agent Entrepreneur logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

The Easy Way to Grow Every Year... Manage Your Sales from the Bottom UP

November 12, 2014
3 min to read


What’s wrong with this picture?

That’s easy to spot – this person’s sales are stuck at an average of 12 units each month from too many bad months.

Ad Loading...


They can definitely sell more. In fact, in their three best months with sales of of 15, 16 and 15 (totaling 46) they sold 35% more than in their four worst months with sales of of 8, 9, 8 and 9 (34).


The Problem With Growing


In the example above, we’ve all heard this salesperson boast at the beginning of the monthly goal setting meeting, “I can hit 20 this month.” Sure it can be done, but hitting 20 is 30% more than their best three month average. So one of two things usually happens...


1. They put in double shifts and either come close or hit their goal. Congrats!


Sounds great except for that little issue of being exhausted. Wearing yourself out on hours usually means that a record 20-unit month is usually followed by a pretty bad eight or nine unit month. In real life, if this salesperson just worked smarter in both months instead of longer, they’d easily sell a couple of units above their 12-unit average both months and end up with the same 28 or 29 units.

Ad Loading...


2. 80% of the time, they don’t come close to 20 and then they blame anyone and anything.


You don’t need to try to break records every month to improve your sales year after year. How can that be? Easy, the secret is just learning to...

Manage your sales from the bottom up, not from the top up.

What do I mean? Slow down and look at the chart again. This person only had four months that fell below their 12-unit average. But those four bad months wiped out the benefit of their three best months.


But don’t you need record months, too? Yes, but you’ll always have higher and lower months than your average. So when you raise your average from the bottom up, you’ll also end up having better months on the high end, too.

Ad Loading...


Instead of focusing on having a 20-unit month, what happens to the average for this salesperson if they just focused on eliminating their below average months?


Even if their best months never got better, if this salesperson just eliminated months below that 12-unit average, their average would go up to 13.2. Not from working longer, not from working harder, and not from having a record month or two, just by working smarter.


And 13.2 is 14 more units over the next 12 months. At $300 per unit (not counting bonuses) that’s an extra $4,200, from better managing their bad months.


Learn to control your bad times and your good times will improve, too. This month, think about some of the changes you can make to turn this year into a record year for you.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Sales

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 →
car with hood open, an arm holding a wrench, The most loyal generation text, Agent Entrepreneur logo
Industryby Lauren LawrenceApril 9, 2026

Service Drives Gen Z Loyalty

The dealership profit center plays an important role in customer retention, and generation Z customers are showing the highest loyalty rates, based on recent CDK Global data.

Read More →
chart showing the quarterly electric vehicle market share from 2020-2025
Industryby Lauren LawrenceMarch 27, 2026

EV Sales Slide While Hybrids Climb

California, as usual, led the country in EV registrations in the fourth quarter, but the U.S. as a whole saw a 43% year-over-year volume decrease.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
car in the background with two people exchanging a set of keys and one person holding a clipboard with paperwork that says "Contract". Text says Buyout Beats Leasing. Agent Entrepreneur logo in top right corner.
F&Iby Lauren LawrenceMarch 26, 2026

Lease Buyouts Deemed Favorable

Better financing conditions and the potential to save money on monthly payments could drive more consumers to buy out their vehicle leases instead of opting for a new lease payment.

Read More →
row of cars, used vehicle demand spikes, chart showing data spike, F&I and Showroom logo
Showroomby Lauren LawrenceMarch 11, 2026

Used Market Gains Speed

New-vehicle sales fell year-over-year for the fifth month in a row in February, making retail deliveries the slowest they’ve been since 2023, according to a CarGurus report.

Read More →
Graphic showing used-vehicle days to turn rate
Showroomby StaffMarch 10, 2026

Black Book: Weekly Market Update

Both vehicle values and conversion rates sped up last week as two segments outperformed in the pre-spring burst of buying.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Showroomby Lauren LawrenceMarch 4, 2026

Used-Vehicle Program Aims to Draw More Buyers

GM says more than 750 dealers across the U.S. are enrolled in CarBravo and that in January CarBravo dealers sold over two times the certified volume of Chevrolet, Buick and GMC dealers using traditional CPO.

Read More →
SalesFebruary 25, 2026

Creating Agency Loyalty

There are tried and true ways to instill it while also protecting your agency from competitors and other roadblocks.

Read More →
Salesby Hannah MitchellFebruary 19, 2026

Auto Sales Still Sluggish

February forecast has new-vehicle deliveries still off from last year at this time amid high prices and vanished EV incentives. But J.D. Power sees business picking up from here as automakers target growth.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Industryby StaffFebruary 10, 2026

Black Book: Weekly Market Update

Many vehicle segments experienced gains last week as conversions picked up. Meanwhile, the retail days to turn estimate stood at 39, analysts reported.

Read More →