agent Entrepreneur logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

The Compliance Bombshell

When hit with the compliance bombshell, you need to understand what compliance means to your client and what exactly you are being asked to do.

July 21, 2022
The Compliance Bombshell

When hit with the compliance bombshell, you need to understand what compliance means to your client and what exactly you are being asked to do.

4 min to read


Picture this: You are meeting with your dealer and discussing the previous month's performance metrics. The numbers are great. Your training and the managers’ execution tell a remarkable story. Then the dealer drops the bombshell — “I want your help with compliance.” 

You have been hit with the compliance bombshell. Your value to the dealer is compliant-based sales training and production. What more does your client want?

Ad Loading...

Compliance means different things to different people. When hit with the compliance bombshell, you need to understand what compliance means to your client and what exactly you are being asked to do. 

Does compliance mean your dealer has read about the revised Safeguards Rule and knows December 9, 2022, is a drop-dead date? The changes are so voluminous and technology-leaning, that you don't want to take this on by yourself. You have help, as there are vendors who can implement an effective Safeguards solution. You need to look at the revised Safeguards requirements for your agency while you are at it.

Is your Dealer reacting to the $10 million Federal Trade Commission (FTC) headline? The Federales' case is available on its website at https://www.ftc.gov/system/files/ftc_gov/pdf. The solution is transparent disclosures and a paper trail documenting consumer consent to purchases at every step in the road to the sale.

Perhaps your dealer's 20-Group recently discussed credit application fraud and the dealer wants you to check credit apps. This means comparing the five key credit determinants between the source credit app and the submitted credit app to see if any one of the five have been jacked to improve the likelihood of a favorable credit decision.

Maybe there was a LifeLock commercial playing on the dealer’s TV during your meeting, and identity theft and Red Flags sufficiency is a concern. Compliance with the Red Flags Rule is a structured approach of policy development, training, vender selection, and transactional review. Many Agents are well versed in this structured approach — help is available if needed.

Ad Loading...

Or the dealer wants an over-arching solution, one that the federales refer to as a Compliance Management System (CMS). A CMS combines a compliant process development and implementation and an audit process to ensure compliant execution. I’ve written articles to help you manage through the development of a CMS.

Once you figure out what the dealer is looking for, and that involves monthly reviews, here are your options (ranked worst to best):

  1. Create and implement a forms checklist

  2. Conduct monthly deal audits

  3. Train a dealership employee to conduct monthly deal audits

  4. Create and implement a transactional compliance checklist

  5. Enroll your dealer in ContinuACE

Forms Checklist

This checklist simply tracks whether required forms are in the deal jacket or digital deal file, or if any of the required forms are missing. The tracker who completes the forms checklist is not required to review the form for accuracy, consistency with other forms, or signatures. This approach provides a minimal comfort level that the forms are being completed but leave several compliance holes in the process.

Ad Loading...

You Can Conduct Monthly Deal Audits

Go ahead and commit to spending some time shuffling through deal files instead of training on production and compliance. You surely understand why this is one of the worst solutions.

Train A Dealership Employee

This solution requires identifying a dealership employee with the skill set and temperament to spend time looking through deal files, understanding what to look for, knowing what a straw purchase or power booking is, reviewing the employee’s audits, and starting all over again when the employee moves to another opportunity.

Compliance Checklist

Ad Loading...

A compliance checklist should be part of every dealership’s compliance initiative. A properly developed, implemented, and completed compliance checklist should unearth the common compliance mistakes, including inconsistent prices on documents, missing documents, uncleared Red Flags, credit application inconsistencies, and others. The best approach requires both the F&I manager and the compliance or billing clerk to complete the entire checklist and affirm that each item on the checklist is properly completed before the deal is billed.

Stay safe, Good luck, and Good selling!

Gil Van Over is the executive director of Automotive Compliance Education (ACE). He is also the founder and president of gvo3 & Associates. 

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Industry

Closeup photo of the front of a white car
Industryby Hannah MitchellMay 21, 2026

New-Vehicle Sales Picture Relative

A May forecast is complicated by last spring’s trade tariff effects on auto retail. Despite continued hard realities, many consumers took advantage of ways to bite the bullet.

Read More →
Nissan logo on front of building
Industryby Lauren LawrenceMay 21, 2026

Auto Group Acquires Third Nissan Rooftop

Iowa-based Coleman Automotive Group recently acquired its seventh dealership, McGrath Nissan, which it renamed Nissan of Elgin.

Read More →
Couple talking with auto salesman next to new car inside dealership
Industryby Hannah MitchellMay 20, 2026

April Less Affordable

Based on prices, reduced incentives and slower household income growth, consumers found it more challenging to buy new last month, Cox Automotive reported.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Wooden people figures of different colors in a row, similar to board game pieces
IndustryMay 20, 2026

Building an Extraordinary F&I Agency

Work to determine your specialized talent, because that fact will determine everything about your agency’s future.

Read More →
Photo of new Chevrolet Bolt parked on a beach
Industryby Hannah MitchellMay 14, 2026

EVs Getting More Attractive

A growing percentage of U.S. consumers are open to switching and fewer are adverse to the idea, according to a recently completed survey. That’s despite the end of a tax break.

Read More →
Benchmark bar graph showing April 2026 EV Sales
Industryby Lauren LawrenceMay 14, 2026

EV Sales Drop in April Following Surge

North American electric-vehicle sales were down 28% year-over-year, a sharp contrast from global EV sales growth of 6%.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of a loan contract on a desk
Industryby Hannah MitchellMay 13, 2026

Auto Lenders, Consumers on a Tightrope

April borrowing data shows that more consumers are bending over backward to buy vehicles, though subprime lending cooled off for the month.

Read More →
Shifting Loan Demands A Sign of the Times, Loan Application paperwork with a pen and a car outline, Auto Dealer Today
Industryby Lauren LawrenceMay 8, 2026

Auto Loan Outlook Shows Cracks

Recent survey data shows that the overall demand for auto loans is down, but the demand for subprime loans is up as consumers face economic uncertainty and affordability pressures.

Read More →
Photo of buyer and seller representatives in Waco Mitsubishi sale outside the dealership
Industryby Hannah MitchellMay 7, 2026

Lone Star State Store Sells

The Mitsubishi location moves from one Texas automotive group to another, continuing this year’s spate of brisk buy-sell activity.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
2026 Mitsubishi Outlander in front of the company’s first national Gallery dealer facility
Industryby Lauren LawrenceMay 7, 2026

Mitsubishi Gallery Makes Progress

As part of its 2030 business plan, Mitsubishi's North America arm will soon open its first 'gallery' store in Tennessee, where customers can learn about the brand, vehicles and technology.

Read More →