Snrub said:Paying the tech's based on piece work is a lousy system in terms of how it affects the customer.
I wholeheartedly agree.
We were recently switched to this setup, and I am going to have a chat with my employer next week about this.
RIght now I have a problem child at work. I have maybe 12 unbillable hours of diagnostic time in it. (Unbillable unless you feel comfortable with giving someone a a $1500 charge for "elifino") The flat rate way to have addressed the car would be to load the parts cannon and say it needed everything even peripherally related to the problem. This is not proper diagnostics and it is not good customer service. (And of course, under warranty, this would not fly)
On the other hand, last week I have 1.72 billable hours, because that car was essentially also the only thing I had to work on all week, and it made me so frustrated and depressed that it made me consider setting fire to MY own [redacted] out of spite. From a personal standpoint, I'd have been just as well to load the parts cannon, and if they bought it, then I'd have something to do and maybe the car would be fixed. And if they didn't buy it, then berk it, not my problem. (Again, this would be horrible customer service)
One of the reasons why I left my job at a dealership, incidentally, was because I was being guided to not repair vehicles under warranty. Granted, warranty paid roughly 60% of what customer-pay services were, but at the same time it was still pay, and besides, in my mind (then and now), people buy a new car for the warranty, so it is bad customer service to avoid warranty repairs. (Specifically, we were having a problem with the rack and pinions failing in a way that was making the power steering pumps loaded all the time. I was told to stop doing so many warranty racks, even though people were coming in complaining about underhood whine and I knew damn well what the problem was...)