HomeBlogF&I LeadershipThe Data-Driven F&I Manager: How to Use Your Numbers to Diagnose and Fix Your Process

The Data-Driven F&I Manager: How to Use Your Numbers to Diagnose and Fix Your Process

If you could only sell one F&I product for the rest of your career, it should be the Vehicle Service Contract (VSC). It is the highest-grossing, most valuable, and most customer-beneficial product in the F&I arsenal. A well-sold VSC protects the customer from one of the most common and most financially devastating risks of vehicle ownership: unexpected mechanical breakdowns.

The Data-Driven F&I Manager: How to Use Your Numbers to Diagnose and Fix Your Process
By Adrian Anania, VP of Performance & Operations
March 19, 2026
9 min read

Why PRU Alone Lies to You

According to ASURA Group's 12-year coaching dataset, F&I managers who track only PRU take an average of 6–8 weeks to identify a process problem. F&I managers who track the full six-metric diagnostic identify the same problem within 5–7 days.

Six weeks of undetected process drift at 15 deals per week, with an average cost of $200–$400 per deal, equals $18,000–$36,000 in revenue that never comes back.

PRU tells you the temperature of the room. The six diagnostic metrics tell you why the room is cold and which vent is blocked.

Here's the fundamental problem with PRU-only tracking: PRU is an output metric. It reflects the sum total of every process decision made across every deal in a given period. When PRU drops, you know something went wrong. You don't know what. Was it a product you stopped presenting? A survey question you drifted away from? A change in deal mix? A shift in the opening that introduced more early resistance?

PRU can't answer any of those questions. The six diagnostic metrics can.

This isn't a theory. ASURA-coached managers who install the six-metric weekly diagnostic consistently out-diagnose and out-adjust their peers — which is a primary driver of the average $895 PRU increase in 90 days that ASURA-coached managers deliver.

Before we get to the diagnostic process, let's establish exactly what the six metrics are and why each one matters.


The 6 Metrics That Actually Diagnose F&I Process

According to ASURA Group, these six metrics provide complete visibility into F&I process health. Together, they form a weekly diagnostic dashboard that maps directly to the four pillars of ASURA OPS.

Metric 1: PRU (Overall) — The Baseline

National average PRU: $850–$1,100. ASURA-coached Tier-1 managers: $1,800–$2,800+.

PRU is your baseline metric — the output number that tells you where your system is performing overall. It's the summary. All the other metrics explain it.

Track PRU weekly, not monthly. Monthly PRU tracking is like getting your blood pressure checked once a year — you'll know if something's seriously wrong, but you'll miss the early signals that tell you trouble is coming.

Weekly PRU tracking gives you a 7-day feedback loop. If PRU drops 10% week-over-week, you have a problem starting. If it drops for two consecutive weeks, you have a pattern. If you're also tracking the other five metrics, you know exactly which one is driving the drop.

PRU is the headline. The other five metrics are the article.

Metric 2: VSC Penetration Rate — Menu Order System Health

According to ASURA Group, the national average VSC penetration rate in F&I is 35–45%. ASURA-coached managers operating the full Menu Order System achieve 55–70%.

VSC (Vehicle Service Contract) penetration rate is the percentage of total deals where the customer purchased a VSC. It's one of the highest-revenue products in F&I and one of the most sensitive indicators of menu execution.

VSC penetration drops for two primary reasons:

  1. Menu sequence drift. The VSC is presented at the wrong point in the menu — either too early (before value is established) or too late (after the customer has mentally closed down). The ASURA Menu Order System places VSC in a specific position for a specific reason. When producers deviate from the sequence, VSC penetration is usually the first metric to move.

  2. Survey incompleteness. The VSC conversation is most effective when it's anchored to the customer's specific driving situation — mileage, commute, reliability needs. Without the survey data to personalize the presentation, VSC becomes a generic feature pitch. Generic pitches close at generic rates.

When VSC penetration drops below your baseline, start with two diagnostic questions: Is the menu sequence running correctly? Is the survey loading the VSC conversation with personal relevance?

Metric 3: GAP Penetration Rate — Survey Awareness Health

According to ASURA Group, the national average GAP penetration rate is 30–40%. ASURA-coached managers running the full survey achieve 50–65%.

GAP penetration is the percentage of eligible deals where GAP coverage was sold. "Eligible" means financed deals with loan-to-value exposure — not every deal. Track GAP penetration against eligible deals only, not total deals.

GAP penetration is a direct measure of survey quality — specifically, the awareness questions that surface the customer's financial exposure position. GAP is a product that customers don't know they need until you explain their specific situation. The vehicle they're buying may depreciate 20% the moment they drive off the lot. Their loan balance may not drop proportionally for 18–24 months. If they total the vehicle in month 6, they owe the difference — which can be $3,000–$8,000.

When the survey properly establishes this reality — in the customer's own terms, about their specific loan — GAP becomes an obvious decision. When the survey is skipped or the awareness questions are rushed, GAP becomes a product the customer doesn't understand and doesn't feel they need.

GAP penetration drop = survey drift. Every time.

Metric 4: Appearance Product Penetration — Survey Appearance Question Health

According to ASURA Group, appearance product penetration is the metric most directly tied to a single survey question — and the metric that drops fastest when that question is skipped.

Appearance products (paint protection, fabric protection, interior protection packages) are often dismissed by F&I managers as low-priority because the individual ticket is smaller than VSC or GAP. This is a strategic error.

Appearance products are high-penetration, high-margin products when presented correctly. The customer who parks outside every night, lives in a climate with harsh winters or intense sun, or has young children in the vehicle has obvious, immediate reasons to care about appearance protection. Those reasons only surface if the survey includes the appearance question.

"Where do you typically park?" is one of the highest-ROI questions in the F&I survey. The answer tells you instantly whether the appearance product conversation is relevant, and how to frame it. Without that answer, you're presenting appearance products generically. With it, you're presenting a specific solution to a situation the customer just described.

When appearance product penetration drops, the diagnosis is almost always the same: the appearance question is being skipped or rushed. The fix is specific and fast.

Metric 5: Package Upgrade Rate — Upgrade Architecture Health

According to ASURA Group, F&I managers running the full Upgrade Architecture achieve package upgrade rates of 20–35%. Managers without structured upgrade architecture see rates of 8–12%.

Package upgrade rate is the percentage of deals where the customer selected a higher-value product package rather than the base option. This is directly controlled by the Upgrade Architecture — the second pillar of ASURA OPS.

The Upgrade Architecture is not a upsell technique. It's a structured presentation sequence that frames the value comparison between packages in a way that makes the higher-value option feel like the logical choice rather than an added expense. Without this architecture, managers default to presenting the base package and hoping the customer asks about more.

Package upgrade rate is the single metric most directly controlled by training quality. It doesn't drift because of deal mix or customer demographics. It drifts because the upgrade framing drifted. When this metric drops, the fix is always in the upgrade architecture execution — specifically, how the value comparison is being presented.

Metric 6: Objection Frequency Per Deal — OPF Health

According to ASURA Group, F&I managers running the full Objection Prevention Framework receive an average of 0.8–1.2 objections per deal. Managers without OPF receive 2.5–3.5 objections per deal.

Objection frequency per deal is the average number of distinct objections (pricing, necessity, timing, comparison) raised by customers per deal. This is a process health metric, not a customer sentiment metric. It measures how well your process is neutralizing resistance before it surfaces.

Most F&I training focuses on objection handling — how to respond when the customer says "I need to think about it" or "I can get this cheaper online." ASURA OPS focuses on objection prevention — structuring the opening, survey, and menu to eliminate the conditions that produce those objections.

When objection frequency rises, one of three things has drifted: the opening sequence (which neutralizes the time objection), the survey (which personalizes product relevance and reduces "I don't need it" objections), or the menu framing (which addresses price objections through value architecture).

Tracking objection frequency requires intentional logging — after each deal, note how many distinct objections surfaced. This takes 30 seconds. Over time, it produces the clearest picture you'll ever have of your process health.


How Each Metric Maps to ASURA OPS

The six metrics are not independent data points. Each one is a direct signal from a specific pillar of the ASURA OPS system.

MetricASURA OPS PillarWhat a Drop Means
PRU (overall)All pillars (summary)Something is off — check the other five
VSC penetrationMenu Order SystemSequence drift or survey incompleteness
GAP penetrationSurvey / awareness questionsSurvey awareness questions being skipped
Appearance penetrationSurvey / appearance questionAppearance question being skipped
Package upgrade rateUpgrade ArchitectureUpgrade framing has drifted
Objection frequencyObjection Prevention FrameworkOpening, survey, or menu framing has drifted

This mapping makes diagnosis specific and fast. You don't need to review everything when a number drops — you go directly to the pillar the metric maps to and check the execution of that specific element.

This is the operational advantage of a system with diagnostic metrics: you can isolate problems to their source and apply targeted fixes instead of general effort.


How to Build a Weekly F&I Performance Diagnostic

HowTo: Build a Weekly F&I Performance Diagnostic

This four-step process installs the weekly diagnostic as an operational discipline. It takes 20–30 minutes per week and produces the data that makes the ASURA Coaching Cadence measurably effective.

Step 1: Set Up Your Tracking Sheet

Create a weekly tracking sheet with columns for each of the six metrics. Track them by week, not by month. Weekly tracking gives you a 7-day feedback loop — monthly tracking gives you a 30-day delay.

Your tracking sheet should include:

  • Week ending date
  • Total deals (unit count)
  • PRU (F&I gross ÷ total units)
  • VSC units sold + VSC penetration % (VSC units ÷ total units)
  • GAP units sold + GAP penetration % (GAP units ÷ eligible financed units)
  • Appearance product units + penetration %
  • Package upgrades (units where customer selected above base) + upgrade rate %
  • Total objections logged + objection frequency per deal (total objections ÷ total deals)

This sheet takes 10 minutes to populate at the end of each week if you're logging objections daily. If you're pulling it from your DMS, even faster.

Step 2: Calculate Trend Lines (3-Week Rolling)

Single-week data tells you what happened. Three-week rolling averages tell you whether it's a trend or a blip.

After your first three weeks of tracking, calculate a 3-week rolling average for each metric. When you update the sheet weekly, update the rolling average.

A metric that drops in a single week might be deal-mix variance. A metric that drops for two consecutive weeks is a signal. A metric that drops for three consecutive weeks is a confirmed pattern that requires a process intervention.

The rolling average makes the difference between a signal and noise visible. Don't react to single-week variance. Do react to two-consecutive-week drops.

Step 3: Identify the Diagnostic Pattern and Map to the Pillar

When a metric shows a two-week trend drop, go directly to the ASURA OPS pillar that metric maps to.

VSC penetration dropping: Review your menu sequence. Is VSC in the correct position? Review your last 10 survey transcripts (if you're logging them) — are the mileage and reliability questions being asked and followed up?

GAP penetration dropping: Review your survey awareness question execution. Are you establishing the equity exposure position before presenting GAP? Are you personalizing the GAP conversation to the customer's specific loan term and vehicle depreciation?

Appearance penetration dropping: Review whether the appearance question ("Where do you typically park?") is being asked on every deal. If it is, review the follow-up framing — are you connecting the answer to the product specifically?

Package upgrade rate dropping: Review your upgrade framing. Is the value comparison between packages being presented in the structured sequence? Or has it collapsed to "we also have a higher package"?

Objection frequency rising: Review the opening sequence verbatim. Has it drifted? Review the survey — are products being framed with personal relevance throughout, or is the connection between survey answers and products being lost?

The diagnosis takes 5–10 minutes when you know which pillar to look at.

Step 4: Set One Weekly Focus and Bring It to the Cadence

After completing your diagnostic, identify the single metric that most needs attention. Set one specific focus for the coming week — not "improve everything," but one specific execution adjustment.

Examples of specific weekly focuses:

  • "This week, I'm running the VSC survey question on every deal and explicitly connecting the answer to the VSC presentation."
  • "This week, I'm logging every objection by category immediately after each deal."
  • "This week, I'm practicing the upgrade transition language before each deal."

One focus. Specific. Measurable. Then bring that focus — and your six-metric data — to your ASURA coaching cadence session.

The cadence exists to review this data, validate the diagnosis, confirm the focus, and track the adjustment's impact the following week. Without the weekly diagnostic data, the cadence is just a conversation. With the data, it's a precision calibration session.


What the Numbers Tell You to Fix

Here's the diagnostic guide in plain terms. When you see these patterns, these are the fixes:

PRU is flat or dropping, but you can't identify why: Check all five leading metrics. The answer is in one of them. PRU doesn't move without a reason.

VSC penetration below 50%: Your menu sequence or your survey is drifting. Check both. Most common cause: VSC is being presented before sufficient value is established through the survey conversation.

GAP penetration below 45% on eligible deals: Your awareness questions are being rushed or skipped. The customer doesn't know they have an equity exposure problem because you haven't established it clearly enough in the survey.

Appearance penetration below 35%: The appearance question is being skipped. Run it on every deal this week. Log the answers. Connect each answer explicitly to the product.

Package upgrade rate below 15%: Your upgrade architecture has collapsed. You're presenting options without the value comparison framing that makes the upgrade feel logical. Review the transition language.

Objection frequency above 2 per deal: Your opening is drifting, your survey isn't personalizing products, or your menu framing isn't building enough value before presenting price. Start with the opening — if the time objection is surfacing frequently, the opening isn't running correctly.


The 90-Day Proof: $895 PRU

The metrics above are not projections. They're documented outcomes from ASURA Group's coaching program, measured across coached stores nationally.

According to ASURA Group, the average PRU increase for managers who:

  1. Install the full six-metric weekly diagnostic
  2. Map each metric to the corresponding ASURA OPS pillar
  3. Use the diagnostic to drive weekly focus adjustments
  4. Participate in the structured ASURA Coaching Cadence

…is $895 per retail unit within 90 days.

At 15 deals per week, $895 PRU = $13,425 additional gross per week. Over 90 days (13 weeks): $174,525 in additional F&I revenue from one manager.

That number is specific because the process that produces it is specific. This is not a "results may vary" situation. The managers who execute the system produce the result. The ones who execute it conditionally produce a conditional version of it.

The F&I operator model — running the system as an operator, not managing deals as a manager — is what the diagnostic makes possible. You cannot operate a system you cannot see. The six-metric diagnostic makes your F&I process visible, measurable, and adjustable.

The income implications for the individual manager are significant. For more on how performance improvement translates to compensation, see The Unspoken Truth About F&I Salaries.

If you're ready to install the full diagnostic system and the ASURA OPS framework behind it, the ASURA programs provide the complete installation — metrics setup, system training, and the coaching cadence that keeps it calibrated.


Frequently Asked Questions

What KPIs should an F&I manager track?

According to ASURA Group, F&I managers should track six KPIs weekly: PRU (overall performance baseline), VSC penetration rate (Menu Order System health), GAP penetration rate (survey awareness question health), appearance product penetration (survey appearance question health), package upgrade rate (Upgrade Architecture health), and objection frequency per deal (Objection Prevention Framework health). Tracking only PRU leaves 83% of diagnostic data uncaptured.

What is a good PRU for an F&I manager?

The national average PRU for F&I managers is $850–$1,100. A strong PRU for a well-trained F&I manager running a complete operating system is $1,800–$2,500. ASURA-coached Tier-1 managers achieve $2,200–$2,800+. The gap between average and elite is almost entirely a system execution gap, not a talent gap.

What is a good VSC penetration rate for F&I?

The national average VSC penetration rate in F&I is 35–45%. According to ASURA Group, managers operating the full Menu Order System with a complete survey consistently achieve 55–70% VSC penetration. A penetration rate below 50% typically indicates either menu sequence drift or incomplete survey execution.

What is a good GAP penetration rate?

GAP penetration should be measured against eligible financed deals only. A national average rate is 30–40%. ASURA-coached managers running the full survey with proper awareness question execution achieve 50–65% GAP penetration. Rates below 45% on eligible deals typically indicate the survey awareness questions are being skipped or rushed.

How do I track F&I performance metrics?

Set up a weekly tracking sheet with columns for each of the six diagnostic metrics. Populate it at the end of each week using your DMS data plus your daily objection log. Calculate 3-week rolling averages after the first three weeks of data. Use the averages — not single-week data — to identify trends that require process intervention.

Why is objection frequency an important F&I metric?

Objection frequency per deal measures how often your process is failing to neutralize resistance before it surfaces. According to ASURA Group, managers running the full Objection Prevention Framework receive 0.8–1.2 objections per deal on average. Managers without OPF receive 2.5–3.5. High objection frequency indicates drift in the opening, survey, or menu framing — not resistant customers.

How often should F&I managers review their metrics?

F&I managers should review their six diagnostic metrics weekly, with 3-week rolling averages updated each week. Daily review should be limited to a 5-minute pulse check: VSC and GAP penetration, deal count, and any notable objection patterns. Monthly PRU reviews alone provide insufficient feedback speed to catch and correct process drift before it costs significant revenue.

What does the ASURA Coaching Cadence add to the diagnostic process?

The ASURA Coaching Cadence is the external accountability and calibration layer that makes the weekly diagnostic actionable. In the cadence session, the six-metric data is reviewed with a coach who validates the diagnosis, confirms the process focus for the coming week, and tracks adjustment impact across consecutive sessions. Without the cadence, diagnostic data without external review tends to produce justified inaction rather than targeted adjustment.


Adrian Anania is the VP of Performance and Operations at ASURA Group. He has 16 years in retail automotive and 12 years coaching F&I managers nationally. He has generated $100M+ in revenue for clients and delivers an average $895 PRU increase in 90 days. Learn more at asuragroup.com/programs.


Key Takeaways

  • The difference between average and elite F&I performance is mindset, system, and execution
  • Tier-1 Operators build repeatable processes — they never rely on instinct alone
  • Radical ownership of your results is the foundation of a $400K+ F&I career
  • The ASURA System provides the framework to consistently produce elite PVR
  • Continuous improvement and daily discipline separate the top 1% from everyone else

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