When a customer says, “Just fix it,” that is not permission to skip the process.
That is trust.
And trust is dangerous if the shop does not have standards.
A trusted shop still documents the inspection.A trusted advisor still explains what was found.A trusted process still protects the customer, the technician, and the business.
“Just fix it” should not make us communicate less.
It should make us communicate better.
Because the customer may not be asking for details in that moment, but they are still trusting us to make the right decisions, document the right things, and protect them from surprises.
Trust is not a shortcut.
Trust is responsibility.
What do you think shops get wrong when a customer says, “Just fix it”?