Introduction: The Numbers Don’t Always Tell the Truth
The financial engine of CFG is often misunderstood because most dealerships are still measuring the wrong thing.
They look at:
- Units sold
- Gross profit
- Monthly totals
And on paper, it can look strong.
But then the reality shows up:
- Cash feels tight
- Floorplan expense is rising
- Funding is delayed
- Inventory is aging
This is where the disconnect happens.
Volume may look good on paper.
Cash flow tells the truth.
The Core Misconception: “We Sold It, So We Made Money”
This is the biggest trap in Commercial, Fleet, and Government operations.
A deal is not complete when:
- The unit is ordered
- The unit is delivered
A deal is complete when:
- The unit is funded
- The cash hits the account
Until then:
You are carrying the cost.
What’s Actually Happening Behind the Scenes
Let’s break down why volume does not equal cash flow.
1. Extended Deal Cycles Tie Up Capital
Commercial deals take longer:
- Order > Build > Ship > Upfit > Deliver > Fund
Each step introduces time.
And time introduces cost.
While the deal is in process:
- Floorplan interest accrues
- Cash is unavailable
- Risk increases
2. Government Deals Delay Cash Even Further
In the Government space:
- Net terms are common
- Funding cycles are slower
- Paperwork must be exact
That means:
- 30, 60, sometimes 90+ days before payment
So even after delivery:
Cash is still not in the bank.
3. Upfit Delays Trap Capital
Units sitting in upfit:
- Cannot be delivered
- Cannot be billed
- Cannot be funded
They are not assets producing a return.
They are capital, sitting still.
4. Inventory Aging Increases Carrying Cost
Stock units that don’t move:
- Accumulate floorplan expense
- Tie up capital
- Reduce flexibility
And in today’s environment—with higher interest rates—
That cost is not minor.
It is material.
5. Margin Compression Hides the Problem
Even when deals close:
- Pricing pressure reduces gross
- Discounts increase to move units
So while volume increases:
Profit per deal may decrease.
And if cash is delayed at the same time:
Pressure compounds.
Why This Matters More Right Now
The current market is amplifying these issues:
- Interest rates are increasing carrying costs
- Fuel costs are impacting customer timing
- OEM delays are stretching cycles
- Customers are taking longer to decide
This means:
Time in process is increasing.
And when time increases:
Cash flow tightens.
The Operator Shift: From Volume to Flow
If you want to fix this, you have to change what you focus on.
Not:
- How many units did we sell?
But:
- How fast do deals move from order to cash?
What Strong Operators Measure
They track:
- Days from order to delivery
- Days from delivery to funding
- Units aging in each stage
- Total time to cash
Because:
Speed is not just efficiency.
It is financial performance.
What a True CFG Financial Engine Looks Like
When this is working correctly:
- Orders move quickly through the system
- Upfits are pre-planned and efficient
- Deliveries happen without delay
- Funding is tracked and accelerated
The result:
- Cash flow improves
- Floorplan expense decreases
- Risk is reduced
And most importantly:
The business becomes predictable.
Encouragement: This Is Fixable
This is not a market problem.
It is an operational opportunity.
You don’t need:
- More inventory
- More discounts
- More pressure on sales
You need:
- Visibility
- Discipline
- Process control
The cash you are looking for is already in your business.
It’s just not moving fast enough.
What Comes Next
Now that we’ve defined the problem, we get specific.
Next post:
Cash Flow Compression in Commercial Fleet: Where the Money Gets Stuck
We’ll break down:
- Exact bottlenecks in the process
- Where cash gets trapped
- How to accelerate movement and unlock capital
Final Thought
Volume is important.
But it is not the full picture.
In Commercial, Fleet, and Government operations:
The dealerships that win are not the ones that sell the most units.
They are the ones who convert those units into cash the fastest.

