A car shopper fills out a finance form at 7:14 PM. They are sitting on the couch, phone in hand, picturing themselves in the car. At 7:16 PM, a salesperson calls. By 7:30 PM, a test drive is booked for Saturday.
Now run the same lead through the average dealership. The form comes in at 7:14 PM. Nobody sees it until the next morning. Someone calls around 11 AM — about 16 hours later. The shopper has already been to two other lots and is test driving at a competitor that afternoon.
Same lead. Same ad spend. Two completely different outcomes. The only difference is the first five minutes.
How fast should a car dealership respond to a new lead?
A car dealership should respond to a new lead within five minutes. This is not a nice-to-have — it is the whole game. The Lead Response Management study found the odds of qualifying a lead drop about 21 times when you wait 30 minutes instead of five. An MIT study found that contacting a lead inside five minutes versus 30 can raise your odds of connecting by up to 391%.
Car-buying intent is hot but short. A shopper who fills out a form is ready to talk now, not tomorrow. Every minute you wait, that intent cools and a competitor gets closer to the sale. The dealership that calls first usually gets the test drive, and the test drive is where cars actually get sold.
If your leads sit in an inbox for hours before anyone calls, your ad budget is paying to warm up cars for the dealership down the road.
Why do car dealership leads go cold so fast?
Car dealership leads go cold fast because shoppers do not submit one form — they submit five. They fill out the same finance or trade-in form on every dealership in a 20-mile radius and wait for someone to call. The first dealer to reach them owns the conversation. Everyone else is calling a lead who has already half-committed somewhere else.
This is why "the leads are bad" is almost always wrong. The lead was hot. It just got claimed by whoever was faster. A shopper does not feel loyal to the dealership whose form they filled out — they feel loyal to the salesperson who picked up the phone while they were still excited.
Speed is not one factor in car lead conversion. For a shopper comparing five lots at once, it is the factor.
What does the average dealership actually do?
The average business takes about 42 hours to respond to an inbound lead, according to a Harvard Business Review study. Forty-two hours. For a car shopper, that is two full days — long enough to visit competitors, get pre-approved elsewhere, and drive off a different lot.
Most dealerships are not slow because they are lazy. They are slow because nobody owns the first response. The lead lands in a shared inbox or a CRM nobody is watching, and it sits until someone happens to check. There is no rule that says "this gets called in five minutes," so it doesn't.
Here is the gap, laid out plainly:
| Response time | What's happening to the lead | |---------------|------------------------------| | Under 5 min | Shopper is still on the couch, still excited — you book the drive | | 30 min | Odds of qualifying drop ~21x; they're filling out the next form | | 1 hour | They've likely spoken to a competitor | | 42 hours (average) | They've already test driven somewhere else |
If your dealership lives anywhere below the top row, you are leaving booked test drives on the table every single day. Book a free audit and we'll show you your real first-response time on last month's leads.
How dealerships fix the 5-minute gap
Fixing the 5-minute gap is mostly about systems, not effort. The dealerships that win do three things. First, every new lead triggers an instant alert to a real person whose job is to call — not a shared inbox nobody owns. Second, an automatic text fires the second the form is submitted, so even if the call takes ten minutes, the shopper already heard from you. Third, the lead drops into a follow-up sequence, because most leads still take several touches to convert.
None of this requires more ad spend. It requires that the first response stop depending on whoever happens to glance at the CRM. When you make the five-minute call automatic, you convert the same leads you are already buying — you just stop handing them to faster competitors.
The 30-Second Audit
Answer these three honestly about your dealership:
- Does someone call every new lead within five minutes — even on evenings and weekends?
- Does an automatic text fire the moment a form is submitted?
- Do you actually know your average first-response time on last month's paid leads?
If any answer was no, book a free audit. We'll pull your numbers and show you exactly how many test drives are leaking out of the first five minutes — even if you never work with us.
The fast dealer doesn't have better leads. He just calls first.