Your CRM isn't a database. It's inventory

Your agency wants another five figures for Tier 3 ads.
But the highest-converting leads in your business are already sitting in your CRM, untouched.
One is a line item. The other is inventory you already paid for.
In dealership after dealership, I keep seeing the same three leaks. Different store. Same story.
The store is paying somewhere between $1,500 and $5,000 a month for the CRM. Another five figures for the agency. And the first recommendation is almost always the same: more ad spend.
That's not fixing the problem.
Internet leads contacted within 5 minutes are 21x more likely to convert than leads reached at 30 minutes. But most BDC first-response times I've seen run closer to a few hours. Some dealers take over an hour just to send an acknowledgment. A few never respond at all.
Most deals take 5 or more touches. Almost half of salespeople quit after one.
22% of leads your BDC marks "dead" are still actively shopping your website a week later — with zero outreach from you. That's not a dead lead. That's a lead you stopped working.
Your CRM isn't a database. It's inventory.
Every unworked lead, every unsold quote, every service customer nobody's touched.
When a store runs a 14-day reactivation the right way — SMS first, email layered in, a GM voicemail as the pattern interrupt — the numbers usually move.
Roughly 30% of contacted leads respond. About 10% of those buy. That's 3 out of every 100 contacts. Run your store's average front-end gross against that number.
Your BDC isn't failing. The process they inherited is.
Before you spend another dollar on ads, pull three numbers:
Leads with fewer than 3 touches.
Unsold quotes with no follow-up.
Service customers with no equity outreach.
If those numbers are high, you don't have a traffic problem. You have a recovery problem.
Want to know what's sitting in your database? Request your free Database Audit — one page, no pitch deck, no drawn-out process.
The most expensive leads in your business aren't the ones you haven't bought yet.
They're the ones you already paid for and then just walked away.
— John Dooley
