Volkswagen Group slips agency model plan into reverse

Staff
By Staff
3 Min Read

Three years after Volkswagen Group UK began implementing agency-style contracts for some of its dealer networks selling electric vehicles, the business is now considering reversing its rollout.

A “review of its sales model” is under way by bosses in Germany and expected to be completed by the end of March 2025, the vehicle manufacturer has confirmed.

Volkswagen Group said its long-term ambition remains “a full agency” sales model, however it believes it may need a different approach “in the short- to mid-term” to better serve its customers.

Some think that changing tack will in fact better serve the manufacturer, not necessarily customers.

“I think the tough market for EV sales has left VW Group feeling it doesn’t want to bear so much risk,” one industry observer told Automotive Management in reaction to the review.

“Why would it want to be responsible for its EV stock while waiting to persuade buyers when under a traditional model it can push it out onto its franchisees’ balance sheets?”

Although VW Group UK has used agency contracts successfully for fleet sales for years, rewarding dealerships for managing the delivery to the customer, it has been rolling out agency across its brands for EV sales gradually since late 2021, with Cupra, Volkswagen and Skoda implemented, and Audi yet to go.

In the past OEMs typically described the agency model as an opportunity to bring them closer to the people who buy their cars, and have insisted that it would create a better experience for customers and more consistent pricing.

However tougher market conditions and the complexity involved have led several manufacturers, including Stellantis, BMW Group and JLR, to delay or cancel their plans, and currently Mercedes-Benz and Volvo Cars are the only major brands in the UK that have agency-type agreements for new car sales with their retailers. 

Marco Schubert, member of VW Group’s extended executive committee for sales, said: “The full agency with direct sales to customers clearly remains our guiding star in the long-term. However, given changing framework conditions we have to re-evaluate if our current agency model for all-electric vehicles delivers the best possible customer experience.

“Therefore, we will initiate a joint review process with our wholesale and retail organisations whether returning to an indirect sales model might be a favourable alternative in the short- to mid-term for selected markets.”

Earlier this year ICDP managing director Steve Young told Automotive Management that for dealerships the issue with agency agreements is not necessarily the terms, but the impact to volumes of vehicles sold.

He added: ““You need volume x (times) handover fee in order to get to the right revenue. If an OEMs’ volumes are down then the dealer isn’t going to get the revenues.”

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