Does 100 Percent Service Absorption Interest You?

I hope you answered “Yes” to the question above. So, let’s begin with defining what “service absorption” means.

It is calculated by taking your total gross profit from the sale of parts and labor, which is sales minus the cost of parts and labor sales and dividing that total by your dealership’s fixed expenses. Do not include any variable sales expenses such as sales commissions or floor plan interest.

To put it simply, if one can achieve 100 percent service absorption, then all of the dealership’s fixed expenses are paid for by the service and parts departments, which means that the sales department is producing net profit on the very first unit it sells. For example, if your sales gross profit is $4,000, your sales commission is $1,000, and your floor plan interest is $500, then you have $1,500 in variable expenses to deduct from gross profit, which leaves you with a net profit of $2,500.

Based on our financial evaluations of RV dealerships across the country, we find that most dealerships are well below 45 percent. That means it is difficult for the average dealer to believe that 100 percent service absorption is indeed attainable since he or she never did it nor do they know of any other dealer who achieved such a feat.

Well let me assure you that it can be done if you are willing to change.

The most significant change needed is to change your attitude toward your service department. First, you must believe your service department will become a profit center. Currently, many dealers perceive this department as a support department for the sales department and to prep units for delivery, then handle warranty headaches after the sale.

Once the warranty period expires, there does not seem to be much effort to keep the customer coming back for retail repairs. After all, during the “season,” the shop is booked for two weeks or longer on any given day, so why worry about retail repair work? This attitude needs to change because retail customers will spend thousands of dollars on parts and labor, which have the highest profit margins of any product you sell. Additionally, we know the RV owners who have their RV serviced at the dealer who sold it to them are much more likely to buy their next unit from that dealer.

We find that the dealers who have low service absorption also suffer from low shop productivity. Shop productivity is defined as the number of hours sold on retail, warranty, and internal repair orders, divided by the number of clock hours the technicians actually work. For example, 100 hours sold on all repair orders divided by 200 technician hours actually worked, equals 50 percent shop productivity.
Our experience shows that most dealers fall into the range of 50-55 percent shop productivity. Are you starting to get a picture of the opportunity for improvement? How can you be booked out two weeks in appointments when your technicians are only 50 percent productive? What happened to the other 50 percent of their working hours?

Technicians, for the most part, are hard working employees. They brave the cold, the heat, the rain, and the snow to perform whatever service or repair is printed on the face of the repair order, and most of the time they complete the service or repair to the satisfaction of the customer. However, do they complete the service or repair in as short a time as possible? More importantly, do they have the incentive to complete service or repairs as quickly as possible? It’s called “performance based compensation.” At most RV dealerships, the answer is “No,” since technicians are simply paid by the number of clock hours worked with no regard for the number of hours sold. If you are a technician, what difference does it make to you if you spend four hours completing a two hour job? Conversely, if you were paid two hours to complete a two hour job, would you try your best to finish in two hours so you could get another repair order to get paid on? If you completed that same two hour job in 90 minutes and still got paid for two hours, would that be a good thing or a bad thing? If you are a good technician, a good employee, and you have a good attitude, you just gave yourself a pay raise. You also, just gave the dealer a pay raise.

Now, let’s assume that you install this “performance based pay plan” in your shop and your technicians’ productivity jumps to 75 percent from the current 50 percent. You just realized a 50 percent increase in labor gross profit. If your dealership is currently profitable, this 50 percent increase in labor gross profit then becomes 100 percent net profit. Take a look at your total labor gross profit for last year and increase it by 50 percent, and then ask yourself if it would be worth changing your attitude to put that much money in your bank account. What would it cost you to do that? Nothing!

by: Don Reed

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