As dealerships face tighter margins, growing operational complexity and the rapid rise of artificial intelligence, leadership has become one of the industry’s clearest competitive advantages. Glenn Lundy, CEO of 800% Automotive Elite Club, joins Adam Marburger on the latest episode of Training Camp to discuss why disciplined leadership, repeatable systems and personalized training matter more than ever for dealerships trying to grow in today’s market.
Currently, Lundy notes that his focus centers on reinventing corporate education inside dealerships. Traditionally, training has used a one-to-many approach, in which all employees receive the same video or presentation, regardless of their learning preferences. Lundy notes that his team now employs AI to invert this model, creating the same essential content in over a dozen versions customized to fit each person’s learning style.
He credited a single developer working closely with AI tools for building the system, noting that the technology now makes personalized training scalable in a way that wasn’t possible even a few years ago.
Reactive leadership
When asked about the biggest challenge facing dealers today, Lundy alludes not to AI or margin pressure directly, but to how leaders respond to them. He said many leaders have become scattered, constantly reacting to a growing list of pressures, from AI adoption to dealer group consolidation to shrinking margins, a pattern that creates overwhelm and leaves the same problems unresolved. Over time, he said, that reactive posture leaves dealerships stagnant even as their teams stay busy.
Conversely, Lundy attributes the success of thriving dealerships today to years of laying groundwork, a process he refers to as laying track, which refers to consistently focusing on the right actions with a long-term perspective to ensure the business is prepared when circumstances change.
He pointed to Rob Ruth, whose dealership has spent three years building a private-party vehicle acquisition strategy that now nets 200 to 250 used vehicles a month at a meaningful savings over auction pricing, an approach other dealers are only now trying to replicate. He also cited Tustin at Roper Kia, who committed years ago to daily discipline, both professionally and personally, holding his team accountable while modeling his own growth. That consistency, Lundy said, has positioned both dealers to benefit now, while less-prepared competitors scramble to catch up.
Systems & daily leadership development
According to Lundy, the gap between dealers who succeed and those who don’t usually comes down to ownership and structure, not desire. Sales managers have historically worn dozens of hats, from pricing vehicles to training staff, making it difficult to hold anyone fully accountable for a single critical function. Building a new initiative, he said, requires a dedicated owner, clear systems and real accountability, without which most efforts stall.
He compared this to McDonald’s, which scales successfully not through exceptional talent but through processes precise enough that any employee can execute them consistently.
That same discipline, Lundy confirms, applies to leadership itself. He says he uses a framework he calls LEAD: listen, encourage, advise, and develop daily, and said most managers skip straight to advising without first listening or reinforcing what employees do well. Building trust that way, he said, makes employees far more receptive to coaching, and the same approach works as effectively with children as it does with dealership teams.
Additionally, Lundy said this same balance extends to the business as a whole. When his team begins working with a new dealership, they evaluate what he calls the automotive triangle: inventory strategy, marketing, people, and processes, since strengthening only one side leaves the others out of balance and risks losing high performers to opportunities elsewhere.
Long-term success
Closing the conversation, Lundy said accelerating technology, particularly AI, is compressing decades of business growth into just a few years, pointing to futurist Ross Dawson’s projection that humanity will experience roughly 2,000 years of evolution over the next century. He noted that acceleration is already visible in how quickly companies like Tesla have grown compared to legacy automakers. Lundy said his own dealership grew sales by 800% over five years through consistent daily discipline, and he encouraged dealers to focus less on their current circumstances and more on building the habits that compound into long-term results.



