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 Shop Hours Without Hiring More Technicians

Service Menu Pricing Strategy

Warranty Work Without the Wait

Winning Back Lost Service Customers

Winning Back Lost Service Customers

Every dealership has them: customers who used to frequent the service drive…  then quietly disappeared. No complaint. No confrontation. Just gone.

While most stores try to win these customers back with a quick campaign or a discount, the reality is this: Reactivating lost customers isn’t a marketing tactic—it’s a system.

To understand what actually works, we brought together two perspectives from the front lines: Joe Pistilli, Customer Success Director at TVI Unotifi, and Scott Kelford, Regional Sales Manager at TVI MarketPro3. Their insights reveal where dealerships fall short and what it really takes to bring customers back.

Winning Back Lost Service Customers

Where Reactivation Breaks Down: No Process, No Priority

Ask most dealerships about their reactivation strategy, and you’ll get the same responses:

“We send reminders.”
“We run campaigns.”

According to Scott, that’s exactly the problem.

“The main theme across the country is that there are no processes in place to really impact these lost customers in a positive fashion. Therefore, it does not yield subsequent service visits.”

In other words, it’s not that dealerships aren’t trying—it’s that they’re not structured.

Scott explains that without clear visibility and prioritization, lost customers remain exactly that—lost:

“At MarketPro3, we provide identifiers with intelligent mail and email that show the dealer’s employees how long it has been since the customer last visited the dealership for service. The dealer must put high priority on these lost customers and give them more reasons to come back.”

Joe reinforces that even with the right tools, results depend on what happens inside the dealership:

“A Unotifi store that treats [its] customers well… will have a much better response rate [from] the same communication. I have high-retention stores that will get 40% [response]… compared to a bad-retention store that will get 8% with the same text [campaign].”

Takeaway:
If there’s no process—or priority—within a service drive, reactivation efforts will always underperform.

What Actually Brings Customers Back: Relevance Over Reminders

One of the biggest misconceptions in fixed ops marketing? That frequency equals effectiveness.

However, both Joe and Scott point to the same truth: Relevance beats repetition. “Sending the right message to the right customer at the right time gives them a reason to come in as they see value in the timing of their service,” Scott shares.

That “right time” isn’t random—it’s driven by real data.

Joe explains how TVI builds messaging around actual service needs:

“The biggest difference between us and everyone else is that we use time, mileage, and opcodes to market [to] people.”

Instead of generic “you’re due” messaging, this allows dealerships to communicate:

  • What service is needed
  • Why it matters
  • Exactly when it’s relevant

Even more powerful? Following up on what the customer already declined:

“Being able to follow up with a customer due to a decline and give them informational videos… is key. We can bring 10% of the customers back that decline originally with a good informational video.”

Takeaway:
Customers don’t respond to reminders—they respond to well-timed messages that make sense.

The Missing Link: Marketing + Service Lane Alignment

Even when dealerships get the messaging right, many still struggle to convert that into actual service visits.  Why? Because marketing and the service lane aren’t aligned.

“Giving a customer access to a good service offer at their time of service is key,” Scott highlights. However, it doesn’t stop at the message. The real impact happens when the in-store experience matches the promise:

“When the dealer aligns their process… with the customer’s reactivation visit and exceeding their expectation is [when] it all really starts.”

Joe echoes this from a lifecycle communication perspective:

“If a customer does not make an appointment… we will continue to communicate by text several more times and then give it to the BDC to call the customer if that is what the dealer wants for their process.”

This creates a seamless pipeline:

  • Marketing identifies the opportunity
  • Automation maintains consistent communication
  • The BDC engages directly
  • The service lane delivers the experience

Takeaway:
Reactivation fails when marketing and operations are disconnected—and thrives when they work as one system.

Precision Targeting: Why VIN-Level Strategy Wins

Another major gap in most dealership reactivation efforts? They target customers too broadly.

Scott explains how MarketPro3 flips that model with game-changing precision:

“Targeting customers by individual vehicle identification numbers versus targeting them [only] as a household is what drives the message home.”

MarketPro3 targets by both household and VIN and will not send multiple marketing pieces to the same household if they have several target VINs in the driveway.

Scott adds another layer that strengthens follow-up and accountability:

“Providing each individual customer with their own customer website is what separates MarketPro3 from other marketing providers.”

This gives dealerships:

  • Clear visibility into customer engagement
  • Better tracking of response behavior
  • Stronger BDC follow-up opportunities

Joe’s lifecycle approach complements this perfectly:

“This is a continuous market plan for the customer’s service life… No one else does this automatically for the life of the customer.”

Takeaway:
The more precise your targeting, the more powerful your message, and the stronger your results.

Consistency Wins: The Power of Follow-Up

Most dealerships stop communication too quickly: One message, maybe two, then nothing.

But Joe shares a critical statistic that stores can use to market strategically:

“We make more appointments off of the third text than the first two combined.”

Unotifi builds persistence into the process:

  • Ongoing communication
  • Structured cadence
  • Escalation to human follow-up

Combined with MarketPro3’s targeting and visibility, this creates a system that doesn’t rely on chance.

Takeaway:
The fortune isn’t just in the follow-up—it’s in consistent follow-up.

Final Thought: Reactivation Isn’t a Campaign—It’s a Commitment

Lost customers aren’t gone forever. They’re still driving, maintaining, and spending money on their vehicle. The question is whether they’re doing it with you or someone else.

As both Scott and Joe make clear, winning customers back requires more than effort. It requires alignment:

  • Process that prioritizes lost customers
  • Data that drives precise timing and messaging
  • Technology that sustains communication
  • People who deliver an experience worth returning to

The question isn’t whether lost customers will come back. It’s whether you’re giving them a reason to.

Check out TVI MarketPro3 for more fixed ops marketing insights.

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