agent Entrepreneur logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Shortcuts and Compliance Are Not Friends

Don’t let process shortcuts short-circuit all the hard work your dealer has put in to make their dealership the success it is today.

December 20, 2023
Shortcuts and Compliance Are Not Friends

Don’t let process shortcuts short-circuit all the hard work your dealer has put in to make their dealership the success it is today.

IMAGE: Pixabay

4 min to read


Once upon a time, I was part of corporate America while working for one of the captives. While in corporate America, I had an accident with my right hand, which ended up requiring a cast. I couldn’t grab the steering wheel with my right hand, my putter grip was abysmal, and I couldn’t write or sign my name.

As a supervisor in my branch office, I was responsible for completing a checklist on every repossessed account to ensure all the required steps from repossession to disposal had been completed.

Ad Loading...

I had to initial a box by each completed task to properly finish the checklist. Since I couldn’t drive, putt, or write, I just assumed my boss would understand if I marked a simple checkmark in each box. I evidently didn’t know my boss very well. “Shortcuts are not acceptable!” he bellowed when he reviewed the first of a stack of repossessions I had completed.

I assume shortcuts develop in many industries, companies, or processes. Some of the shortcuts I witness in dealerships create potential compliance concerns. As a trusted advisor to your dealer clients, you should be on the lookout for these shortcuts and discuss the potential risk with them.

Handwriting Product

Pricing In a perfect world, the customer signs at least three documents disclosing the acceptance and pricing of voluntary protection products: menu, buyer’s order (or PCD in California), RISC/lease, and enrollment form. There are times when the product price does not print on the enrollment form, instead it is either left blank or prints as “N/A.” Other times, the dealer management system (DMS) picks up the wrong price, perhaps printing the price of the vehicle service contract on the maintenance form.

The form in the file either reflects the free price (blank or N/A) or the wrong price, or the correct price that has been handwritten in. Oftentimes, when the price is corrected, the customer has not initialed the change. This begs the question, exactly what does the customer’s copy show?

Hopefully, the customer’s copy is consistent with the dealer’s copy, otherwise there could be some explaining to do if the customer ever decides to file a complaint or litigation and the file is requested in discovery.

Ad Loading...

Taking the shortcut to not having the DMS corrected or programmed or not properly loading the deal is potentially putting the validity of the transaction at risk.

Used Car Buyer’s Guide Disclosure

The FTC Used Car Rule is very specific about the language that must be used to properly disclose any remaining warranty. Most dealers have a solid process to properly make this disclosure. For example, the Used Car Rule says that using shorthand terms such as “factory warranty remaining” is not a sufficient disclosure. The vendors who manage the buyer’s guide process for dealers generally have the correct, safe-harbor language.

The process falls apart when a used vehicle is sold before the vendor has an opportunity to put a correct buyer’s guide on the vehicle. Sometimes it falls apart when the salesperson gets lazy and handwrites a buyer’s guide instead of taking the guide off of the vehicle or printing one from the dealer’s software. Going the shortcut route thinking you are saving time leads to non-compliance with a federal law.

Signing Customer Names

People get busy. Salespeople fail to get the customer’s signature on the privacy notice, or F&I managers forget to have the customer sign the gap enrollment form.

Almost every dealership employee understands that forging a customer’s signature to a form is a crime. Others rationalize that the customer did agree or knew that they agreed to the privacy policy or signed a menu and contract agreeing to purchase GAP, so it is all right to sign their name.

Ad Loading...

Forging a customer’s name is never an acceptable shortcut.

Not Reviewing the Buyer’s Order/RISC

During your next managers sales meeting, ask how many of your managers have read and understand each section, front and back, of the buyer’s order, the retail installment sales contract, and the lease agreement. After all, they are likely signing these documents on behalf of the dealership. Isn’t it reasonable to expect that they have read and understand all the provisions they are asking customers to agree to?

Sometimes a shortcut is just being lazy instead of understanding the very basics of your job. Don’t let process shortcuts short-circuit all the hard work your dealer has put in to make it the success it is today.

Continued good health and good selling.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Industry

Photo of two men in suit jackets shaking hands next to new car inside of a dealership
IndustryApril 23, 2026

A New Consumer Culture in the Auto Dealership

Dealers should aim to build a positive work environment, helping employees execute an efficient experience, from their online research to the final delivery of the vehicle.

Read More →
Closeup of the side of an Audi car
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 23, 2026

New-Vehicle Sales Down

A cloudy April forecast was expected due to last April’s sales surge in anticipation of U.S. trade tariff-inflated prices. Meanwhile, automakers pumped up incentives to address today’s consumer wallet woes.

Read More →
Photo of Cadillac Lyriq SUV on road with partly cloudy sky in background
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 16, 2026

Used Autos Selling for More

A recent price spike due to several larger market forces, though it hasn’t dulled demand, is pushing more consumers to efficient models to squeeze in buys.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of facade of Waldorf Toyota car dealership
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 16, 2026

Maryland Auto Group Sells

A group out West picked up the major D.C.-area collection, putting it in the upper tiers of private automotive groups in the U.S.

Read More →
Line graphic showing Cox Automotive's March Credit Availability Index status
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 13, 2026

Auto Lending Opens Up in March

Lenders loosened access for subprime borrowers, and consumers with negative equity reached a record high, Cox Automotive reported.

Read More →
electric vehicle next to an urban charging station. EV Demand Diverges. F&I and Showroom logo
Industryby Lauren LawrenceApril 10, 2026

EV Interest Varies Regionally

U.S. consumer interest in electric vehicles lags behind other countries despite the rising gas prices caused by the ongoing war in the Middle East.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of the rear of a Mercedes GLC 400 electric SUV with a skyline in the background
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 10, 2026

Brands Weighed on Projected Recalls

Research reveals the brands and models most likely to have higher recall rates over their lifetimes. While some brands rank high, addressing safety issues can be a selling point.

Read More →
Photo of white 2026 Ford Bronco on a sandy beach
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 10, 2026

March New-Vehicle Sales Don’t Reflect War

Cox Automotive data shows Americans doubled down on big-is-better despite price increases. Slightly higher incentives helped fuel the demand.

Read More →
Photo of several cars on lifts in a service center
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 9, 2026

Franchised Dealers Stand to Gain Service Business

Cox Automotive research shows both the opportunities and the challenges in turning consumers’ growing affordability needs into increased fixed-operations revenue.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of office desk with open laptop on it and an empty chair next to it
IndustryApril 9, 2026

What Matters Most in Building Your Agency

The partner you choose for growth and expansion is key, because better is the ultimate goal instead of growth for growth’s sake.

Read More →