In Episode 35 of the Friction-less Workshop Podcast, host Anthony Perl and automotive trainer Andrew Uglow tackle one of the most common sources of workshop friction: the complaint that service advisors don't provide enough information to technicians. But is this really about lazy advisors, or is there a deeper systemic problem?
Andrew reveals why this complaint is actually a symptom of broken communication systems, not individual failures. He explores how technicians and service advisors literally speak different languages - one technical, one customer-focused - and why neither side fully understands what the other needs. The episode exposes how workshops inadvertently create information bottlenecks by failing to establish clear communication protocols.
Key topics include the shared responsibility model for information flow, why technicians need to ask better questions instead of waiting for perfect information, and how service advisors can translate customer concerns into actionable diagnostic data. Andrew shares practical frameworks for creating effective communication systems that eliminate 80% of workshop friction.
Listeners will discover why the "us versus them" mentality between front and back of house destroys efficiency, how to implement simple communication protocols that work, and why both technicians and advisors need training in each other's roles. The episode also addresses how modern workshop management systems can help or hinder communication, and why face-to-face interaction still matters in a digital age.
Perfect for workshop owners tired of communication breakdowns, service advisors feeling caught in the middle, technicians frustrated by incomplete information, and anyone responsible for improving workshop efficiency. This episode provides actionable solutions for one of the automotive industry's most persistent problems.
#ServiceAdvisor #WorkshopCommunication #TechnicianCommunication #WorkshopEfficiency #AutomotiveWorkshop #CommunicationBreakdown #WorkshopManagement #ServiceDepartment #TechnicianFrustration #InformationFlow #WorkshopSystems #AutomotiveIndustry
Why do technicians always complain about service advisors not providing enough information? Andrew Uglow reveals it's not about lazy advisors - it's about broken systems. Discover how to create effective communication protocols that eliminate workshop friction and improve efficiency for everyone.
Simple Protocol Success - Workshops that implemented basic communication checklists saw dramatic improvements in first-time fix rates and reduced comebacks.
For Workshop Owners/Managers:
For Service Advisors:
For Technicians:
For Service Managers:
If this episode helped you understand communication breakdowns in your workshop, please subscribe and leave a review! Your feedback helps other workshops discover these solutions.
EP36: The Good People Myth (Next Episode)
Andrew has a variety of free downloads and tools you can grab.
Discover if your workshop is Retention Worthy© here or visit his website, https://www.solutionsculture.com where the focus is on bringing reliable profitability to automotive workshop owners and workshop management through the Retention, Engagement and Development of their Technical Professionals.
This podcast was produced by 'Podcasts Done for You' https://podcastsdoneforyou.com.au.
Career progression.
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:Myth, why there's more opportunity
than your technicians realize.
3
:Join passionate automotive trainer and
coach Andrew Ulo as he dives into the
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:complaint that automotive offers no
career progression for technicians.
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:In this episode, you'll learn
why the traditional apprentice to
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:manager path isn't the only option.
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:How automotive skills translate
to countless other industries and
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:discover the difference between career
progression and personal development.
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:Along the way, you'll hear some great
stories, including Andrew's own journey.
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:From apprentice to national training
manager to business owner, and why
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:the skills learned in automotive
repair, prepare technicians for almost
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:any challenge life throws at them.
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:I'm your co-host, Anthony Pearl, and this
is the Frictionless Workshop podcast.
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:Let's get cranking.
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:Andrew.
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:Let's talk about this whole idea of.
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:Career progression.
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:Is there enough career
progression for technicians?
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:What is the progression even look like?
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:You know, where is it that they start?
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:Where is it that they want to go to?
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:Is it even the same for everybody?
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:How do you actually
encapsulate that whole idea?
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:Because there is a perception, I
gather from the feedback you've had,
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:that there isn't enough progression.
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:Andrew Uglow: This is a mixed
basket, and I go back to the
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:expectation of the individuals.
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:What are you actually expecting?
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:Like where, where do you wanna go?
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:Do you wanna become dealer
principle of a dealership?
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:Because you could, there is no question.
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:I know of several people who are dealer
principles, but you have to develop more
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:skill than just the ability to fix funky
cars or talk with unhappy customers.
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:You need to develop financial acumen.
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:You need to develop people skills,
you need to develop leadership.
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:And I wanna highlight that one.
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:Like we don't need more
managers, we need more leaders.
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:They're not the same, that they're
like absolutely different things.
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:One is about managing a system, the
other one is about leading people.
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:People don't wake up in the morning and
go, gee, I'm, I'm so looking forward to
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:being managed today, or I'm non-compliant.
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:Manage me, you know, manage
me harder, manage me harder.
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:No, people don't do that.
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:People go, leave me.
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:Help me.
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:I'm struggling with this.
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:And leaders help leaders serve and
we take a management frame, not
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:a leadership frame, and it has a
suboptimal outcomes in their business.
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:And so back to the idea of career
progression or where do you wanna go?
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:Do you want to be a leader?
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:Because that would be more useful.
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:And so if that's the case, if really
as a tech, if that's what you want,
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:you want to be, you know, known,
recognized, appreciated, you know,
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:stopped in the street and asked for
your autograph, if that's your thing.
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:Well short, by all means
develop your technical skill.
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:'cause the foundations for that are gonna
stand you in good stead for everything
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:else you do in or outta the industry.
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:Conversely, let's not just stop there.
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:Let's start with helping you lead
you like you want to progress, right?
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:Let's get you leading you well.
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:Once you are leading you well, now we
can give you unofficial responsibility.
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:You can be the team leader,
you can be the workshop.
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:Supervisor, you can be the
whatever sub thing that is in
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:the workshop that we can give you
that gives you more responsibility
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:to demonstrate your leadership.
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:And now we have a, a gap.
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:Well, maybe you work this part of
the workshop and someone works that
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:part of the workshop right now.
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:Why don't you start doing
leadership with customers?
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:Why don't you start doing
leadership financially?
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:Why don't you start doing leadership?
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:So I, I'm gonna argue there,
there is and there isn't.
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:And it depends upon what do you want?
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:When you say there's no progression,
what's that really about?
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:Because if we just deal with that, as
you know, I start as an apprentice and
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:then I become a tech, and then I become a
senior tech, and then I become a foreman.
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:Then I become a service manager, and
then I become a fixed operations manager,
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:and then I become a general manager.
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:Is that the progression
you're looking for?
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:Like automotive is not corporate?
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:You know, I don't become a, a subs, semi
prime candidate for partial leadership.
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:Like there's so many levels
and sub levels in corporate.
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:This isn't that This,
this is about solving you.
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:You wanna know what a workshop's about?
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:A workshop is about encouraging
customers to invest in positive,
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:reliable ownership experiences of
their vehicle in this business with
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:the skill that this workshop has.
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:That's what a workshop does.
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:Customers don't come because they've
got great workshop management.
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:Customers don't come because they've
got outstanding profitability.
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:Customers come to get stuff fixed
on their car 'cause it is or isn't
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:doing something, or they just can't
afford to have the car go bad on
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:them because it's too much stress.
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:And so they just want that
stressor added their life.
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:And so our job as
technicians is to do that.
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:Is to provide that skill so the customer
can jump in their car, drive it, come
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:back 12 months later, and they haven't
had any problems that they love their
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:car, that it's a great vehicle for them.
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:It's, this is what we're selling.
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:And so you go, well, there's
no career progression.
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:Okay, sure.
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:Where do you wanna go?
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:And the flip side of this is, okay,
so you wanna go wherever that is.
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:If you don't have the skills
required to be a good tech, there
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:is no way that you can progress.
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:There just isn't.
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:Because the skills that put you in
good standing for anything else you do.
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:And I, I say this out of personal
experience, what I've learned as a
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:technician, how to think, how to think
for myself, how to manage myself, how
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:to deal with stress, how to handle
angry customers, like all of these
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:skills I learned in the workshop.
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:I went them at the cliff base.
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:Yeah, sure.
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:I went back to school and I
did, I studied at Swinburne.
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:I, I did some really useful stuff.
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:I then went and did a whole bunch of
other stuff that fits outside of the
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:conventional thinking, because the
conventional thinking I found was lagging,
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:but because of what I learned and how,
not what I learned to think, how I
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:learned to think, but just that was the
foundation that allowed me to progress.
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:So I love having this
conversation with Dex.
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:I love having this conversation with
Dex, oh, there's no progression.
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:Great.
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:Where do you want go?
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:Where do you wanna go?
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:And, and, and how
committed are you to that?
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:Anthony Perl: I think, and it's a
conversation that's interesting, isn't it?
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:Because it's coming from the negative,
there's no career progression, whereas.
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:The conversation could easily
come from, Hey, I really want
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:to get to here at one point.
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:Is there any way the company
can help me get there?
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:I've thought about doing this
course, or that course, or, you know.
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:Doing some extra hours and sitting in
here to see what other people are doing.
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:It's the way that conversation is
held can be everything as well.
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:Andrew Uglow: Absolutely, and, and with
all due respect, I, I know of several
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:managers who are really good at that.
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:The, the tech is, they feel like they've
plateaued with their technical skill.
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:I don't know what I wanna do next.
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:No problems.
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:Would you consider working with customers?
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:Well, okay, well, let's train you on that.
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:Ha.
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:Right?
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:And I don't know if
you missed that or not.
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:Let's train you on that, and
then we'll pro promote you.
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:Let's give you some skill and then let's
try that out and see how that works.
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:Whereas usually they
just go, oh, here you go.
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:Go and work with customers.
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:I tell you what, there's a world
difference between customers who answer
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:back, who have emotional days, who
illogical, irrational, and unreasonable,
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:versus cars that aren't sure.
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:Cars do weird things, but
they don't have bad days.
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:They don't turn up late.
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:They don't.
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:Abuse you because who knows why?
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:Global warming.
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:I don't know what it was.
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:You know the, the customers just do some
of the worst things and not all customers.
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:Most of them are really good, but some
of them have, or maybe some of them
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:could go to someone else's business and
upset their staff rather than coming
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:to my business and upsetting my staff.
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:Anthony Perl: The Frictionless
Workshop Podcast is brought
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:to you by Solutions Culture.
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:For details on how to get
in touch with Andrew Con.
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:Salt the show notes below,
and don't forget to subscribe
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:so you don't miss an episode.
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:Now, back to the podcast,
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:some of them have Googled the problem
and are insistent on what the problem
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:is when it may not be the case at all.
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:I,
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:Andrew Uglow: I look, and it is
really challenging, and again,
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:there's two sides to this argument.
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:Automotive industry in the past at
times has been profoundly dishonest.
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:Like, not just, not just a little
bit naughty, not just a bit gray
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:around the edges, but like absolutely
dy black in the wool, dishonest,
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:like shifty, dodgy, shonky, nasty,
manipulative, scheming, dishonest.
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:And I like, I've, I've seen
this, I've worked with this,
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:I've spoken to customers.
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:It's, it's funny the feedback I get
from customers, Hey, you know, oh,
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:what do you do for a living, Andrew?
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:Oh, I help technicians
conquer automotive technology.
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:Oh, really?
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:So you're teaching them how to work?
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:Yes.
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:Oh, I had this car and this
problem and they did this to me.
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:And that it just, it's always
comes out and I, I love it.
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:Abs like, give me feedback,
let me know how we're going.
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:I, I think it's fantastic.
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:And so we have, as an industry,
as individual businesses, we
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:have opportunity to improve.
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:Customers pay us money.
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:They don't make us money.
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:They pay us money, and so
we need to look after them.
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:That's only fair and reasonable.
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:We need to give.
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:Genuine value for what we do.
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:Conversely though, customers could
be, what's the word I'm looking for?
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:A bit more open at times.
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:You know, and the reason they Google
and go to forums and chats and stuff
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:is they, they're trying to find
information because information is power.
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:Knowledge is power.
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:You know, they've been handled in the past
and they don't wanna get handled again.
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:And sure, you know, maybe they're trying
to solve a problem, but at the same time,
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:be open, particularly at a dealership
level and even independent workshop
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:level, we have access to information
that you don't, we understand cars at
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:a level that you just simply don't.
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:So help us, help you, you know,
help us work with you like we want
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:you, and this is the good business.
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:We want you to have the most pleasurable
ownership experience in your car as
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:you possibly can, or we, we don't
want you to have a second thought
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:about the reliability of your car.
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:In order to do that, we need you
to invest in the skill in this
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:workshop on your vehicle, and this
is how we believe it should happen.
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:And take that on board, you know?
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:Sure.
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:It's about the money.
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:Don't get me wrong, we're not a
charity, we're not a sheltered workshop.
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:Although you could argue that
for some places it's a business.
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:We're here the money, but at the same
time, we're here to give genuine value.
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:We're we're here to delight customers.
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:Anthony Perl: I mean, and we talk
about this idea of career progression,
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:which backs onto the previous episode
where we were discussing the whole idea
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:of recognition, and I think there's
a bit of a gap there, isn't there?
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:Because this interaction with.
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:The client doesn't happen as much
between the technician and the client.
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:They don't necessarily know what's
going on, so there's not necessarily
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:an opportunity for recognition to
follow through, and therefore the
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:opportunity for that to be recognized
as being there something that they've
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:done and therefore get some career
progression as a result of it.
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:And I had this personally just
recently where I had my car and
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:I was on a longish journey and.
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:The warning light came on.
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:Yeah.
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:And an engine warning light.
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:And I'm like, I don't know.
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:And I was on the freeway and I
managed to get to the destination
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:even though I was losing some speed
at, at times, get to where I was
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:going, pull out the manual as you do.
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:What does this actually mean
is the question it said.
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:And so the interesting thing
was it said it might be that you
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:haven't tightened your fuel cap.
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:That can get rid of the problem.
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:Well, that's an easy fix.
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:I can get out of the
car and I can do that.
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:Did that, no, that didn't do it.
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:And when you, you know, eventually
was in touch with the dealership
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:and said, what's going on?
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:Oh yeah, you shouldn't drive it much.
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:Bring it in.
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:We'll look at the problem.
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:The short version of the story is,
I went to the dealership, couldn't
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:get in there for two weeks, got in.
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:Even though I still had to make some
other trips with this engine warning
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:light coming off and on, get in there
and I waited in the dealership from
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:eight o'clock in the morning until
two 30 in the afternoon when they
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:said to me, oh, I'm really sorry sir.
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:We didn't get a chance to
have a look at your car.
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:Can you bring it back in?
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:In a few more days?
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:But what's really interesting, and
here comes the good bit, I bring it
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:into the dealership the next time and.
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:I didn't have to wait too long to find
out that when they did eventually look
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:at it, all it needed was new spark bugs.
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:Andrew Uglow: What?
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:Anthony Perl: It was a very quick fix.
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:Andrew Uglow: Well, that was good, right?
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:Anthony Perl: Which was great.
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:Right?
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:And it was great that it
was done that way, but.
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:The interesting thing for me is, is
I'm left with the sour taste because
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:it took so long to get to that point.
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:But on the other hand, I want to
actually recognize the technician
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:that went in there straight away and
fixed the problem in no time at all.
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:So whilst I'm negative about the fact
that the whole management process took
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:too long, but the actual recognition
that could have happened for that
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:technician to say, you identified
that problem really quickly, you
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:fixed the problem, I would love to.
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:Give you some recognition for that.
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:And that opportunity actually
wasn't available to me as the
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:client to be able to do that.
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:Andrew Uglow: Yeah, that's, they
do send a feedback form, but
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:technicians don't always see that.
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:And going back to the idea of progression
in a business, and particularly in
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:automotive, well, let's put on our
comparison hat and go, well, how much
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:progression is there for plumbers?
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:You want career progression as a
plumber, what's that look like?
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:You want career progression as a
chippy, what does that look like?
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:You know, you want career
progression as a, a HVAC technician,
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:what does that look like?
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:I, I go back to the idea of what
are you actually looking for?
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:And with progression, I think often,
certainly being my experience, that
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:they confuse the idea of recognition
with progression and they fuse
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:progression with development.
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:Really what we're looking
for, what they're saying.
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:And again, test by asking, well, you
are looking for bigger aggression.
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:Do you want more responsibility?
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:Or do you want more development?
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:Do you want to be better at what you do?
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:Do you want more skill?
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:Do you want broader skill?
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:Like what are these things?
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:And not always, but often.
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:And it does depend upon the person, but
very often I find talking to texts, they
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:go, actually, no, it's the development.
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:And we can talk about
that in the next episode.
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:And again, this is another
area that I think automotive
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:has opportunity to improve.
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:The idea of training versus
developing, what are we doing?
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:You know, because developing is about
planting people, growing people as opposed
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:to training, which is about producing a
financial outcome, speed, and efficiency.
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:Anthony Perl: Yeah, I think.
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:It's really just to wrap that whole
idea up of career progression in there.
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:It's getting to the source
of what it actually means.
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:I think there's a, you know, as you
talked about, that whole idea of, you
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:know, again, someone in another trade
plumber is a good example, is the goal.
315
:I wanna run my own plumbing business
and I want to have a team of
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:plumbers that's career progression.
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:That's a different thing, setting up
a business and doing that and, and if
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:you're a technician and that's what you're
looking to do, that's a different idea.
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:But sometimes it is also recognizing that,
as you say, career progression is just
320
:about more information, more knowledge,
the ability to be better at what you do
321
:rather than necessarily shifting jobs.
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:Andrew Uglow: Yep, absolutely.
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:Anthony Perl: That concludes
our look at career progression
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:opportunities in automotive.
325
:Here's where things
get really interesting.
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:Next episode, we are diving into the
communication crisis that's costing
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:dealerships over a million dollars a year.
328
:In staff turnover, Andrew exposes the
hidden cost of promoting technicians
329
:without leadership training and
reveals why your best technical
330
:minds often make terrible people.
331
:Managers will share shocking data from
KPMG's research and practical solutions.
332
:For developing real
leadership in your workshop.
333
:The workshop Communication crisis drops
shortly, so make sure you are subscribed
334
:now so you never miss an episode.
335
:This is The Frictionless Workshop podcast,
produced by podcast done for you online.
336
:All details in the show notes.