OEM vs dealer KPIs

OEM vs Dealer KPIs: Why Misalignment Is Costing You Deals in Q2

Introduction: You’re Measured Differently Than You’re Managed

Every dealership operates inside an OEM system.

That system is driven by:

  • Production targets
  • Allocation utilization
  • Wholesale volume

But your business operates on something completely different:

  • Cash flow
  • Inventory risk
  • Funding timelines
  • Profitability

And that’s where the problem begins.

OEM vs dealer KPIs are not aligned—and that misalignment is costing you deals in Q2.


Current Market Pulse (Q2 Reality)

Right now, the gap between OEM expectations and dealership reality is more visible than ever:

  • OEMs are pushing allocation usage and production flow
  • Dealers are managing inventory risk and delayed funding
  • Pricing adjustments are forcing deal re-evaluation mid-stream
  • Customers are slowing decisions and demanding more clarity

Translation:

What helps the OEM doesn’t always help the dealer—and vice versa.


The KPI Disconnect: OEM vs Dealer Reality

Let’s break this down clearly.

OEM KPIs vs Dealer KPIs

OEM FocusDealer Reality
Units ProducedUnits Delivered
Units Shipped (Wholesale)Deals Funded (Cash)
Allocation UtilizationInventory Turn
Order Bank VolumePipeline Quality
Production EfficiencyGross Profit + Cash Flow

Where the Breakdown Happens in Q2

This is not theoretical; this is happening every day.


1. “Use Your Allocation.”

OEM expectation:

Order units, fill allocation, keep production moving

Dealer reality:

Ordering without committed customers creates:

  • Inventory risk
  • Floorplan expense
  • Aging units

2. “Units Are Shipping.”

OEM perspective:

The unit is built and shipped—success

Dealer reality:

The unit still needs:

  • Upfit
  • Delivery coordination
  • Funding

It hasn’t produced cash yet.


3. “Strong Order Bank.”

OEM view:

A full order bank = strong performance

Dealer reality:

A weak order bank filled with:

  • Uncommitted customers
  • Outdated pricing
  • Misaligned specs

Creates false confidence.


4. “Hit the Number.”

OEM pressure:

Volume targets

Dealer reality:

Profitability and cash flow matter more than raw volume


The Cost of Misalignment

When OEM vs dealer KPIs are not aligned, here’s what happens:

  • Inventory builds without demand
  • Deals stall between stages
  • Cash flow slows
  • Gross erodes due to pressure to move units

And the dealership ends up working harder for worse results.


What High-Performing CFG Departments Do Differently

They don’t fight the OEM system.

They operate within it—but manage their own KPIs.


1. They Prioritize “Fundable Deals” Over Units

  • Not every order is equal
  • Not every unit should be prioritized

They focus on deals that will:

  • Deliver
  • Invoice
  • Fund

2. They Control the Order Bank

Instead of:

  • Filling it with speculative orders

They:

  • Tie orders to real customers
  • Validate timing and pricing
  • Continuously clean it up

3. They Track Time, Not Just Volume

They measure:

  • Days to delivery
  • Days to invoice
  • Days to funding

Because time drives:

  • Cash flow
  • Profitability
  • Operational efficiency

4. They Separate Internal vs External KPIs

They understand:

  • OEM KPIs = required to operate within the system
  • Dealer KPIs = required to run a profitable business

And they manage both—intentionally.


The Alignment Strategy: How to Win in Q2

You don’t need to choose between OEM success and dealership success.

You need to align them.


Step 1: Define Your Internal KPIs

At minimum, track:

  • Time to delivery
  • Time to funding
  • Inventory turn
  • Gross per deal
  • Cash conversion cycle

Step 2: Filter OEM Activity Through Dealer Reality

Before:

  • Ordering units
  • Accepting allocations

Ask:

“Will this produce a funded deal—or create inventory risk?”


Step 3: Build a “From Order to Cash” Dashboard

Track every deal by stage:

  • Ordered
  • In production
  • At upfit
  • Ready for delivery
  • Invoiced
  • Funded

This becomes your real scoreboard.


Step 4: Align the Team Around the Right Metrics

Everyone should understand:

  • Sales = not just selling, but moving deals forward
  • Operations = removing delays
  • Accounting = accelerating funding

Alignment eliminates friction.


Do This Today: Fix KPI Misalignment

Start here:

  1. Review your last 10 deals
    • How long did each take to fund?
  2. Compare OEM activity vs actual cash flow
    • Are you busy—or profitable?
  3. Clean up your order bank
    • Remove or flag weak deals
  4. Track “days to funding” starting today
    • Make it visible to your team
  5. Challenge every new order
    • Is this a deal—or inventory risk?

Final Thought: Manage What Actually Matters

OEMs manage production.

You manage outcomes.

If you measure success the way the OEM does:

  • You will stay busy
  • You will hit volume
  • But you may not improve profitability

OEM vs dealer KPIs will never fully align.

But high-performing CFG departments don’t let that become a weakness.

They turn it into an advantage.

By:

  • Understanding the difference
  • Managing both intentionally
  • Focusing on funded deals—not just shipped units

Because in Q2:

The dealerships that win are not the ones that produce the most activity.

They are the ones that:

Convert activity into cash—consistently.



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