Instant Vehicle Access
A shopper scanning a QR code can pull up vehicle photos, specs, pricing, or a direct contact link — without needing a salesperson nearby. It turns passive browsing into active engagement.
Every vehicle on your lot can carry a scannable QR code tied directly to its VIN. When a shopper scans, they get instant access to vehicle details — and your team gets a real-time lead with the context to follow up fast.
Static stickers and handwritten price tags don't tell a shopper anything useful. QR codes change that.
A shopper scanning a QR code can pull up vehicle photos, specs, pricing, or a direct contact link — without needing a salesperson nearby. It turns passive browsing into active engagement.
Every scan is a signal of interest. SwiftGraphix routes that lead — including VIN, stock number, and New/Used/CPO classification — to the right person on your team via email.
Lot traffic doesn't stop when the showroom closes. QR codes give after-hours shoppers a way to engage with your inventory and leave a trail your team can act on the next morning.
Each code is generated from your actual inventory data and mapped to a specific VIN. When a unit sells or moves, the QR can be updated or retired — no orphaned codes cluttering the lot.
Every QR is classified by program type. Your team sees whether a lead came from a new, used, or certified unit — so follow-up matches the shopper's intent.
Scans aren't dumped into a generic inbox. Leads route to the assigned salesperson, BDC rep, or manager based on rules you control inside the SwiftGraphix dashboard.
A printed price sticker gives the shopper a number. A VIN-level QR code gives them information — and gives you visibility into what's happening on the lot.
Start with a demo and see how VIN-level QR codes connect your inventory to real engagement data.
Get StartedPair QR codes with branded windshield graphics for a complete lot presentation.
Understand what's happening on your lot with real-time scan tracking and reporting.
Common questions about QR codes, analytics, and getting started with SwiftGraphix.