0–30 Days: Foundation, Setup & Organizational Structure (Expanded Guide)

0–30 Days: Foundation, Setup & Organizational Structure (Expanded Guide)

Primary Goal: Build the structural backbone, systems, and early rhythms that enable a Commercial/Fleet/Government (CFG) department to launch quickly, operate leanly, and scale efficiently.


SECTION 1: Define Department Mission & Objectives (Days 1–3)

In the Foundation Setup & Organizational Structure phase, this section clarifies the department’s purpose, objectives, and intended beneficiaries.

1.1 Clarify Your Mission Statement

Your mission should speak to:

  • Serving local business, fleet, and government customers
  • Providing specialized configurations and uptime-focused solutions
  • Becoming a long-term partner, not just a sales vendor

Example: “Deliver fast, accurate, and reliable commercial vehicle solutions that maximize uptime, support business growth, and drive long-term partnerships with local fleets and government agencies.”

1.2 Set 12-Month Objectives

Define what success looks like:

Volume Goals:

  • 15–25 units/month by Month 6
  • 150–250 units/year, depending on PMA size

Gross Revenue Goals:

  • Healthy blended PVR
  • Back-end focus: warranties, maintenance plans, commercial accessories

Fixed Ops Goals:

  • Increase RO count by 10–20% within 12 months
  • Establish 15–30 fleet PM contracts
  • Raise the absorption contribution significantly

1.3 Identify Your Core Customer Segments

Break your PMA into segments:

  • Trades (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, telecom)
  • Delivery/logistics
  • Service companies
  • Municipal & government entities
  • Rental companies
  • Landscaping & construction
  • Medium-duty & specialty segments

This segmentation dictates everything from inventory to prospecting.


SECTION 2: Organizational Structure & Role Definition (Days 1–7)

Commercial success requires a player-coach model up front to keep costs low.

2.1 Establish the Hands-On Commercial Leader

One person must own:

  • Account acquisition
  • Quote creation
  • Inventory plans
  • Upfitter coordination
  • Deliveries
  • CRM
  • Customer follow-up

This leader must be someone who is:

  • Hands-on
  • Comfortable in the field
  • Organized
  • Process-driven
  • Not a desk jockey

2.2 Draft the Initial Role Responsibilities

Primary Responsibilities:

A. Sales & Prospecting

  • Daily outreach
  • Field visits
  • Discovery conversations
  • Quote generation

B. Inventory & Ordering

  • Initial selections
  • Maintaining aged inventory reports
  • Managing pipeline orders

C. Upfitter Management

  • Weekly WIP updates
  • Price negotiation
  • Delivery coordination

D. CRM & Reporting

  • Building account lists
  • Tracking quote activity
  • Forecasting commitments

E. Delivery & Follow-Up

  • Ensuring vehicles are clean, upfitted correctly, and presented professionally
  • Executing a fast follow-up after delivery

2.3 Prepare Future Staffing Framework

You do NOT hire them now — but you define what comes later.

  • Commercial Sales Rep #2
  • Admin/Title/Billing Support
  • Dedicated Driver/Jockey
  • Fleet Service Advisor
  • BDC Support (optional)

This makes growth predictable and planned.


SECTION 3: Infrastructure Setup (Days 3–10)

This is where the operational “machine” gets assembled.

3.1 CRM Setup for Commercial Business

Retail CRM setups do NOT work for commercial.

You must build:

  • Custom pipelines:
    • New lead
    • Initial contact
    • Discovery
    • Pending quote
    • Quote sent
    • In negotiation
    • Ordered
    • Delivered
    • Follow-up cadence
  • Account tags:
    • Trade type
    • Fleet size
    • Renewal cycle
    • Priority level
    • Government vs private
  • Reminder systems:
    • Semi-annual fleet reviews
    • PM service reminders
    • Renewal cycles
    • Expiring leases
    • Account birthdays (fleet purchase cycles)

3.2 Build Reusable Templates

These save massive time and ensure professionalism.

  • Quote template
  • Build sheet/spec sheet template
  • “Needs analysis” questionnaire
  • WIP (work-in-progress) tracking sheet
  • Delivery checklist
  • Email sequences for outreach
  • Service introduction script
  • Government sales introduction template

3.3 Establish Dealership Internal Alignment

Meet with:

  • Service Director
  • Parts Manager
  • GM
  • Controller
  • Title/Billing Clerk
  • Lot Manager
  • Upfit coordinators

Purpose:

  • Clarify the commercial process
  • Define new workflows
  • Set communication expectations
  • Set timelines for delivery readiness

This prevents chaos later.


SECTION 4: Build Your Top 100 Target Account List (Days 5–15)

This is the heartbeat of the first 90 days.

4.1 Identify Local Businesses in Your PMA

Use:

  • Google Maps
  • Chamber of Commerce lists
  • Local business directories
  • Industrial parks
  • Construction zones
  • Upfitter referrals
  • DOT registries

4.2 Prioritize Using Commercial Scoring

Criteria:

  • Fleet size
  • Current vehicles
  • Purchase cycles
  • Age of fleet
  • Type of industry
  • Proximity
  • Estimated need

4.3 Build the Account Profiles

For each business, record:

  • Key decision-makers
  • Fleet size
  • Vehicle applications
  • Current pain points
  • Budget season timing
  • Upfitting requirements
  • Competitors they buy from

4.4 Load Everything Into CRM

Every account begins with:

  • A task
  • A call
  • An email
  • A drop-in
  • The next step

This is the core pipeline that drives the entire 180-day plan.


SECTION 5: Establish Upfitter, Vendor & Partner Relationships (Days 10–20)

Your ability to deliver the appropriate configurations quickly is a significant competitive advantage.

5.1 Meet All Relevant Upfitters

Categories include:

  • Utility body
  • Service body
  • Reading/Knapheide
  • Dump body
  • Flatbeds
  • Ladder racks
  • Shelving
  • Refrigeration
  • Towing/beds

5.2 Negotiate Processes & Pricing

Clarify:

  • Standard price sheets
  • Turnaround timelines
  • Access to chassis pools
  • Status update cadence
  • Floorplan rules (who carries units during upfit?)
  • Delivery expectations
  • Warranty processes

5.3 Establish Communication Rhythm with Upfitters

  • Weekly check-in calls
  • WIP report (shared spreadsheet)
  • Estimated completion dates
  • Photos of finished units
  • Immediate delivery scheduling

This prevents delays, miscommunication, and aging.


SECTION 6: Inventory Strategy & First 30 Days of Stocking (Days 10–30)

The initial inventory is lean, strategic, and fast-turning.

6.1 Choose Your Initial Stock Mix

Recommend a focused first batch of:

  • Light/Heavy Duty work trucks (XL)
  • Cargo vans (130/148)
  • Small upfit-ready cutaways
  • Basic service bodies
  • Basic dumps

Avoid exotic units that age immediately.

6.2 Set Up a 180-Day Rolling Order Plan

Even before unit #1 is sold, you must:

  • Project demand
  • Align with OEM ordering windows
  • Build a monthly order rhythm
  • Track allocation
  • Review upfit timing/constraints

A Commercial Department cannot survive on random one-off ordering.

6.3 Implement Inventory Controls

To prevent aging:

  • Set maximum age standards
  • Track days-to-turn by segment
  • Create liquidate-and-reinvest rules
  • Build relationships with dealers for trades

This protects the floor plan and ensures profitability.


SECTION 7: Begin Initial Outreach (Days 15–30)

This is your soft launch before the complete 31–60-day outreach phase begins.

7.1 Light Prospecting Campaign

The goal is to start conversations, not to sell aggressively.

  • 10–15 calls/day
  • Basic introduction emails
  • 5–10 drop-ins/week
  • Deliver a commercial leave-behind packet

7.2 Focus on Discovery Conversations

Ask:

  • What they use now
  • What they like/dislike
  • How old their vehicles are
  • What their next cycle looks like
  • Upfit needs
  • Service expectations

7.3 Early Quote Activity

Even if the quote is simple, create and track it.

Quotes serve as:

  • Needs analysis tools
  • Relationship openers
  • Pipeline builders
  • Trust builders

7.4 Introduce Key Stakeholders

Introduce:

  • Service
  • Parts
  • Upfit coordinator
  • Lot manager/delivery specialist

To show professionalism and structure.


SECTION 8: End-of-30-Day Evaluation & Adjustments

At Day 30, review:

Activity Metrics

  • # of accounts added
  • # of contacts made
  • # of quotes generated
  • # of onsite meetings
  • # of Upfitter relationships established

Infrastructure Review

  • CRM functioning?
  • Inventory aligned correctly?
  • Templates refined?
  • Department communication in sync?

Next 30 Days Priorities

Set goals for:

  • Outreach volume
  • Inventory adjustments
  • Quotes-to-orders path
  • Upfitter scheduling
  • Deeper prospect segmentation


Ready to Turn Your Commercial, Fleet & Government Strategy into Measurable Growth?

You’ve seen the 180-Day Blueprint Overview—a proven, step-by-step roadmap for building a high-performance Commercial, Fleet, and Government department from the ground up. This blueprint is designed to take your dealership from foundational setup to full market penetration, predictable processes, and long-term profitability.

However, fundamental transformation happens when the plan is implemented correctly.

Don’t attempt to do this alone.

I work directly with Dealer Principals, COOs, GMs, and Commercial Directors to implement each phase of the 180-Day Blueprint, ensuring alignment across sales, inventory, upfits, F&I, and Fixed Operations—so the strategy turns into measurable results.

If you want faster execution, fewer costly missteps, and a department built to scale, let’s talk.

Schedule a call today, and let’s implement your 180-Day Blueprint together.



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