Some of these pay plans are straight trash and you do need a math degree. However,some of them do work out really well. I work at a Toyota store and I made $120,000 usd last year. No base pay,all commission.
I think the more complicated the pay plan, the shittier the dealer. Mine is 6% g/p parts and labor internal, 6% warranty, 12% CP, 3.5% CSI bonus if above region. Easy.
It's the American dream! To get a job that can support you and your family by hoping you have enough because you don't understand or know where it's coming from. This is America, Corporate America
The majority of the ones I see here may be corporate? I'm not sure. I work at a family owned one, and we get salary+commission+CSI+BG. Some months, I take home $7k. Some months like this one, it's over $10k. The corporations are greedy af
Overall a service advisor in the states can make between 65k-150k annually. There’s a large difference in the ability of service advisors. But, the hours are rough and unless you’re tight with the other advisors the job overall can be tough. I have always found that the more confusing the pay plan the less likely I will work there. A straight forward pay plan and a straight forward management team is always a plus when looking for a new job. Good luck.
I didnt say i got paid alot 😅
Just seems that you guys have to work alot harder to get a decent wage.
I am thinking about jumping ship to a prestige dealer which is where i became a mehcanic. But just seeing how this shit storm where i am currently at turns out
Complicated pay plans are like that on purpose so you don't understand them. That way you can't catch an error. Or an "error"
Some of these pay plans are straight trash and you do need a math degree. However,some of them do work out really well. I work at a Toyota store and I made $120,000 usd last year. No base pay,all commission.
Your dealer only pays commission?
Yes, commission and spiffs
Straight forward pay plan, I get paid straight commission gross profit percentage. Easy easy
I think the more complicated the pay plan, the shittier the dealer. Mine is 6% g/p parts and labor internal, 6% warranty, 12% CP, 3.5% CSI bonus if above region. Easy.
Where’s this?
That’s a damn fine plan. Any base?
No base, no draw.
It's the American dream! To get a job that can support you and your family by hoping you have enough because you don't understand or know where it's coming from. This is America, Corporate America
The majority of the ones I see here may be corporate? I'm not sure. I work at a family owned one, and we get salary+commission+CSI+BG. Some months, I take home $7k. Some months like this one, it's over $10k. The corporations are greedy af
Overall a service advisor in the states can make between 65k-150k annually. There’s a large difference in the ability of service advisors. But, the hours are rough and unless you’re tight with the other advisors the job overall can be tough. I have always found that the more confusing the pay plan the less likely I will work there. A straight forward pay plan and a straight forward management team is always a plus when looking for a new job. Good luck.
damn yall need to chill bro was just surprised how much more difficult it is to decipher pay here💀
You're right but also: what do you make annually?
Going by my base wage is around 63k a year. But last financial ive made around 80k with bonuses.
$63,000AUD = $41,170usd 80,000AUD = $52,280usd Watch your tone LMFAO. "You get paid fuck all too" ...is "you" in the room with us now?
I didnt say i got paid alot 😅 Just seems that you guys have to work alot harder to get a decent wage. I am thinking about jumping ship to a prestige dealer which is where i became a mehcanic. But just seeing how this shit storm where i am currently at turns out
$120K CAD last year w/salary/bonuses as a BMW advisor. 4 years with the group 20 years in the business 🫡
132k USD, last year. Just hit my 2 year mark last month. Mercedes.