coming soon, but no images.
So how do you run that process and, you know, are able to maintain such a high customer experience at the same time? So we encourage our stores to take photos immediately. The sooner they're on the website, whether they're through reconditioning or not, we want them out there. And, you know, I guess there's probably different viewpoints on this, but going back to the earlier conversation about acquiring inventory, right? You got to go in eyes wide open. You know, you're going to need tires. You know, you're going to need this. You know, you're going to need that. If you're doing a good job, you're able to know where you're going to be in that car. And then you can see what the market is transacting at from a retail standpoint, and you price it accordingly. So it's out there. And then what we found is, is we do get leads and inquiries on these vehicles that aren't quite ready. That allows us to really prioritize what's important, right?
If I have a customer that's really excited about this, you know, Q5, I took in on trade over the weekend, I know, hey, I got to make sure the front deals clear, right? That's all good. And then I can just go to my top and say, Hey, we got to get this one in because we got a customer that's wanting to come in on Wednesday, right? And the quicker we turn that inventory, the better we do because these cars aren't getting worth more as each day passes, as you know. So, and we just let the customer know, Hey, it hasn't gone through the shop. But when it does go through the shop, you're going to be able to see everything we did do it and what we didn't do because, you know, we just believe in sharing that with our customers.
You also mentioned CGI. So for anyone that's not familiar with the term, right, Dennis is referring to those virtual backgrounds that some dealers use. I'm assuming I'm correct here. But so tell me more about tell me, do you do you do any of that kind of stuff to kind of speed up your merchandising? Yeah, some of this built into the dealer image pro product, you know, they can apply background. So you get that consistent look at feel, you know, up until I can't tell you the exact date we had, you know, all of our backgrounds with the exception of maybe some fresh some photos of some fresh merch, right, that was just trying to get on the website. We were all the same, but one of the manufacturers, Porsche, you know, they elected they did not want their dealers to use CGI background. So, our quest to get uniformity across your voter, he railed.
Yeah, you know, whatever. I mean, personally, backgrounds, whatever, you know, yeah, I don't think anybody is looking at our look at that beautiful background, right? I think they're looking at the car, the descriptions, the miles, you know, price. That's good. Yeah, yeah, I actually never use CGI in my experience because I was too like, pedant. I needed, I needed that real live photo. But that's, uh, that's an interesting observation that you're saying, Porsche doesn't even allow those CGI backgrounds. That's crazy. It's crazy the amount of detail, the luxury manufacturers, you know, think about it's actually like beautiful. I love that. Because I'm the same way, like I obsess over like a letter or like a, you know, punctuation when the creative piece of content. So that's cool to see that, you know, there's other areas in the car business where that's prevalent.
Yeah, no, it's a, you know, Porsche is an amazing manufacturer. They make an amazing car. You know, I mean, they are, you know, not the others aren't, but they are very well put together, put together very meticulous across a lot of friends. But you can't argue with the success that brand has. This episode is brought to you by cars commerce. The platform is simplified everything about buying and selling cars, including the quote unquote follow up. Let me explain dealers fast and effective follow up is crucial for converting leads and customers. But here's the problem. 40% of shoppers report that they are not getting timely or helpful responses from dealerships. This is a huge problem because your own team could be leading four out of every 10 sales opportunities on the table. Cars commerce makes it simple to measure and improve your follow up performance. A cars.com experience report tracks the percentage of leads your teams responding to and how customers rate those responses. While dealer inspires retailing technology enables your team to quickly text follow ups with personalized financing options to make the most out of every opportunity. To learn more about how you can measure and improve your team's follow up performance, go to cars commerce dot inks slash experience or click the link in the show notes below.
Okay, so before we move on to market and your insights into where we're at today from the car industry, tell me a little bit more about your actual in-store sales process and F&I. Right. Here is how you run that. Do you do anything that is maybe particularly unique to your organization? There's so many different ways that dealers across the country sell. I mean, I guess in some ways it's all the same, but in other ways it's all has its own tweaks and quirks and whatnot. So curious to know what is your process that your store follows?
I would say we're traditional in terms of the steps of the sale. Most of our traffic comes by way of an internet lead. They're looking at us online well before they come in. With the exception, we got a couple stores and auto malls where we'll get a higher frequency of foot traffic. But the process overall is just welcoming customers to the store, finding out what it is they want. If it's an internet lead, we already know. Just asking questions. We want to make sure they like the car. They like the company. Because if they like the company, they like the car and they like our sales professional. We're set up for success, I feel like. We do like our customers to take the vehicle for a test drive prior to buying it. Because no two use cars, as you know, you'll see drive the same. Same goes for new. The wheels seal the deal. It does, man. I definitely subscribe to that. But I think if there's one thing that might be a little bit maybe different, we have our sales professionals. At each store, they have some finance and insurance products that they present with the initial proposal. Because there are studies out there that indicate people do want to buy these protection products. They just want to know more about them earlier in the process. So they have time to consider and figure it out. You have some customers that, yeah, I'll take that and that. And then they'll buy the car and then they go through. And then we have our finance managers, obviously, make sure whatever was agreed to out the front in terms of products are properly disclosed and go over any other options that may not have been shared with the customer upfront. Obviously trying to sell a few more protection products. And then do the paperwork, shake their hand, thank them for their business, and make sure they're coming back to see us for parts and service.
In terms of products that you're selling nowadays, are you seeing any interesting trends? Is anything changing? Particularly in the environment where today where vehicle values have been declining? We're still pretty close to all-time highs in terms of actual prices, but values are declining, which is putting downward pressure on dealership profits. Other than the traditional vehicle service contracts, gap insurance, whatnot, are you seeing anything going through your mind, any products that are up and coming, anything like that?
I think just cosmetic products in general, things like ceramic coating, tire and wheel, we work in a luxury environment here, so I think people have a lot more concern over how their vehicle looks. I think security is important. Nowadays, you look at California, the insurance rates. I can't remember the, I think they're supposed to go up another 25% next year is what I was reading the other day. And I think when you take all that together, when you look at inflation, you just look at these F&I products. And it certainly is a way for a customer to control their monthly expense. So I just think broadly, they're definitely a value. I think they're more valuable than they ever have been.
How expensive everything is getting between gas, groceries, insurance rates, and then you look at our labor rates. I mean, people are more risk-averse. People are definitely more risk-averse. Well, I think so, because all of a sudden you look at what it costs to buy a new car. And I mean, you talk about this extensively. It seems to be a common theme. You just can't afford to go out and drop a sign up for another $1,000 payment because you talked about cars' values are decreasing. So what they're worth, people owe more on their car than the value that there's no payoff ferry, right? That difference just gets tacked onto the loan. So you just have you're exacerbating an affordability problem.
So finance managers and just dealerships in general making F&I products really a focus will not only give a good experience, but it really will allow the customer to hang on to that vehicle and manage risk a lot more efficiently, especially if they're live in paycheck to paycheck. And, you know, I mean, it's in the news. There's a lot of a lot of the public is live in paycheck to paycheck, unfortunately.
What's your outlook right now for the business? You know, I posted this the other day. I wrote interest rates at decade highs, vehicle prices near all-time highs, monthly payments near all-time highs. So new car sales must be declining, right? Nope. Plus over 8% from last year and plus 12% from last month, the resilience of the American economy is bewildering. What's your take care? I'm optimistic. I've been doing this since 97. And, you know, if you put it all on a graph, minus a few dips, it just continues to go up into the right. You know, we got some stuff coming up here in November, which will be interesting. But what goes up must come down, you know, eventually, and I'm referring to rates.
But I think, you know, America, its citizens, you know, there's a love affair with their car. We are very much into our cars where you go over to Europe. I don't, you know, they don't quite have that same vibe that we do. You know, that's just how we're set up. So I'm optimistic it's going to be good. And I also, you know, I just think it's a great industry. And I don't think it's going anywhere. And, you know, anytime soon in the way that we know it today, I think if it's going to go anywhere, it's going to be dealerships being more customer-centric and finding out the right way to meet the customer where they want to be to make these transactions quicker and more enjoyable. I think that's where it's going.
Is anything out there concerning you nowadays? And I asked, look, I know you do a lot of luxury in Highline. So you are pretty well insulated, especially talking about, you know, Porsche and stuff like the Range Rover Land Rover, right? You're talking about these are vehicles that, you know, if you have money and you lose 50% of your net worth, you can still purchase that vehicle. So your customers have disposable income to play with. But what's concerning? I mean, anything keeping you up at night, anything going through your head, what give us kind of behind scenes?
Yeah, I mean, I do broadly have concerns about overall affordability. We sell a significant amount of pre-owned cars, you know, even off-ground, they're not all luxury. You know, and people are looking for, you know, as my father used to call him sheet seats, everybody wants an affordable car to get back and forth to work. And, you know, if those aren't present, which, you know, it makes it tough, and then you have these rates, I think it does make it really challenging for consumers to find affordable, reliable transportation. And if you can't get to and from work, you know, you've got a whole host of other problems that go along with it. That concerns me. And then I just think the, you know, in the background, we have the FTC with everything they're talking about relative to the car industry.
I think some of what they're talking about in that course, rule, what is it? Combating cars. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I think there is some good stuff in there that I think would be good for the industry. But I think there's a lot of other stuff in there that's onerous and is a byproduct of having individuals that truly don't understand the automotive industry, regulating it. And that concerns me quite a bit. What do you think would be good in the cars or like what aspects do you think could be a positive? I think this is like the part where I try to exercise as much intellectual honesty and really kind of dissect and say, let's let's be real for a second, right? What is wrong with the way things are being done?
Why is this even a topic of conversation, right? There's plenty of industries that make a lot of money. So why this industry? And to your point, what actually could maybe make sense? And then of course, what could not make sense? Because you mentioned people that potentially don't understand the industry trying to regulate it. That's a problem. So let's just start with what do you think could be good? Well, I think the biggest thing, you know, if I had to put in a nutshell why the industry has, you know, such a bad perception, I would say one word to describe that would be transparency, right?
I think the part of the cars rule that I, you know, that I think makes sense is, you know, if Dennis is going to advertise a car for a certain price, right? I think it would be good for the dealership down the road or the neighboring state to advertise their car at whatever the price is, right? So you have people go into stores and there's add-ons and these different things. And sometimes they're just not on the website. They're not clear, they're not conspicuous. I think at that added layer of transparency and level setting that for the consumer would be good. And I think it would just make for an overall better experience for the consumer in terms of transparency.
我认为关于汽车规则的部分内容是有道理的。就是,如果 Dennis 要以某个价格广告一辆车,对吧?我觉得对于附近的经销商或邻近州的经销商来说,以任何价格广告他们的车也是好的。这样的话,人们到店里后,不会因为附加收费或其他东西感到困扰。有时候这些附加费用不会在网站上明显显示。我认为增加透明度和设定统一标准对消费者有好处。这会让消费者在透明度方面获得更好的体验。
One thing in California, every retail car deal, you know, someone that finances, we have this form, it's called a pre-contract disclosure statement. And what that does is that every single F&I product sold on a transaction needs to be itemized, the name of it, and how much the customer's paying for it down the whole list. And then on the bottom, it shows what the car payment would be with and without those products. And that has to be on every deal. Like a lender won't even fund a consumer's loan without it present in the deal package.
I think that coupled with, you know, kind of consistent pricing, the way we need to advertise our cars online, I think that's good. I think it gets rid of the transparency problem the industry has. You know, that is one piece that I think would be good. Because, you know, I mean, let's face it, I mean, we have some well-deserved black eyes from some behavior over the years, I think. But if a customer comes in and it's transparent, I don't want to deal with a consumer that thinks I'm not being honest and forthcoming. It's not great to be on the receiving end. And it's not, it just makes for a hard transaction, I think.
Alright, Dennis, before we wrap up, I'm curious to know, and this is a very general question, you know, what's exciting to you nowadays? What's going through your mind on a positive note? What are you excited about? Man, I really, I'm just, I'm, I think I'm weird. I really don't feel like I work. I really am fortunate to be here. So everything about this place, everything about the people that work here, I'm excited about. I really am on this journey. I've been here a little over four and a half years now.
I'm just really excited to see people continue to grow and choose to make a career out of our industry. Because it is a great industry. It's a people industry. And that's, that's what excites me. That's what keeps me going. And, you know, that's what floats my boat, man. I got it. It is a, it is a people industry. Yeah. Yeah. And so my shameless plug, we actually, we just announced CDG recruiting. So car dealers have got acquired global auto staffing. We are in the recruiting business, baby, because sometimes the job board is not enough. And you need your handheld. So that's my shameless plug.
I agree with you. It is a people industry and people are, as the most important. So, and I think it's great that you're doing that. You know, if you don't have great people that want to win and want to get better, ultimately the customers are the one that are suffering. And I think if you're a brand and then doing that, you're going to be able to offer a great service to dealership that are looking for quality talent. So we drive their business forward, but improve their reputation within their communities because they do a great job. So I'm excited for you.
Appreciate that. All right. So before we wrap up, what's the I see some is that a book of Elon Musk in a background or is that a picture? What is that? I'm a big Elon Musk fan optimism pessimism that we're going to make it happen. You know, I just it's good. I like it. I like it. Yeah. Elon, Elon is a follower of cardio show guys. So we have, we have him in our corner. Good stuff.
All right, Dennis. Really appreciate you coming on. This was really insightful. So we'll have to do it again at some point. Wish you wish you the best of luck. Seems like you're running a tight chip over there. Likewise. Thanks for having me. And it was great having a conversation with him. Keep on doing what you're doing. It's great for the industry and the community. Thank you.
All right. Hope you enjoyed that episode. Please give the podcast a rating. Consider subscribing to the show and check the show notes for links to what we talked about. Thanks for tuning in. I'll see you guys next time.