TrueCar announced an organizational realignment this week, including a 30% workforce reduction. On today’s episode of CBT Now, TrueCar CEO and Founder Scott Painter shares insight into the realignment and the company’s turnaround strategy.
Painter founded the company in 2005, serving as CEO and guiding it through its 2014 IPO before stepping down in 2016. He recently took the reins back after leading a $227 million transaction to take the company private, marking a major reset.
Upon returning as CEO, Painter spent over a month meeting with all employees, contractors and reviewing external partnerships. He and senior leadership conducted more than 60 hours of individual interviews and departmental evaluations to evaluate company culture, employee competence, their alignment with TrueCar’s mission, and identify employees critical to the company’s future.
Painter is pursuing a back-to-basics strategy, pivoting away from quantity and prioritizing quality. He noted that the company may initially shrink slightly as a result. The ultimate goal is to help dealer partners sell cars more efficiently and at a higher velocity. TrueCar currently supports approximately 11,500 dealers and has nearly 8 million monthly in-market shoppers, 75% of whom are looking for new vehicles. Only 2% of shoppers convert into prospects, meaning millions of potential customers never reach TrueCar’s dealer clients. Improving this conversion is central to the company’s strategy.
"We really are focusing on a pivot from quantity to quality in every respect of the business."
To sharpen focus, TrueCar is discontinuing non-core operations, including TrueCar Plus, its digital retailing platform; TrueCar Wholesale; and the TCMS marketing solutions team. Painter noted that over half of the company’s employees had been working on initiatives outside TrueCar’s core business.
Painter also highlighted that TrueCar has been historically unprofitable, losing between $20 to $30 million annually over the past five years. As a private company, the focus will shift from “adjusted EBITDA break-even” accounting to real cash profitability. Under Painter’s leadership, the company is on track to deliver its first genuine profit in the first quarter. This turnaround is driven by eliminating unprofitable initiatives, refocusing top talent on core operations, and cutting unnecessary costs.
Looking ahead, TrueCar aims to generate one million annual vehicle sales on its platform and achieve more than $1 billion in annual revenue within three years, even with a smaller, more effective dealer network. The company will partner with fewer, higher-quality dealers and leverage affinity partnerships to increase trust and closing rates.
At NADA Show 2026, Painter’s return and TrueCar’s refreshed strategy received a positive reception from dealers and partners. Both former detractors and new dealers expressed interest in engaging with the company. However, Painter and his team are committed to achieving profitability before scaling to ensure product readiness and dealer satisfaction.
Looking toward the future, Painter envisions TrueCar as the leading new-car buying program focused on price transparency, customer trust, and dealer profitability. Technology and AI enhancements will improve the customer experience while supporting dealer efficiency and margin growth.



