Choosing the right appraisal system is the first s
Thursday November 26, 2009 - 8:11 am
Published By: The Formula Publications Team
Bill Xinaris Columnist
One of the biggest changes in the auto
industry at least for Ontario is just around the corner as the new
MVDA, 2002 will be in full force on Jan. 1.
Mandatory disclosure
requirements found in section 42 of Regulation 333/08 will be one of
the biggest changes for dealers. These disclosures must be collected
during the appraisal process and then disseminated to the next customer
who purchases that vehicle - be it a used car customer, a wholesaler,
another dealer or the auction.
This change represents new
standards and new expectations for the dealer body. The 24 disclosures
are not a matter of choice. Fall out of compliance and you are subject
to penalties enforced by OMVIC and consumer remedies.
In both cases, financial loss is the result.
So
how do you test to see if your current appraisal process will keep your
dealership compliant? Ask the used car manager for the last five
appraisals. If you find that either the information collected does not
address all of the 24 required disclosures or that any one of the
appraisals is missing information, has incomplete, incorrect or
illegible information, then you have a problem.
So how do you become compliant? You can either go with a paper appraisal system or an electronic appraisal system.
If you choose a paper appraisal system, then the UCDA forms are a
must. Both the appraisal form and wholesale bill of sale contain all
the required questions. When these forms are used in the proper manner,
they ensure compliance with the MVDA. This means that the forms must be
filled out completely every time they are used.
Unfortunately
any paper appraisal system can fall victim to three human factors over
time and when this happens, compliance is jeopardized.
Completion. Sales teams are excellent at selling, but can lack
attention to detail. Forms can be filled out incorrectly; information
collected is sometimes inaccurate or missing. The writing can be
illegible and the paper form can disappear.
Comfort. The
appraisal is the most contested step of any sale. Many sales people are
not comfortable with this step and want to get through the appraisal
quickly. They dont want to ask too many questions since it makes them
feel they are interrogating the customer. Short cuts happen.
Consistency. The management team has to ensure the forms are filled out
but questions can be missed, which may go unnoticed during busy
periods. In addition, sending sales people back to a customer asking
for more information undermines their competence and can be counter
productive to the completion of deals.
In contrast, effective electronic appraisal systems minimize these human factors and do not fall victim to them over time.
An electronic system can be an excellent alternative as long as it has the following properties:
Its easy to access and use.
Has a VIN decoder that accurately decodes critical information about the vehicle.
Questions, including all of the MVDA disclosures, must form part of the
input data. All questions must be answered in order to print the paper
appraisal form.
Produces all of the required disclosure documents and a wholesale bill of sale that meet MVDA specifications.
The electronic system should also be interactive. Ask the questions with the computer
screen turned towards the customer and make it part of the process.
Under these circumstances the dynamics will change and the process will
no longer feel like an interrogation. Every question will be asked
every time for every appraisal and the data captured is stored and will
always be correct and legible.
Finally, an electronic
appraisal system, unlike CRM and TMS tools, must be fully under the
control of the management staff. CRM and TMS tools rely on sales people
to enter information into the system after the customer has left the
showroom. On a busy day, customers are missed or forgotten and
often the information entered can be selective in nature. With an
effective electronic appraisal system, entering the information will be
part of the sales process. The managers will control this process by
completing the evaluation only if a printed appraisal form is submitted
to them. This is complete control and accurate data collection.
When
selecting an electronic appraisal system make sure that it does not
allow sales people to skip any of the mandatory MVDA questions and
still produce an appraisal document. Also make sure that the system
does not allow any document or template to be printed that needs to have questions manually completed by the sales people. Whether
you choose the paper appraisal system or an electronic appraisal
system, it is important to put the process in place right away. January
1 will be here before you know it, So make sure you are prepared.
Bill
Xinaris is the general manager of Trade Tracker Inc., a Canadian
company focused on the trade-in appraisal process and in partnership
with more than 300 dealers across Canada. He can be reached at
bxinaris@tradetracker.ca.