The First Step To Becoming A Top Shop
By
Eric M. Twiggs
“There’s greatness inside of you, and it’s on the other side
of your excuses.” Mel Robbins
Something happened a few weeks
ago, that knocked me out of my seat. I was speaking with a shop owner named “Rose” who was concerned about the performance of her shop.
She was down in gross profit dollars for the month and suspected that her
service manager “Nick” wasn’t fully engaged.
Rose recommended that we
schedule a three way call on the following Tuesday with Nick, to get him on the
right track. I agreed, and suggested that she ask him the following
question: “What three things are getting in the way of you achieving the
shop’s goals?”
Before our call, I was bracing
myself expecting to hear the typical “reasons” that tend to surface:
“You have to be in a big city to make money”; “The vendors say that everybody
in town is slow”; and my personal favorite: “We have an older customer base
that’s on a fixed income.” My goal was to get these perceived barriers
on the table so that we could address them.
Tuesday morning had arrived and
Rose, Nick, and I were on the call. Before I could speak, Nick
interrupted with the following statement: “Eric, I don’t have three things
getting in the way, I only have one.” What he said next knocked me out of
my seat: “It’s ME. I am the problem.”
This was the first time that a service manager ever told me
that HE was to blame for the negative performance of the shop. I
approached the call looking to get him on the right track to become a top shop.
By taking personal responsibility for his results, he
had already taken the first step. So, what can personal responsibility
do for you?
You Will Get Motivated
There was an experiment
conducted on a group of predatory fish known as the pike. This
species has a reputation for being a ruthless hunter that will eat anything you
put in its space.
A group of researchers conducted the “pike
experiment” by placing the fish on one side of the tank, and placing their food
on the other. They then put a glass divider between the fish and the
food.
The pike repeatedly swam
towards the food banging its nose against the glass. This happened again
and again, until they sank to the bottom of the tank and stopped trying.
Even when the researchers
removed the barrier, the pike made no effort to swim to the food and eventually
starved to death. Once the pike lost control of reaching its
destination, it lost the motivation to move forward.
Here’s the big takeaway: Blaming
factors beyond your control, is like placing a barrier in front of your goal.
If the local economy is the problem, you will continue to bang
your head against the glass, since there’s nothing you can do to change it.
Taking responsibility for your
results will motivate you to move forward, because once YOU become the
problem, YOU also become the solution. You can’t change the
economy, but you CAN change yourself!
You Will Get Results
During my tenure as a district
manager, there were occasions when someone working for me would arrive
late. I never heard them say: “Sorry I’m late Eric, I guess I need to
leave my house earlier the next time.”
The number one “reason”
I received for tardiness was: “Boss, traffic was really bad today.” This
caused many of my monthly manager’s meetings to begin ten to fifteen minutes
after the stated start time.
This motivated me to take
responsibility for the way I communicated the meeting times. Instead of
starting at 9am, I announced an 8:45am start time, with a fifteen-minute grace
period.
I told everyone that after 9am,
the door would be locked, and anyone on the wrong side of the door would not be
allowed to enter. After making this change, I never had a problem
with managers arriving late to meetings. Everyone was in place before 8:45am.
Why did this work?
Instead of blaming traffic, the
managers began taking responsibility for leaving earlier. Once
they took personal responsibility for their punctuality, they arrived on
time, every time!
If you desire to change the results at your shop,
its critical to shift from a complex of blaming to culture of owning.
Want to improve your margins?
Try owning how you communicate the estimate findings, instead of blaming
the customer’s finances. Do you need more cars? Try owning how you
answer the phones, instead of blaming the size of your city. Once you
change your mindset, you can change your results!
Conclusion
The following weeks after our
three-way conversation, Nick had doubled the gross profit dollar results in
comparison to the previous weekly average.
By taking personal
responsibility, he got motivated and then got results! Have you taken the
first step to becoming a Top Shop?
Eric M.
Twiggs
The Accountability Coach
PS: Looking to take
the first step towards becoming a 2017 Top?
Email etwiggs@autotraining.net to receive a Top Shop Process check sheet.
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