Many international OEMs assume that selling direct will save margin and accelerate U.S. entry. In reality, going direct often destroys focus, inflates cost, and creates service gaps that damage long-term credibility. This edition outlines why the dealer model remains the most effective path for scale, trust, and sustainable U.S. growth.
Many international manufacturers believe the fastest way into the U.S. is to sell direct to end customers. The logic is simple: no middleman, no margin loss. But what looks efficient on paper often becomes a costly distraction in practice.
Why Direct Is Risky
- Scale: Covering the U.S. with your own salespeople requires massive investment in headcount, systems, and travel.
- Customer Expectations: U.S. customers expect fast local service, parts availability, and strong support — not answers from a distant headquarters.
- Brand Perception: Without a dealer network, you are often perceived as an outsider, limiting adoption.
The Dealer Advantage
The dealer model exists in the U.S. for a reason. Dealers bring:
- Local relationships with municipalities, fleets, and contractors.
- Service infrastructure that builds trust and repeat sales.
- Market intelligence that helps you adapt quickly.
The Bottom Line
Going direct is tempting, but most international OEMs underestimate the cost and complexity. A deliberate dealer strategy provides a faster, more sustainable path to growth — one that builds credibility, not just sales.
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