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NADA Show 2026: What Fixed Ops Leaders Must Prioritize in the Year Ahead

NADA Show 2026 was packed with technology, bold claims, and the loudest buzzword in automotive right now: AI.

But when you step back and listen carefully to the conversations happening between dealer leaders, OEM executives, trainers, digital strategists, and fixed operations specialists, an even clearer theme emerges: 2026 will reward precision, process, and customer experience—not just new tools.

Across our interviews with industry leaders, six dominant fixed ops themes stood out.

NADA Show 2026 Takeaways

1. Retention Is the Growth Strategy

For years, fixed ops growth rode the wave of strong vehicle sales. That cushion is gone. Fewer new vehicles means fewer natural service opportunities. Every retained customer matters more.

As David Willard explained, “The new cars sold in America have gone down for the last five years… so you have less at-bats. Each individual retained customer is more important to you now than ever before.”

Corey Smith from EasyCare elaborated further: “Everyone’s talking about a 70% retention rate. But is that because they have to come to you… or because they want to?”

That distinction matters. True retention isn’t warranty-driven. It’s relationship-driven.

TVI MarketPro3’s Scott Kelford summarized the biggest retention killers simply:

  • -Time
  • -Price perception
  • -Treatment

Willard added that price often isn’t the real issue. “Since COVID, I don’t think independents give you a price advantage at all… It’s the perception.”

Retention in 2026 isn’t about discounts. It’s about consistency, communication, and experience.

2. The 12-Year Opportunity: Aging Vehicles Are the Revenue Engine

The average vehicle on the road is now nearly 12–13 years old, yet many dealerships still focus their marketing energy on 7- to 10-year-old vehicles, depending on the focus parameters of their OEM performance metrics.

TVI Unotifi’s Lauren Marzella pointed out that the average age of cars on the road is higher now than at any other time in history. 

TVI MarketPro3’s Steve Coad shared real-world examples of targeting 7+ year-old trucks and SUVs during specific seasons—leading to differential service, brake work, suspension repairs, and strong customer pay.

Across the industry, the results extend even further. Dealers are seeing 15- and 20-year-old vehicles returning for $2,000–$3,000 repairs when engaged correctly.

Ketan Bhatia, Lincoln Regional Manager for Ford Motor Company, emphasized, “The biggest Rolodex is right there at the dealer’s hands… It’s their DMS.”

Instead of blanket campaigns, dealers are now using:

  • -Mileage segmentation
  • -Recall reactivation
  • -Declined service follow-up
  • -Ownership verification

Marzella summed it up:

“Intelligent marketing isn’t one-size-fits-all… it evolves as we learn customer behavior.”

The opportunity lies in how well you communicate with the customers you already have.

3. AI Is Everywhere—But It’s Not the Easy Button

AI dominated this year’s NADA conversations, but the most grounded discussions were about balance.

TVI Unotifi’s Michael Lopez warned, “AI definitely [shouldn’t become a crutch.”

Dealers are exploring:

  • -AI phone answering
  • -AI text automation
  • -AI scheduling
  • -AI-driven marketing optimization

However, without process oversight, AI won’t fix broken systems. It will automate them.

Michael Waltrip, Vice President of Fixed Operations with Auto Services Unlimited, put it bluntly: “Every customer just wants someone to answer the phone.” He also acknowledged that advisors are busy, “They’ve got a guest in front of them.” AI can help fill those gaps—especially after hours—but Waltrip also offered a critical perspective: “AI is only what you put into it… There is no easy button.”

The most productive AI application emerging from NADA? Freeing up BDC teams. Lopez explained, “If they’re trying to develop business, they can’t do that if they’re taking inbound phone calls all day.”

AI handling overflow scheduling allows BDC agents to focus on:

  • -Recalls
  • -Declined services
  • -Maintenance follow-up
  • -Lost customer reactivation

AI works when it enhances the human experience—not replaces it.

4. Digital Marketing Must Drive Revenue, Not Just Clicks

Fixed ops digital marketing has historically been an afterthought.

Ian Favre, Digital Marketing Director with TVI MarketPro3, challenged that model: “Fixed operations digital marketing spend is usually the afterthought from most big box agencies.”

Instead of generic service ads, granular campaigns are outperforming:

  • -Toyota transmission repair
  • -Brake service near me
  • -Model-specific service queries

More importantly, dealers are demanding true ROI tracking. Favre says, “Impressions and clicks don’t matter if they don’t turn into money.”

The shift is toward tying:
Keyword → Click → Phone Call → Closed RO → Revenue

Meta advertising (Facebook and Instagram) is also becoming more precise. Instead of spraying broad audiences, campaigns are built directly from DMS data—active, inactive, or lost customers—eliminating waste.

In 2026, digital advertising isn’t about visibility. It’s about measurable service revenue.

5. Process and Experience Win the Retention Game

If there was one consistent undercurrent in every conversation, it was process discipline.

Easy Care’s National Fixed Operations Training Director, Corey Smith, emphasized, “If you don’t have a playbook in service, you’re not going to win this retention game.”

He described the difference between transactional service and experience-driven service: “If they feel good at the end, no matter how much they spent, they’re going to come back.” 

He also introduced a powerful mindset shift: Instead of asking, “When do you want to pick it up?” Ask, “What does your day look like today?”

That subtle change reframes expectations and builds trust, along with a few other built-in procedures: Scheduling pickups, walking customers to their vehicle, setting next appointments, and treating oil change customers like engine replacement customers.

Smith noted, “If I’m dropping off my $50,000 baby and I don’t hear from you, I feel like you’ve forgotten about me.”

Ford Motor Company’s Lincoln Regional Manager, Ketan Bhatia, echoed the same principle from an OEM luxury perspective, “The basics of any business is communication.”

Whether it’s Lincoln-level pickup and delivery or a high-volume Toyota store, the core differentiator remains consistent communication and convenience.

6. Creative Thinking Will Separate Winners

Tyler Parker, TVI MarketPro3 Regional Sales Manager, and Joe Castellino, Vice President of Fixed Operations at American Motors Group, highlighted something deeper: the definition of successful service departments. Castellino says it’s all in “how we’re thinking.”

Every aspect of customer outreach matters:

  • -Converting orphan customers.
  • -Targeting underserved markets.
  • -Leveraging mobile service.
  • -Reactivating lapsed owners.

Growth in 2026 requires a proactive strategy, not passive reliance on legacy traffic.

The Big Takeaway from NADA 2026

When you combine every interview, one truth becomes clear:

The future of fixed ops is not about chasing trends. It’s about executing fundamentals with precision.

  • -Retention over reaction
  • -Segmentation over saturation
  • -Efficiency over hype
  • -Revenue over vanity metrics
  • -Process over chaos
  • -Experience over transactions

AI will evolve. Digital tools will improve. Marketing channels will shift.

But dealerships that build disciplined processes, prioritize communication, and treat every customer like they have a choice—because they do—will protect and grow fixed ops profitability in 2026 and beyond.

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