menu
Insights

Valuable insights of the auto
industry and service drives.

Data
Expectations
Social Media
Strategies
Targeting
Service Business

Data-Driven Decisions in Fixed Ops

The Value of the Dealer-Technician Relationship

Dealership Technician Retention and Recruitment

Declined Work Recovery: The Hidden Profit Center in Your Service Lane

The Personality Profile That Promotes Fixed Ops Growth (And the One That Quietly Kills It)

How to Optimize a Dealership BDC for Fixed Operations

Increase Hours Per Repair Order

Service Menu Pricing Strategy

The Real Cost of Lost Service Customers

Warranty Work Without the Wait

Increase Hours Per Repair Order

In many service departments, the conversation around growth often centers on one question: Do we need to hire more technicians?

But what if the real opportunity is process, not staffing?

Across the industry, dealerships with similar technician counts often maintain dramatically different labor hours per repair order (RO). Some stores average around 1.4 hours per RO, while others consistently achieve 1.8 hours or higher with the same staffing levels.

The difference rarely comes down to culture alone. More often, it’s the result of operational discipline, training, and communication inside the service process.

According to Ken Pletcher, a Fixed Operations Specialist at TVI MarketPro3, the root cause usually reveals itself quickly.

Increasing Hours Per repair order

Where the Breakdown Typically Starts

When hours per RO are low, the issue often surfaces before a technician ever turns a wrench.

When Ken walks into a dealership and sees low labor hours per RO, the first thing he usually finds is “untrained service advisors and/or technicians, or a busy shop.”

Training and workflow management play a significant role in whether service opportunities are discovered and communicated—or missed entirely.

Untrained advisors may struggle to ask the right diagnostic questions during the write-up. Technicians may rush inspections in high-volume environments. And when the shop becomes overwhelmed, the inspection process often becomes the first casualty.

The result: vehicles leave the dealership with unresolved needs that could have been identified and addressed.

What High-Performing Stores Do Differently

Operationally, the difference between a 1.4-hour store and a 1.8-hour store often comes down to how the service process is executed.

Ken notes that higher-performing stores tend to have advisors who understand both the customer and the vehicle.

“A 1.8 [hour] store may have properly trained service advisors that listen to the customer’s needs, understand why the vehicle is being serviced at that location, and the maintenance needs of the vehicle,” Ken says.

But the advisor conversation is only one piece of the equation; the technician inspection process is equally critical.

“The technicians would be [recording] a thorough MPI video explaining items that need attention and applauding items that are being maintained properly,” Ken explains.

Importantly, the inspection should occur before the technician begins the requested repair.

“This inspection should be completed first, then perform the other items the guest brought the vehicle in for,” he adds.

This sequence ensures the advisor has a complete picture of the vehicle’s condition before discussing recommendations with the customer.

The Operational Details That Quietly Drive Hours

Beyond advisor training and inspection quality, many of the biggest contributors to higher hours per RO are operational efficiencies inside the shop.

Ken highlights several workflow factors that directly influence technician productivity and inspection consistency:

  • Technician efficiency
  • Whether a porter moves vehicles to the bay
  • Parts delivered directly to the technician
  • Organization and variety of shop tools
  • Communication between technicians, advisors, and parts

“How is communication happening in the shop?” Ken asks. “Does the technician stay in their work bay, or do they visit the parts department or service advisors?”

Every unnecessary trip across the shop floor reduces productive time.

When technicians remain focused on diagnostics and repair—and the rest of the system supports them—hours per RO naturally rise because inspections are more thorough and opportunities are discovered earlier.

The Biggest Misconception About Increasing Hours

One of the most common mistakes fixed ops leaders make is assuming the answer is simply to sell more services.

Ken cautions against this mindset.

“The biggest misconception is to sell more ‘stuff’ that may not be needed or benefit the guest,” he says.

Examples often include blanket recommendations like:

  • Annual wheel alignments
  • Engine oil treatments
  • Fuel system treatments
  • Transmission fluid additives

While these services may have legitimate use cases, recommending them without proper inspection or context can erode customer trust.

Another tactic Ken sometimes sees is artificially inflating labor hours on common jobs to raise the hours-per-RO metric.

“A fixed operations leader may also increase hours sold for common jobs to inflate hours per RO without monetary gain,” Ken explains. “This could add technician cost to inflate an hours-per-RO measurement.”

In other words, the metric improves—but profitability and customer value do not.

Understanding the Customer’s Situation

Instead of focusing solely on selling more services, Ken emphasizes understanding the customer’s relationship with the vehicle.

“Understanding if a guest purchased the vehicle, leased it, or is the second or third owner will help determine which path makes the most sense,” he explains.

Maintenance recommendations should reflect how the customer uses the vehicle and their long-term ownership goals.

Ignoring those factors can have lasting consequences.

“Service retention is a great indicator if a guest’s needs are not being considered during a service visit,” Ken says.

When customers feel recommendations are relevant and transparent, they return. When they feel pressured into unnecessary services, they don’t.

The Real Path to Higher Hours Per RO

Increasing hours per RO without adding technicians isn’t about selling harder.

It’s about discovering legitimate service opportunities through better processes.

Dealerships that consistently outperform in this metric tend to focus on:

  • Advisor training and discovery conversations
  • Thorough technician MPI videos
  • Efficient shop workflow
  • Strong communication between the service and parts departments
  • Customer-focused maintenance recommendations

When these operational fundamentals are in place, the hours-per-RO rate naturally increases because more of the vehicle’s real needs are identified and addressed.

That means better profitability for the dealership, better efficiency for the technicians, and better transparency for the customer, which is the goal of every high-performing service department.

Visit TVI MarketPro3 for more expert insights on fixed ops.

Let's get moving. Get your customized marketing plan today.

Thank You! A representative will reach out to you shortly!
Next
Captcha
Submit

View All

Follow Us

© 2026 TVI-MarketPro3 | Privacy Policy

Sign up for email updates