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Fixed Ops Marketing That Works

As dealerships head into a more competitive and operationally demanding 2026, one thing is clear: a service department’s success no longer depends on a single marketing channel or technology. It depends on balance. It depends on consistency. And more than ever, it depends on human connection supported by smart automation.

To understand fixed ops marketing that works, we spoke with Steve Coad and Tyler Parker, two industry experts and Regional Sales Managers at TVI MarketPro3, whose daily work with top-performing service departments provides a unique, ground-level view of what truly drives results. Their message? High-performing fixed ops marketing strategies blend traditional outreach, digital channels, and innovative AI tools, all while maintaining the human touch.

Fixed Ops Marketing That Works

A True Multichannel Foundation: Mail + Email (Yes, Both Still Matter)

For years, many dealers assumed direct mail was fading as digital options rose. Even Steve Coad once thought so, until real dealership outcomes proved otherwise.

“I used to think mail was something we really didn’t need,” Steve shared. “I said to [TVI President] Will Allen that I wanted to start selling email only because mail was unimportant. He told me I was an idiot, and he was right.”

He even tested an email-only strategy with a Hendrick Automotive Group store:

“What I learned was that, no, we were both wrong… You have to have both to make it work.”

Industry data backs this up:

In fixed ops, where customers must be reminded when and why to return, both channels reinforce each other. Email delivers convenience and immediacy; physical mail delivers authority, legitimacy, and retention-boosting reminders customers actually keep.

Dealership-Driven Digital Strategy (Not “Set It and Forget It”)

The market has undergone significant evolution since 2020. Digital channels aren’t optional, but they also aren’t self-driving.

“We still need to have that base of core, but we also need to have digital marketing that goes along with it,” Steve explains. “And… the dealership has to be involved with it. They can’t just hire us and think they’re going to check back in… They have to talk to us regularly about it.”

This is a critical shift happening across the industry:

  • Digital ads and social outreach generate strong engagement, but their success depends on local relevance, timely communication, and consistent oversight.
  • Stores that treat digital as “auto-pilot marketing” are susceptible to steadily declining results over time.

High-performing service departments meet routinely with their marketing partners, review KPIs, adjust offers, monitor recall data, and update audiences dynamically.

Digital evolves fast—and so must your strategy.

Strong BDC and Human Support (AI Helps, But Can’t Replace Humans)

AI has become a powerful tool in fixed ops marketing—especially for handling inbound questions, appointment coordination, and recall outreach. But both Steve and Tyler warn against fully replacing humans:

Steve advises:

“AI is great… but sometimes the most important thing you can do is have the person on the phone to talk to that client… to believe that [BDCs] don’t need people… is a recipe for failure.”

A high-performing service lane has:

  • AI tools to manage volume and efficiency.
  • A real BDC or service coordinator to provide empathy, reassurance, and problem-solving.

The winning strategy: AI first, humans always available.

Balanced Outreach Across Old-School and New-School Channels

Tyler Parker drives the point home:

“You have to tap people with multiple channels… You can’t think that some of the old-school ways are dead… You can’t think that the new-school AI ways are going to do everything for you.”

Customers don’t behave uniformly.

  • Some respond to texts.
  • Some rely on email.
  • Some only respond to physical reminders.
  • Some love quick digital scheduling.
  • Some call in and want reassurance from a person.

A high-performing strategy satisfies all of them—repeatedly, consistently, and through the channels they prefer. The takeaway: no single channel wins; everything wins together.

A Partner Who Handles the Back-Channel Work You Can’t

One of Tyler’s most important insights:

“We can go in and help [dealerships] spread out those channels… Even if they have another person… or an AI thing they believe in, we can come in and do some of that back-channel stuff that gets other people.”

But each service department should be working to ensure it is:

  • Engaging lost customers.
  • Connecting with recall-affected households.
  • Re-engaging customers lost to independents.
  • Utilizing trigger-based outreach (declined services, mileage bands, warranty expirations).
  • Layering campaigns to maximize effective frequency.

Dealers rarely have time to execute this level of segmentation. This is where a partner like TVI MarketPro3 can be of assistance.

Final Fixed Ops Marketing Takeaway

Going into 2026, the highest-performing service departments won’t be the ones that chase trends or abandon proven methods. They’ll be the ones that build a multichannel, human-powered strategy and execute it consistently.

Visit TVI MarketPro3 for more insights into fixed ops marketing.

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