Introduction: The Constraint Isn’t Temporary—It’s Structural
OEM pressure commercial fleet operations are facing today is not a short-term disruption—it is part of the environment you must learn to operate within.
Allocation shifts.
Build uncertainty.
Pricing volatility.
Product pushes that don’t always align with real fleet demand.
These are not occasional issues anymore.
They are part of the system.
And the dealerships that are waiting for things to “normalize” are already falling behind.
What OEM Pressure Actually Looks Like Right Now
Let’s get specific about what you’re dealing with.
1. Allocation Is Still Inconsistent
What’s happening:
- Units are limited or reallocated
- Commercial orders are not always prioritized
- Forecasting becomes unreliable
Impact:
- Harder to commit to timelines
- Increased pressure on customer expectations
2. Production and Build Variability
What’s happening:
- Build dates move
- Certain configurations are delayed
- Supply chain issues still affect output
Impact:
- Delivery windows stretch
- Planning becomes reactive instead of proactive
3. Pricing Movement and Cost Pressure
What’s happening:
- Mid-cycle price increases
- External cost factors influencing OEM pricing
- Differences between the order price and the delivery price
Impact:
- Margin compression
- Customer pushback
- Deal instability late in the process
4. Product Strategy Misalignment
What’s happening:
- OEMs pushing certain platforms or technologies
- Fleet customers are not always aligned with those changes
- Gaps between what’s available and what’s needed
Impact:
- More complex conversations
- Need for alternative solutions
The Mistake: Blaming the OEM and Stopping There
Most dealerships respond by:
- Complaining about the allocation
- Waiting for better conditions
- Passing the problem to the customer
That does not solve anything.
Because the OEM is not changing for you.
The only variable you control is how you operate within that environment.
The Operator Approach: Win Inside the Constraint
Strong CFG operators do not eliminate constraints.
They work around them—and often use them to their advantage.
1. Expand Your Sourcing Strategy
You cannot rely on a single pipeline.
That means:
- Dealer trades
- Pool units
- Alternative configurations
Flexibility creates opportunity.
2. Set Expectations Early and Reinforce Them Often
Customers can handle delays.
They cannot handle surprises.
Strong operators:
- Communicate timelines clearly
- Explain potential risks upfront
- Provide updates consistently
Clarity builds trust—even when things change.
3. Build Optionality Into Every Deal
Instead of one path, offer:
- Multiple configurations
- Alternative timing scenarios
- Backup options
This keeps deals moving when conditions shift.
4. Control the Parts of the Process You Own
You may not control production.
But you control:
- Order bank visibility
- Upfit readiness
- Delivery coordination
- Funding speed
Execution matters more when supply is constrained.
5. Strengthen Customer Positioning Through Guidance
When OEM pressure increases:
- Customers feel uncertainty
- Decisions become harder
This is where you lead.
Explain:
- What is happening
- What it means
- What is the best path forward
You become the stabilizing factor.
Where This Creates Advantage
Here’s the opportunity most miss.
When supply is constrained:
- Weak operators lose deals
- Reactive dealerships slow down
Strong operators:
- Maintain momentum
- Keep deals alive
- Strengthen relationships
Constraint creates separation.
Connecting This to the Current Market
With:
- Fuel costs rising
- Interest rates elevated
- Customer decisions slowing
OEM pressure adds another layer.
But when your operation is strong:
- You manage expectations
- You control the flow
- You guide decisions
And that creates consistency.
Encouragement: You Don’t Need Perfect Conditions
The idea that:
- Better allocation
- Stable pricing
- Predictable builds
Will solve everything is misleading.
Because:
The dealerships that win are not the ones waiting for better conditions.
They are the ones who operate effectively in the current conditions.
What Comes Next
Final post in this series:
The Dealers Who Win in This Market Will Look Different
We’ll bring everything together:
- Fuel costs
- Interest rates
- OEM pressure
- Operational discipline
And define what the winning CFG operation looks like moving forward.
Final Thought
OEM pressure is not going away.
The question is not whether it exists.
The question is:
How well do you operate within it?
Because in commercial fleet:
The dealerships that win are not the ones with the best allocation.
They are the ones who make the most of what they have.

