Comebacks: Prevention, Reputation and Cost [THA 224] - a podcast by Carm Capriotto, AAP

from 2021-05-20T00:15

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhCWEuVLJlE&t=5s
Bruce Howes has specialized in the service of European automobiles since he was 21 years old. He is a Bosch Trained technician, with extensive experience in BMW, Mercedes and Volvo. Bruce’s business background began with his family business, his grandfather owned an automotive repair shop during the 1920s.
In 2003 he opened the Atlantic Motorcar Center in Wiscasset, ME. Bruce leads a team of highly trained and certified technicians. His business takes a rather unique approach to customer service, focusing on relationships with customer and car. Bruce shares “When a customer comes in and spends more time sharing their son’s baseball game, or showing us photos from their last vacation, then I know I’ve done my job.”Bruce is also a Dale Carnegie graduate and former volunteer with Junior Achievement. Listen to Bruce's previous episodes https://remarkableresults.biz/?s=bruce+howes (HERE)
Tom Lambert, owner of Shadetree Automotive. Tom Lambert got his start right at home. His dad and uncles always had projects going on in the home garage. During the summer vacation, his dad would have Tom remove engines from the vehicles that were being sent to the local machine shop for rebuilding.
In the past three and a half years, Tom and his dad have made strategic adjustments in the business. They are now a $2.5 million dollar a year shop with 10% annual growth and profitability. They continue to improve every day. Tom says he has the best team and a strong culture. In January 2017 Tom bought his dad completely out of the business.
Tom struggled for many years because he had lost his passion for the auto industry. After receiving all the guidance and coaching over the past few years, he is rejuvenated and has more passion than ever and is currently doing everything he can to pay it forward to other local shop owners. Tom’s previous episodes https://remarkableresults.biz/?s=%22Tom+Lambert%22 (HERE).
Russell Crosby is the owner of Russ's Wrench Auto Repair located in Clinton, NJ.Key Talking Points
Not meeting customers expectations- losing the opportunity to make it rightFollow-up calls/email/texts- saying thank you without asking about another appointment, 95% will bring back once you have a conversation. Many won’t let you know what went wrong, reach out and openly accept feedback.  
70% of comebacks are communication issues- customer to advisor, advisor to technician, technician to advisor 
Quality control- tech driving car to verify correction, QC checklist, senior service advisor driving carDVI to minimize comebacks- accountability for comebacks and confidence when talking to a customer
Logging comebacks- google spreadsheet, time/repair/cause. Look for trends in comebacks. Is it trainable?More detail the better for service advisors and technicians- service advisors need training on asking customers the right questions 
Customers often withhold information of what’s wrong or what it’s had done previously because they think it’ll cost less- build rapport and trust with customers and ask open-ended questions for discussion. 
Let service advisors advise- are they overloaded with estimates/scheduling/answer phone etc? Consider bringing another employee on board. Give them time to talk on the phone and communicate with customers instead of rushing through it. 
“Caring for cars and people”- value customer and their vehicle 
Leadership- set goals, get team on board, measure the goals, provide feedbackTeam culture-making mistakes doesn’t mean you’re kicked out the door. Failure is learning. When mistakes happen bring it up when you’re one on one. 
Perfection doesn’t exist- give grace to customers and employees and make it right. Progress, not perfection. 
“Perfection is not attainable, but if you chase perfection, we can catch excellence.” Vince LombardiFeedback- ask new...

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