8 minute read

Shortage of Collision Repair Technicians�����

CIC Committees Tackle Ongoing Shortage of Collision Repair Technicians

It’s not uncommon during discussions within the collision repair industry about the technician shortage for body shop representatives to point to what they see as the inadequate entry-level skills of students completing auto body training programs.

Educators and others speaking at this spring’s Collision Industry Conference (CIC), however, offered their own perspectives on the issue.

“We do not have a recruiting problem. We have a retention problem,” Virginia Oden, a trade and industrial education program specialist with Oklahoma Career Tech, said at the meeting held in Oklahoma City. “How we treat our employees is key. If you don’t provide them with opportunity, they will look elsewhere. They will tell you it’s because of the dollar. But people do not leave a job they love and where they feel appreciated. They leave because of management, period.”

She said she has seen technical education teachers “work hard every day to instill the passion they have for this industry into those students, and then when they get out into the industry, they are treated terribly. They may leave your shop and go down the street to the next shop. But if they’re treated terribly at that shop, they will leave the industry.

“They can get better work and better hours, with less hard labor, working at Amazon,” Oden said. “So it’s important once we get them recruited and passionate about what we do, we’ve got to treat them with respect. It’s not about ‘kids today.’ It’s every single person who’s breathing. We all want to be treated with respect.”

Speaking from the floor at CIC, Dane Rounkles of American Honda said he once went to a collision shop in the Southeast to visit a student interning there while completing the Honda Professional Automotive Career Training program at a local school.

“He wasn’t there, and I asked, ‘Did he not show up?’” Rounkles said. “No, he was mowing the shop owner’s yard. When I spoke to the

Shop Showcase owner of the body shop about this, he said, ‘I had to pay my dues. with Ed Attanasio They’ve got to pay theirs. As long as the school keeps sending people, I never have to mow my yard.’ My point: Do not assume these kids need to do what you and I did.” Social Media for Shops Bud Center, chairman of the CIC Talent Pool and Education with Ed Attanasio Committee, said too often he hears shops and schools pointing to the other as the cause of the technician shortage. “There needs to be more conSEMA Show Goes On versation. People need to get on the same page,” Center said. with Ed Attanasio Virginia Oden of Oklahoma Career Tech said To that end, the discussion at CIC included panelists sharing ideas Media and Publicity for Shops how entry-level technicians are treated when they enter the industry impacts whether they stay in the industry about ways to improve the technician shortage. Oden said collision repair and other technical training programs in her state hold summer with Ed Attanasio camps that give fifth and sixth grade students some exposure to the differ-

Shop Strategies

with Stacey Phillips

Body Shops Giving Back

with Stacey Phillips

The Best for Much Less.

Tips for Busy Body Shops 2X Free Daily Deliveries to Northern California and Reno, Nevada We Offer Very Competitive Pricing and Discounts Professional, Friendly and Efficient Wholesale Parts Staff 2X Free DailyDeliveries to NorthernCalifo with Stacey Phillips

Purchasing Nissan OEM parts has never been easier and more cost effective. Our new factory-backed program allows us to compete with aftermarket pricing on thousands of collision parts. It’s a huge benefit to your customers to offer OEM parts at My SEMAFuture Nissan aftermarket prices! with Stacey Phillipsof Roseville 600 Automall Dr. Roseville, CA 95661-3022

916-677-5251

Shop Strategies916-786-0743 24 hr Fax

Parts Hours: Mon – Sat 7:30 am – 6 pm wholesale@futurenissan.com Parts.FutureNissan.com

NISSAN GENUINE SERVICE AND PARTS Order Parts Online at: www.futurenissanparts.com with Victoria Antonelli

Driving What’s Good Your Trusted Audi Dealer Since 1969

• Large Inventory and Quick Access to 200,000+ Audi Genuine Parts • We Offer Monday-Friday Delivery to Vallejo-Redding-Reno-Fresno and Turlock • Dedicated Staff of Professionally Trained Audi Wholesale Parts Specialists Ready to Help You

Niello Audi

Phone: 916-480-2851 Fax: 916.483.1963 Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8am-5pm audi.parts@niello.com www.audi.niello.com 2350 Auburn Blvd. Sacramento, CA 95821

ent programs. During eighth grade, students tour technical training programs in their area.

“It’s all about planting seeds. It’s making students and parents and counselors aware of the opportunities that are out there,” Oden said. “At the same time, having done this for a while, the industry tends to want the fruit off the tree. They don’t want to help plant the seed to grow the tree. So they’re not involved in those summer camps and eighth grade visits and sophomore showcases. It’s like anything: If that student has seen your face, they become comfortable with you. You’re building that relationship. You’re starting that investment.”

Amber Alley, manager of Barsotti’s Body & Fender in San Rafael, CA, has spoken at a number of past industry events about the success her shop has seen from its involvement with a local college taking part in a pilot project funded by the Enterprise Rent-A-Car Foundation. The students in the two-year program rotate spending eight weeks at school, then eight weeks working in a shop.

At CIC, Alley said she sees strong evidence of student interest in the trade.

“I’ve done job fairs and that type of thing, and it’s not that people aren’t attracted to the industry,” Alley said. “It’s the presentation of the industry that they get once they come in.”

Too often, she said, shops aren’t willing “to invest in people, and to offer them fair wages and a career path, because they’re scared that someone down the street is going to give them a dollar more. But not everyone is going to make it at your shop. We all have to be willing to take the calculated risk of investing in someone. We can’t have the attitude that they need to prove themselves to us. We need to prove ourselves to them.”

Oden agreed that offering a career path is essential to keep young people in the industry.

“They want to know what those steps are: This is where you are going to start. This is the compensation package, and here’s how you grow that,” Oden said. “I can tell you: Every single student in our career tech programs wants to see that.”

But at the same time, Alley said, the industry needs to have “a serious conversation” about what it will take for shops to pay competitive wages that attract and retain technicians in the industry.

“None of this is going to matter if we can’t keep our doors open, if we can’t charge what the work costs, if you can’t pay the people what they need to earn to stay in the industry,” she said. “That needs to be a priority, having that conversation. We need to be big boys and girls about it, and be really serious…None of this is going to get solved unless we can pay people what their value is.”

Center said when he asks shop owners what they are personally doing to help address the technician shortage and if they are involved with local schools, they often say they don’t have the time.

“If you don’t have time as the owner or manager of a business in this industry to help solve this problem, who is going to do it? If you don’t have time, designate someone on your team to take that responsibility, and get this stuff done,” Center said. “Somebody has to take the lead.”

The fact Sheryl brought this concept to my attention hit home again just a few days later when I heard Ray Chew of CCC talk about what he termed a “no-update update.” Ray was talking about reaching out to customers just to let them know there’s nothing new you can tell them—there’s still no timeline from the supplier for the arrival of the part we need, for example—but you wanted to at least give them that update.

The “no-update update” will help fill those communication voices to prevent negativity from creeping in.

I’d love to hear how you’re offering “post-collision emotional support” or “no-update updates” to help avoid “voids in communication” at your business. Or if there’s a phrase or quote you’ve recently heard that’s resonated with you, drop me a line at mike@collisionadvice.com.

AUTOBODY

TRUST FORD PARTS

CERTIFIED PARTS WHOLESALING DEALERS

SO. CALIFORNIA Caruso Ford Lincoln

LONG BEACH

800-353-7224 562-492-9452 Fax

www.carusoford.com parts@carusofordlincoln.com

Citrus Ford

ONTARIO

909-390-0948

Mon-Sat 7-6

Colley Ford

GLENDORA Wholesale Parts

800-253-3807 909-592-8577 Fax

E-mail your orders parts@colleyford.com

Fairview Ford

SAN BERNARDINO Wholesale Direct

909-386-0220 909-889-1741 Fax Galpin Ford

VAN NUYS

818-778-2005 818-778-2090 Fax Penske Ford

LA MESA

800-648-7431 619-668-7765

NO. CALIFORNIA Sunnyvale Ford Lincoln Mercury

SUNNYVALE

408-738-1530 408-738-3125 Fax

www.fordautodirect.com.com

NEVADA Friendly Ford

LAS VEGAS

702-877-6546 702-870-6280 Fax

WASHINGTON Bowen Scarff Ford Lincoln

KENT

800-942-0712 253-852-3340 253-813-5050 Fax

M-F 8-5:30 parts@bowenscarff.com

This article is from: