About | LocalParts™
About LocalParts

LocalParts™ is infrastructure designed to make dealer inventory visible, accessible, and usable when real demand exists.

LocalParts transforms inventory from static operational records into active visibility, routing, and demand connection. It is not a marketplace and it does not replace the dealer — it strengthens how inventory is discovered and fulfilled.

What LocalParts is

LocalParts is a demand and visibility system built around how parts are actually searched, sourced, and fulfilled. It connects inventory, location relevance, and intent to create clearer paths between demand and the correct dealer outcome.

System Principle Inventory remains dealer-owned. Fulfillment remains dealer-controlled. LocalParts provides the infrastructure layer between demand and supply.

Why it exists

Dealers already carry the inventory. The challenge is visibility.

Traditional systems were built for internal operations, not modern search behavior. That disconnect leads to missed opportunities, even when the part is already available locally.

What it connects

Dealer → Consumer

Enables local discovery and direct paths to reserve, purchase, or install parts.

Dealer → Dealer

Supports inter-dealer inventory movement and network-based sourcing.

Dealer → Wholesale

Improves access and response across wholesale demand channels.

What LocalParts is not

LocalParts does not move inventory away from the dealer. It does not replace dealership systems, pricing, or operations. It does not function as a marketplace.

Instead, it improves how inventory is surfaced and connected to demand — without disrupting how dealers operate today.

Who built this

LocalParts was built by a team with deep experience in digital systems, inventory environments, and large-scale demand capture.

After working across enterprise platforms and analyzing how demand is actually captured, it became clear that the issue wasn’t demand — it was how inventory was being surfaced.

Core Insight The market already exists. Most systems just weren’t built to capture it.