
Understand the difference between DMS and CRM for auto dealerships. Learn what each system does, when to use each, and how they work together.
DMS (Dealer Management System) manages ALL dealership operations: inventory, CRM, sales, F&I, service, accounting, and compliance. CRM (Customer Relationship Management) focuses specifically on leads and customer interactions: capturing inquiries, tracking communication, and managing the sales pipeline.
Think of CRM as one essential component within a comprehensive DMS. Most modern DMS platforms (like DealerOneView) include CRM functionality, so dealers don't need separate systems. This integration eliminates duplicate data entry and ensures customer interactions connect directly to inventory and deal data.
| Feature | DMS | CRM (Standalone) |
|---|---|---|
| Inventory Management | ✓ Yes | No |
| Lead Management | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Customer Database | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Automated Follow-ups | ✓ Yes (good DMS) | ✓ Yes |
| Deal Desking | ✓ Yes | No |
| F&I Products | ✓ Yes | No |
| Service Department | ✓ Yes | No |
| Accounting | ✓ Yes | No |
| Compliance Documents | ✓ Yes | No |
A comprehensive platform managing ALL dealership operations from acquisition to accounting.
Specialized system focused exclusively on customer relationship management and sales pipeline optimization.
Best for: Independent used car dealers (5-500 vehicles) who want a single platform for all operations.
Best for: Dealers with legacy DMS systems that lack modern CRM capabilities.
Best for: Very small operations (1-5 vehicles) or lead generation businesses (not full dealerships).
DMS (Dealer Management System) manages ALL dealership operations: inventory, sales, service, accounting, compliance. CRM (Customer Relationship Management) focuses specifically on lead and customer management: capturing leads, tracking interactions, automating follow-ups, and managing the sales pipeline. Think of CRM as one component within a comprehensive DMS.
Yes, but you'll need separate systems for inventory management, deal desking, accounting, and compliance documentation. Most independent dealers find it more efficient to use a DMS that includes CRM functionality rather than managing multiple disconnected systems.
No. If your DMS includes robust CRM features (lead capture, automated follow-ups, pipeline management, customer database), a standalone CRM is redundant. However, some dealers use specialized automotive CRMs alongside basic DMS systems when the DMS CRM features are limited.
Essential CRM features in DMS: lead capture (website forms, phone, walk-ins), automated email/SMS follow-up sequences, lead scoring and prioritization, customer database with purchase history, sales pipeline tracking, appointment scheduling, and integration with inventory for vehicle matching.
Get DMS + CRM in one platform. DealerOneView includes robust CRM features integrated with inventory, sales, and compliance. No need for separate systems or duplicate data entry.
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