agent Entrepreneur logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Unwanted Answers to Compliance Questions

Some practices are better left undone at the dealership, for its, and the consumer's, good.

June 20, 2024
Unwanted Answers to Compliance Questions

Digitizing sales and F&I processes and updating policies are two ways dealers can build in compliance.

Credit:

Pexels/Markus Winkler

4 min to read


My job is to help dealerships find compliant solutions for the processes they’ve implemented. I am asked compliance questions daily by dealership owners and managers, and I would say I am able to usually provide a compliance solution that the owner or manager finds agreeable.

I said usually. Occasionally the answer to a question is not what the person wants to hear.

Ad Loading...

When I started gvo3 & Associates over 22 years ago the burning question was, “How can I add the subprime acquisition fee to the vehicle sales price?” The short answer is you can’t. The long answer is that adding the subprime acquisition fee to the sales price is a violation of the Truth in Lending Act and doing so for every subprime customer could potentially create a class-action lawsuit. Still a few dealers persisted in the practice, saying “I ain’t gonna pay juice for any subprime customer,” and I had to fire them as clients.

Thankfully, due to the efforts of many dealership advisers, I haven’t seen a deal where the subprime fee was added to the sales price in over a decade.

In today’s environment, I occasionally run into one of the following scenarios when reviewing deal files, and the unwanted answer remains the same:

Blank Signed Document

This scenario usually happens when a manager thinks he is helping a customer. It could also help a nefarious manager to kink a deal.

I’ve seen credit applications, statements of fact, credit union membership agreements, manufacturer purchase plan documents, powers of attorney, and voluntary protection product forms that are signed by the customer, but the form is devoid of any information.

Ad Loading...

The excuse is usually along the lines of trying to avoid inconveniencing the customer if the dealership had incorrectly completed the original document. “We don’t want to have the customer come back if the form needs to be resigned.”

While I generally believe the manager would not use the blank signed document to somehow kink the deal, I don’t want to leave that opportunity open. Some of these forms include a statement to the customer to not sign the form if it is blank.

My recommendation to dealers is a layered answer. First, in the policy manuals we write for dealers, we include a list of non-negotiables. This is a list of actions that could lead to termination. One of the actions in the non-negotiables is, “We will not have our customers sign any document that is blank.” Consider including expecting this of your managers.

The second recommendation is that electronic signing is an accepted process by consumers and finance sources. Asking a customer to electronically sign a document is usually an acceptable solution to avoid having the customer return to the dealership.

Backup Contract

A backup contract is just that. The F&I manager and the customer execute two valid retail installment sales contracts, or RISCs. In the past, the primary reason was that the dealer had finance sources who required either an RISC with an arbitration agreement or an RISC without an arbitration agreement. In the mind of the F&I manager, there was a contract that would be acceptable to any finance source, arbitration or not. This occurrence has lessened over the years as the credit approval process has sped up through the use of technology.

Ad Loading...

A different issue is now creeping into some dealers’ process - thanks again to technology. Any dedicated reader of my writings knows that I am a fan of digitizing the sales and F&I processes. E-contracting is a better process than printing an RISC and obtaining a wet-ink signature.

Some dealerships are experiencing sporadic temporary issues with the e-contracting process. For some reason, the e-contract will not process on the finance source’s end, requiring the manager to get the customer back into the dealership to recontract using a wet-ink signature. Some of the F&I managers believe it is more convenient for the customer (and themselves) to have the customer e-sign an RISC and wet-ink sign a paper RISC.  

It is simply bad form to have two valid, executable RISCs on the same VIN to the same consumer. The practice simply must be outlawed by the dealership’s policy manual.

Continued Good Health, Good Luck, and Good Selling.

Gil Van Over is executive director of Automotive Compliance Education (ACE), founder and president of gvo3 & Associates, and author of “Automotive Compliance in a Digital World."

 

Originally posted on F&I and Showroom

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Industry

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 →
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 →
Ad Loading...
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 →
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 →
hand signing paperwork on a clipboard on top of a desk with a gavel to the side

Senators Propose Chinese Connected Car Ban

Just weeks before President Trump is set to meet with the Chinese president, two U.S. senators proposed a bill with the aim of protecting Americans’ data.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of work team at a U.S. Subaru hybrid vehicle plant
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 30, 2026

Consumers Gravitate to Hybrids

A study of Q1 used-vehicle sales shows many consumers are looking to minimize fuel costs but aren’t willing to go all electric and no longer have a tax break incentive to do so.

Read More →
family in a car, Affordability Out the Window, Auto Dealer Today
Industryby Lauren LawrenceApril 24, 2026

Bad Credit Tanks Attainability

A recent study suggests expectant parents are feeling the burden of bad credit more than other demographics when it comes to buying a new car.

Read More →
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 →
Ad Loading...
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 →