Oftentimes, F&I is seen as a numbers game—how many products are presented, how many are accepted, and how much profit is generated. But beneath those numbers is something far more human: the customer's decision-making moment.
F&I has never been just about presenting options; it has always been about helping customers make decisions that genuinely protect their investments.
That moment of truth—when a customer says yes or no—is not about just the product on the table. It is about how clearly the customer sees the value of it. And when the focus shifts too far toward presentation and process, that clarity and value could get lost.
The Real Challenge
Every day in F&I offices across the country, customers say no. Not because they cannot afford it, and not because they are not interested, but because they were not given a compelling reason to say yes.
F&I does not have a product problem. It has a selling problem.
A Tale of Two Approaches
I attended a meeting where a speaker confidently declared that menu selling was the future, that step-selling was outdated and if you were still doing it, you were missing the boat.
Then someone turned to me and said, "You've been doing this a long time; what is your take? I stood up and said:
"Forget everything you just heard about menu selling."
Menu selling is not a sales process—it is a sales tool. It is an integral tool to put everything in front of the customer quickly and efficiently. But when did we start relying on a menu to sell for us? Here's the problem: It turned sales professionals into order-takers instead of value-builders.
Finance managers started counting on menus to do the selling for them. Instead of engaging customers, they walked them through the options, letting them drive the process.
So, I asked the room, "What do you do when a customer declines everything on the menu? Where do you go next?"
The answer: You go back to step-selling. Step-selling reconnects you with the basics that work—needs, relevance, and real conversations that drive decisions. And when those fundamentals are in place, value is not just explained—it is experienced. That's what moves the conversation beyond price.
The Missing Piece: Need Awareness
The five steps of the sales process remain fundamental: qualify, deed awareness, need satisfaction, trial close, and close. Yet the commonly skipped step, especially among experienced F&I professionals, is need awareness.
Many finance managers jump straight from qualification to presenting features – need satisfaction – bypassing the critical step of helping customers recognize why they should care in the first place.
That oversight creates a fundamental disconnect. If customers do not recognize the problem, they will likely view the solution as optional, no matter how well you present it.
Guided Discovery: Telling is Not Selling
The most effective way to build value is not by telling customers what they need. It is by helping them discover it themselves through questions that guide them toward the most relevant solution. The guided discovery method transforms the typical sales presentation into a meaningful discussion.
Consider this simple technique: Rather than explaining that a protection plan covers windshield damage, say: "On a scale of one to 10, where one means never and 10 means guaranteed, what do you think the likelihood is of getting a rock chip in your windshield?"
When customers respond with an eight, nine or 10—and most will—they've just acknowledged a problem that requires solving. The psychological impact on customers’ mindsets is significant: They've identified their own needs rather than being told what they should care about and having the decision being pushed on them.
Asking the right question with the end goal in mind creates room for customers to recognize risks they hadn't fully considered, and this recognition forms the foundation of value.
The Art of Converting No to Yes
Value goes beyond the price tag. It lies in the perceived benefits and outcomes that customers expect from your product. To master value-based selling, dealership personnel do not need a polished script or presentation. Instead, they must speak to customers' needs and problems. Here are practical strategies that could work well:
1. Ask Questions Instead of Making Statements
People are more likely to take action when they hear themselves say why they need something. Asking the right questions is an effective way to encourage that conversation.
2. Focus on Dialogue, Not Monologue
With a declining attention span, customers' focus fades quickly, but dialogues keep the customers involved. Engage them in the process rather than talking at them about features and benefits.
3. Make It Personal
Connect protection products to real-life scenarios. "Has this ever happened to you?" or "Do you know someone who's experienced this?" makes the need tangible and immediate.
4. Avoid Feature Dumping
Feature dumping overwhelms your customers. Relevance engages. Customers don't buy based on every detail listed on the warranty; they buy when something in that list feels personal — when it matches how they drive, where they go, and what they deal with every day.
The Timeless Move: Value
While the tools of the trade continue to evolve—digital menus, online F&I, virtual consultations—the customers' decision-making psychology remains the same. Customers still buy based on perceived value, not just price. Successful F&I professionals understand that their role goes beyond walking customers through the options. It is to help customers see the risks they may face and why protecting their investments matters. They shift conversations from "Here's what we offer" to "Here's why it matters to you."
All F&I managers should ask themselves: Am I just offering products or selling solutions?
When value leads the way, the conversation changes, and so do the results, because when customers truly see the value, price becomes secondary.
Doug Dingman, with over 30 years in the auto industry, co-founded PRO Consulting. Ruby Sharma is a marketing and content specialist who develops sales content and resources to support dealership team performance.
EDITOR’S NOTE: This article was authored and edited according to F&I and Showroom editorial standards and style. Opinions expressed may not reflect that of the publication.










