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AI Is the Fixed Ops Tool—Not the Strategy

The Core Fixed Ops Challenge in 2026

Data-Driven Decisions in Fixed Ops

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)

Increase Shop Hours Without Hiring More Technicians

Service Lane Mistakes That Destroy Trust

Service Menu Pricing Strategy

Winning Back Lost Service Customers

Service Lane Mistakes That Destroy Trust

In fixed operations, trust isn’t lost all at once—it erodes moment by moment, interaction by interaction. And sometimes, it only takes a few poorly handled visits to lose a customer for good.

That’s exactly what TVI MarketPro3 Fixed Operations Specialist Elizabeth Dera uncovered during a recent dealership visit. What she heard wasn’t just a one-off misstep—it was a breakdown in process, communication, and customer-first thinking that ultimately cost the dealership far more than a single repair order.

Service Lane Mistakes

A Missed Opportunity from Day One

The customer’s journey began with a simple expectation: a routine 5,000-mile service under their brand-new vehicle’s ToyotaCare policy. Instead, Elizabeth explains, they were immediately met with an upsell that made no sense.

“The service advisor tried to actually sell tires to the customer… 5K, brand-new… and the advisor is like, well, you know, sometimes the tires on these new vehicles are pretty soft.”

For a customer expecting a complimentary service, this interaction didn’t feel helpful—it felt opportunistic, and it set the tone for everything that followed.

When Recommendations Stop Making Sense

At the 10,000-mile visit, things escalated. The customer received a multi-point inspection (MPI) report showing no urgent issues—but was presented with a list of over $350 in recommended services, including multiple fuel system treatments, A/C cleaning, and filter replacements—for a 10,000-mile vehicle. Elizabeth was shocked at this encounter, to say the least.

“[There are] no red items, but there are three yellow items on a vehicle with 10,000 miles, which is kinda ridiculous, right?”

Even more concerning? These recommendations weren’t explained. The customer received a digital report with no conversation, no context, and no guidance. Just a list of charges.

The Breaking Point: Contradictions Kill Credibility

By the time of the 15,000-mile visit, the customer was already skeptical—but still open. They expected to possibly need filters this time, especially after prior recommendations. Instead, they got something far worse: inconsistency.

  • * Previously recommended services disappeared
  • * New or repeated chemical services reappeared
  • * Most damaging of all—a clearly inaccurate alignment recommendation

The dealership’s own alignment scanner showed the vehicle was perfectly aligned, but the MPI said otherwise.

“When the customer pulled in, the alignment [report] was completely green… But when they got their inspection report back, [the advisors] are now recommending an alignment.”

That moment didn’t just create doubt—it destroyed trust.

Where the Process Broke Down

According to Elizabeth, the issue wasn’t just bad recommendations—it was a systemic failure.

No Communication with the Customer

“They send you the inspection… but nobody comes to talk to the customer,” she emphasizes.

The customer was expected to approve or decline services without any explanation of:

  • * Why the service was needed
  • * What value it provided
  • * Whether it was urgent or preventative

Lack of Consistency Across Visits

Each visit told a different story:

  • * Services recommended → then removed later
  • * New services introduced without context
  • * No reference to prior deferrals or service history

Possible Overemphasis on Product Sales

In this customer’s account, Elizabeth noticed the effort put into selling a particular brand of products:

“I think there is a huge incentive to sell chemical  products at this store.”

Whether intentional or not, the recommendations appeared more sales-driven than need-based—especially for a vehicle with such low mileage.

What High-Performing Stores Do Differently

Elizabeth didn’t just identify the problem—she pointed to the solution. Top-performing service departments take a completely different approach:

They Communicate—In Person

“You walk to that lounge, you explain the MPI to the customer… You have those interactions.”

They Educate, Not Just Sell

Customers understand:

  • * What’s needed now vs. later
  • * Why a service matters
  • * What to expect from the next visit

They Build Continuity

  • * Deploying the same advisor whenever possible
  • * Reviewing prior recommendations
  • * Creating a consistent ownership experience

They Use MPI as a Trust Tool. Not a sales tool.

The Real Cost: More Than a Declined RO

This customer declined every recommendation.

But the bigger loss?

“The customer’s lost faith in this dealership and won’t be back.”

That means:

  • * No future service visits
  • * No long-term retention
  • * No future vehicle purchase

What could have been a lifetime customer was lost in three visits, and a customer that might have raved about their service is now more likely to steer their friends and family away from this dealership.

The Fix: Where Dealerships Should Start

If this scenario feels uncomfortably familiar, the solution starts with two critical areas:

Training on Process & Integrity

  • * Align advisors and technicians on what should be recommended—and when
  • * Reinforce that credibility matters more than short-term sales

Prioritize Communication

“That was one of the biggest issues… communication and validation of what really needed to be done,” Elizabeth stresses.

Every MPI should include:

  • * A conversation
  • * A clear explanation
  • * A reason the customer should trust the dealership

Final Thought: Every Interaction Either Builds or Breaks Trust

Dealerships don’t lose customers because of one bad recommendation. They lose them because the experience stops making sense. When recommendations feel inconsistent, unclear, or excessive, customers don’t just decline the service; they decline the relationship. Once that trust is gone, it’s almost impossible to win back.

Go to TVI MarketPro3 for more fixed ops success strategies.

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