Across Darwin Automotive, software tools have driven an additional $114 in average F&I profit per vehicle for its dealership customers, said Battista.
But the potential benefits of digitizing the finance office go beyond the bottom line. Software also can alleviate the bottleneck that can lead customers to wait hours to finish their deals.
For instance, Battista said, electronic paperwork can be emailed ahead of time rather than printed out while the customer waits. Customers can upload records before they arrive at the dealership. Multiple documents can be signed at once, rather than manually one at a time.
"The No. 1 complaint is the amount of time they spend in F&I," he said, "so the target of these tools has to be: How do I cut that time in the F&I office?"
Glassman Auto Group, in Southfield, Mich., started piloting Dealertrack's remote e-signature capability in the spring, and switched from paper to digital F&I product menus this year, said David Barash, Glassman's finance director. The digital menus are used both in store and off-site.
In addition, customers are sent a questionnaire about their individual driving habits, which generates a list of products that best fit their needs. Allowing consumers to structure a deal based on their own circumstances is the biggest reason Glassman — which sells Kia, Hyundai, Genesis and Subaru vehicles — saw F&I gross profit rise at least 30 percent this year, Barash said.
Dealers often think they'll be more profitable if the customer is sitting across the desk from a finance manager, who can read body language and other cues, he said.
"What we found is that the customer just wants a little bit more flexibility, and it made the process way more interactive for the customer," he said.
"It turned it into a consultation," Barash added, "rather than a sales pitch."