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Aug. 18, 2003 – Top Guns

Dealer profit jumps in June

Overall dealer profitability, as measured by Top Gun dealers nationwide, jumped in June to 10.1%, up from 7.3% in May, but down from 11.1% in June 2002. Overall net profit for the year through June was 7.4%, off from the 7.9% YTD figure recorded in May and the 8.3% last June.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Average Gross Profit per Vehicle Financed is based on the profits from all extended service agreements, the commissions on insurance policies and 50% of service maintenance programs, sold for at least three years. 2003 does not include DOC fees.          Floor traffic at participating dealerships is determined by analyzing Guest Logs, information sheets filled out by visiting consumers.                                                                                                                         This represents net profit as a percentage of sales before depreciation and with all owner salaries adjusted to reflect the true value of the job performed. Rent amounts are also adjusted to reflect true market value of the facility when it is shareholder owned and leased back to a corporation.
Showroom traffic continued to trail traffic recorded last year. Traffic was down 4% in June, compared to June 2002. Traffic has been down 1% and 8% in April and May, compared to the same months last year.

Gross Profit Per Hour

To calculate Gross Profit per effort hour, take the total gross profit generated by your P&A department for a given month or pay period. Divide that number by the total number of hours worked (clock hours) for all members of the P&A team, regardless of title, for the same period. If someone works in P&A as well as another department, estimate the number of hours they worked in Parts.

Average Invoice To Walk-in P&A customers

To see how you compare, determine your total gross sales to walk-in customers. Be sure to exclude all wholesale, mail-order, service through repair orders, and P&A sold with major unit sales. Then divide your gross sales by the number of transactions to those walk-in customers.

OEM Parts Sales Compared To Accessory Sales.

If your accessory sales dollars do not equal your total OEM parts business, your customers are buying from sources other than you.

Service Effective Labor Rate

To determine your effective labor rate, take the total Service team effort hours (techs and all support personnel, including porters) and divide that amount into your gross labor sales for the same period.

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