Need some input here, guys.
Under what situations do you allow repair orders to be held open and for how long?
A few "for instances"....
A service contract ticket with several jobs, most work completed, one part needs to be ordered. We would collect deductible from customer and have them return next week when the part arrives, holding the RO open. What would you do?
Warranty repair, tech has an hour invested for prelimininary diagnosis, customer needs car. We would have the customer return in XXX number of days, hold the ticket open, and allow the tech to flag some of his time. What would you do?
Your body shop has a big collision job and sends you the car for some heavy suspension repairs. You do the work, return car to them....and they'll need at least another 2-3 weeks to finish their end. We would hold our ticket open and wait for the body shop to finish their work, then close both RO's at once and submit to insurance company. What would you do ?
As you might guess, I am fighting a little battle here. Our GM thinks every RO should be closed into accounting by the time the tail lights disappear down the road. I say that there are some instances where it is perfectly legitimate to hold a repair order open. As it is, about 95% of our tickets are closed virtually immediately.
I'd appreciate any input.
Doug
Also, what standard do you use as an "acceptable" amount of labor-work-in-process? Our sevice department generates $140-160K in labor sales per month and as of 3 hours ago our labor-in-process was $4960.