Here’s something you have probably already thought about too much. A customer pulls up your website on a Tuesday night, scrolls through your inventory for fifteen minutes, finds a unit they’re interested in, and then closes the tab. They never called and left a message. They never filled out the form. You will never know they were there.
The Website You Built Doesn’t Talk Back
Lots of dealership websites are brochures. A phone number at the top. A contact form at the bottom. Inventory in the middle. Everything points at the customer, and nothing comes back. If the visitor wants to engage, they have to do all the work, call during business hours, fill out a form and wait, or drive in. Most of them do none of those things. They close they click back and look at the next dealer in the Google search.
And here is the part that stings. You are paying to drive that visitor to your site. SEO, paid social, inventory syndication, the website redesign you greenlit last spring. The money to put them on the page is already spent. The leak is at the door.
The Workaround That Created a Second Problem
Some dealers have figured this out and bolt a third-party text widget onto their site. It captures the inbound message. That part works pretty good and is a clear move in the right direction. The problem is what happens next.
The conversation lands in a separate inbox, owned by a separate vendor. Reps have to copy and paste between the systems. Context gets lost between the first message and the first reply. So, by the time someone in your shop sees the lead, the customer has already texted two competitors.
So now you’re paying a few hundred dollars a month, per rooftop, for a tool that solves the capture problem and creates a workflow problem. Your team is toggling between two inboxes all day, watching two systems, hoping nothing slips. Multiply that across a dealer group and you’re funding a recurring line item to make your operation worse.
What This Should Actually Look Like
The website lead should never leave the system you already use. When a visitor sends a text from your site, it should land in the same inbox where every other text conversation already lives. The CRM record should be created the moment they hit send, with the unit they were looking at attached, the source already filled in, and the timestamp already logged. Your rep should not have to log into anything new. They should not have to copy anything. They should just reply, the way they reply to every other message.
If your DMS is the system of record for your inventory, your CRM, your service tickets, your accounting, and every other text your team sends and receives, then the website lead belongs there too.
Anywhere else is a leak.