On the latest episode of Inside Automotive, we’re joined by renowned business strategist and executive coach Jay Abraham to discuss how dealers can uncover hidden growth by thinking beyond traditional industry practices. Abraham, founder and CEO of The Abraham Group, has worked with icons like Tony Robinson and now offers his insights to help dealers operate with exponential impact rather than incremental gains.
To start, Abraham details how his unconventional entry into business, working on performance-only roles in multiple industries at once, led to a breakthrough realization. This realization is that most industries are siloed, unaware of the smarter strategies being used elsewhere. By borrowing models, tactics, and positioning concepts from other sectors, he began engineering hybrid approaches that produced explosive results. He calls this shift in perspective “funnel vision,” a contrast to the limited “tunnel vision” many industries tend to adopt.
According to Abraham, dealers are especially ripe for transformation because they manage five or six businesses under one roof. Yet, many store operators become “successfully stuck.” Which means, they reach profitability but plateau because they’re only focused on conventional metrics like KPIs, advertising ROI, and gross margins. Abraham challenges dealers to look for “overlooked performance indicators” (OPIs), factors like salesperson compatibility with vehicle types, underleveraged referral systems, or missed upsell opportunities, that could unlock massive performance improvements with no additional cost.
Throughout the conversation, Abraham emphasized the importance of developing strategic thinking, not just operational efficiency. He urges dealers to stop benchmarking only within the automotive industry and start studying how other industries optimize customer relationships, improve retention, and generate high-converting referrals.
“Study how other industries approach the same generic functions that you do because there's a lot of different ways to skin that cat. And many of them are safer, faster, more powerful, and most of them are not even understood by your competitors.”
He also highlights the power of soft skills, explaining that teaching staff to improve communication cadence, trust-building, and authority can yield 200 to 300 percent greater impact, again, with no added investment.
Ultimately, Abraham advises dealers to revisit how they extract residual value from existing customers. Whether through smarter referral strategies, better use of first-party data, or enhancing service department perception, he believes dealers are sitting on growth they’ve already paid for, they just need to optimize it.


