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Automotive Service Department Training: Inside Job or Outsourced?

Prepping Technicians for Smart Automotive Tool Purchases

Tackling Customer Wait Times in Fixed Ops

Dealership Parts and Service: 2 Departments, 1 Team

Comparison of Dealership Service Communications

Automotive Marketing Services Expectations

Measure Your Service Advisors' Success

Optimizing Parts Inventory in Fixed Ops

Service & Parts Loyalty Programs: Helpful or Headache?

Steering Dealerships Toward Express Service: A Missed Opportunity?

Dealership Parts and Service: 2 Departments, 1 Team

One of the most significant challenges across any company is getting multiple departments working as one team. Even with some of the hardest-working team members, most keep their heads down and grind through their tasks without considering their impact on other departments. Department leaders are often sincere but misguided in their attempts at creating harmony. The automotive industry is not immune to this leadership faux pas, and the two departments that most need to be in sync, parts and service, are often out of alignment. 

Automotive-Parts-and-Service

For a dealership to succeed in fixed ops, these two departments must collaborate to optimize efficiency, profitability, and customer satisfaction. While the parts and service departments have distinct roles, their success is interdependent, and fostering a unified team mindset can significantly enhance dealership performance.

Understanding the Divide

Each department has distinct roles and responsibilities when meeting dealership goals. The parts department oversees inventory management, timely procurement, and accurate fulfillment. Meanwhile, the service department is busy diagnosing, repairing, and ensuring vehicle performance and customer satisfaction.

Since these two departments don’t always work side by side, it can be easy to miscommunicate about parts’ availability or delays. Frustrated technicians who rely on these parts may lash out at the parts team, leaving them feeling unappreciated. Although this is internal friction, the disconnect inevitably impacts customer satisfaction and, ultimately, the dealership’s bottom line.

Why Unity Matters

Operational Efficiency

Many companies hold team-building exercises or send their team to a ropes course or retreat. That’s fun and can certainly improve relationships, but fixed operations departments can only attain operational efficiency if a precise system is in place and regularly inspected by fixed operations leaders. While it’s essential that each team enjoys the other, setting them up with a proven system prevents finger-pointing. If everyone follows the system to a tee, the fingers can instead point to the system when issues arise. The team can then resolve issues through tweaking and testing the system.

Customer Experience

Two departments running on the same cylinders create a seamless customer experience. You might be tempted to think the customer is oblivious to the disjointed workflow behind the scenes, but the evidence will always rear its ugly head. Whether the repair takes longer and costs more than expected, or the service advisor seems stressed or frustrated because their team is acting out, the customer feels the impact of inefficiencies and infighting behind the scenes. We all know that happy customers lead to repeat business and higher retention rates, and it is almost certain that retention rates suffer when the service and parts teams struggle to align.

Financial Performance

The more efficient parts and service teams are in their processes, the more effective they are in reducing downtime, leading to higher productivity and profitability. Effective inventory handling reduces overstock and waste, but both teams must work to meet these standards.

Strategies for Building One Team

Communication and Collaboration

Communication is the foundation of strong fixed operations leadership. Parts and service directors can improve communication by implementing regular cross-department meetings to align goals and address issues. Technology can also enhance this communication if the departments use shared tools and platforms for real-time updates on parts’ availability and job status.

Cross-Training

Allotting time for parts staff to train on service processes and vice versa should enhance a mutual understanding between the two. Shadowing their counterparts builds empathy and strengthens the desire for teamwork.

Shared Goals and Incentives

Create KPIs to encourage collaboration, such as minimizing repair cycle times or improving customer satisfaction scores. Introduce team-based bonuses tied to overall fixed ops performance.

Leadership Support

Fixed ops directors and managers must foster a culture of teamwork. They must consistently inspect what they expect and hold each team member accountable for their role in the system of success. In doing so, they must lead by example and promote interdepartmental respect and collaboration.

Conclusion

If a dealership fails to get these two fixed ops teams to work in unity, it will ultimately fail its service customers by negatively impacting customer satisfaction and loyalty. Whether through better communication, shared goals, or leadership initiatives, dealerships need to ensure the steps are in place for the fixed ops department to align their parts and service teams.

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