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To get things kicked off, what is your current position and what are your goals?
Why getting up at 12 pm. Is hard on your body.
Why getting up at 12 pm. Is hard on your body.
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You or your team not feeling it?
Keeping a service department motivated is not about giving one big speech once a month. It is about what your team feels every single day when they walk in. People stay motivated when expectations are clear, wins are recognized, leadership is consistent, and everyone understands that their work matters. In a service department, motivation usually drops when the team feels overwhelmed, underappreciated, or like nothing is ever good enough. A few things make a big difference: Set clear goals.Your advisors, techs, porters, and support staff should know exactly what winning looks like. Recognize effort, not just outcomes.Not every great day is a record sales day. Sometimes it is better communication, cleaner inspections, better teamwork, or improved attitude. Create accountability without killing morale.People need standards, but they also need fairness. Strong teams respect leaders who hold the line without playing favorites. Show them the bigger picture.When employees understand how their role affects CSI, retention, gross, comeback prevention, and shop flow, they take more ownership. Give them chances to grow.Motivation goes up when people believe they are building something, not just surviving another shift. Celebrate progress.A lot of service departments only talk when something goes wrong. That burns people out. Catch people doing things right. At the end of the day, motivated teams are usually built by leaders who are present, honest, and consistent. People can handle pressure. What they struggle with is chaos, confusion, and feeling invisible. What do you think keeps a service department motivated the most: money, recognition, leadership, team culture, or growth opportunities?
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Resume Review
I’m offering a free resume review for anyone actively seeking remote opportunities. Remote job resumes often need to be ATS-compliant, and I can help ensure yours stands out the right way. If you’d like a review or consultation, feel free to reach out:📩[email protected]
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What would you do?
Let’s talk about something real. A customer leaves your shop, notices an oil spot at home, and instead of calling you first, they take the vehicle to another shop and pay for an inspection. Then they come back expecting you to: refund the inspection bill repair the issue for free and take full responsibility without ever being given the first chance to look at it That’s not how a fair process works. If a shop did the original work, they should be the first call when there’s a concern. Any reputable business should want the opportunity to inspect the vehicle and make things right if the issue is related to their repair. But once a customer chooses to involve another shop and approve charges without giving the original shop that opportunity, it changes the situation. Standing behind your work is good business. Expecting blind responsibility without first allowing inspection is not. What do you think — should the original shop still be responsible for everything?
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