agent Entrepreneur logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

F&I for Non-F&I Managers

Raising the F&I acumen of all managers associated with sales is a smart move.

by John Tabar
April 12, 2022
F&I for Non-F&I Managers

Raising the F&I acumen of all managers associated with sales is a smart move.

4 min to read


I recently had the pleasure of working with a dealer group who believes that it is critical for the success of their dealerships to ensure that sales and F&I work together as closely as possible. As a matter of fact, they insist that all sales managers, general sales managers and general managers, attend all F&I training with the F&I managers and F&I manager candidates. They believe that all managers in the variable operation of their dealerships should have F&I knowledge and a solid understanding of compliance.

They have learned that the best outcomes occur when sales and F&I are working together to maximize each opportunity, and that when everyone is on the same page, self-administered accountability is increased and compliance risk diminished.

Ad Loading...

The roles of the F&I manger and sales manager have evolved, they are not as defined as they once were. In the interest of streamlining the sales process, sales managers are routinely performing tasks that traditionally have been the responsibility of F&I. Requesting credit reports, submitting deals to lenders performing credit interviews, to name a few. When the sales manager has limited or no F&I experience this can sometimes foster an environment that can create some communication issues, compliance risks, missed gross profit and disfunction. 

To be fair, the sales manager position is one of tremendous responsibility in the variable operation of any dealership. They are held accountable for all activities that generate revenue in the sales department such as, incoming phone calls, BDC leads, walk-ins, the activity of each salesperson they are responsible for, appointments, deliveries, gross profit on every deal and the development of their team. In other words, they are very busy. Take into consideration the sellers’ market we are currently enjoying in many places and it easy to see why some sales managers without F&I experience can tend to focus on a “yes”, but not necessarily “the best yes”. 

Transferring F&I knowledge to sales managers is a good idea for all stakeholders in a deal. If you are an F&I manager or general manager, I would recommend that you examine the F&I experience level of your sales management team. Do you have a sales manager or two that have limited, or no F&I experience submitting deals and interacting with lenders? If so, you may want to be proactive in gaining an understanding of their knowledge of deal structure from the lender’s perspective, their understanding of your current lender’s guidelines, and compliance. 

The whole purpose in having the sales manager submit deals for approval is to streamline the process. Having a clear understanding of which deal should be submitted to the select lenders who have the highest possibility of approval is step one in creating better deal structure, maximizing options, and streamlining the approval process. Review each lenders guidelines with the non-F&I sales manager and share what they are looking for in PTI, DTI and LTV. 

Use a discussion on compliance and Truth-in-Lending to bring up how terms are presented to the customer and how important it is for the customer to have options when finalizing their deal in F&I. 

Ad Loading...

Being visible and assisting the sales manager by taking a T.O., participating in one-on-ones and helping to select the right vehicle for those credit challenged customers can go a long way in building a collaborative and cohesive sales and F&I relationship. This is also a great time to reinforce the importance of compliance and transfer your knowledge to the manager without F&I experience. 

Compliance is one of those things that everyone has heard about, knows is important but, admits when exposed to what is required and consequences that may arise if not adhered to, that they could know more about it. 

Let them know that compliance isn’t a skill that can come from years of sales experience, it is based on education and training, situation awareness and discipline to process. Start with Personally Identifiable Information and go from there. 

Bring them into the F&I office when the opportunity arises and show them everything that must happen in a deal from start to finish from the F&I perspective.

Raising the F&I acumen of all managers associated with sales is a smart move. If this process is more than you wish to take on by yourself, you might want to adopt the training strategy of the dealer group I mentioned and at the beginning of this article and commit to F&I for all non-F&I managers. 

Ad Loading...

John Tabar serves as Executive Director of Training for Brown & Brown Dealer Services. 

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More F&I

F&Iby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 27, 2026

Price Driving Insurance Churn

Over half of insurance holders ages 18 to 29 reported to be 'somewhat' likely to change providers in the next 90 days, according to CivicScience, which found that interest was lower among older age groups.

Read More →
F&Iby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 25, 2026

Report Finds Year-End F&I Strength

Deal volume ebbed and flowed throughout 2025, but product performance remained steady, according to automotive technology and data intelligence solutions provider StoneEagle.

Read More →
Summit Updatesby StaffFebruary 23, 2026

Look Ahead to the Future of F&I at Agent Summit

Joel Kansanback – CEO of Strategic Dealer Advisory – will take to the stage at the 2026 event.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
F&Iby Hannah MitchellFebruary 23, 2026

Some Auto Brands Cheaper to Insure

A new top 10 list ranks the least expensive for average full insurance coverage on a clean driving record and high driver credit scores.

Read More →
Industryby Lauren LawrenceFebruary 11, 2026

Insurance Shopping on the Rise

A TransUnion study found that relationship-driven sales models proved to be important, as consumers who used an agent had a lower shopping intensity than those going it alone.

Read More →
Industryby Hannah MitchellFebruary 4, 2026

Auto Insurance Cost Reprieve

2025 brought consumers relief after years of rate hikes, but 2026 could bring renewed policy pain, depending on how U.S. trade policy affects prices.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
F&Iby Hannah MitchellJanuary 29, 2026

F&I Sales Show Affordability Pressure

An annual report on the revenue stream finds more consumers are opting out as they face high car prices and overall inflation, and it recommends tweaks to increase success.

Read More →
F&Iby Hannah MitchellJanuary 12, 2026

Auto Credit Access Loosens

December brought some of the best borrowing availability for consumers in years, though lenders tightened their reins on riskier segments of the market.

Read More →
TrainingDecember 10, 2025

Accountable Is as Accountable Does

Auto dealerships work better when all staffers own their duties.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
StoneEagle logo beside a headshot of Cindy Allen, CEO, on a pink background with a stylized upward-trending chart.
Industryby StaffDecember 5, 2025

EV Surge Shows AI Steadied Softer Q3

StoneEagleData reveals the gross reality behind the rise in EV leasing and the steady role F&I offices played.

Read More →