1. GM says no to flushes the same time they are settling large class actions on Dexi-cool. Related or not, some issues kind of go hand in hand.
2. GM wants everyone on simplified maintenance -- dealers go on it -- price the service 1 at $79.95. Then GM issues a coupon for an LOF/rotate (the heart of a service 1) at $39.95 - effectively taking $40 out of the gross.
2a. And the upsell they want is the $10 you'll make on a battery.
3. GM seriously should have other issues more important on their table than running retail. GM has never even really proven that honest selling of flushes that 99% of dealers does not actually enhance retention. (I don't know if it does or not - I just know in our ultra-sensitive world that if no one ever complains about your selling practices you aren't doing it right.)
4. They really need to do a hard RO survey of looking at what makes up the work in a Toyota or Honda shop. Besides LOFs, etc it is timing belts, filters, etc. That is where most imports can make money. GM cut their dealers legs out from under them with simplified maintenance, it hasn't helped them sell one more vehicle, it has maybe led to shady practices by a few, and here we are. Face it - GM really doesn't know what they are talking about with retail - good people, just clueless. I am sure they would be upset at the grosses that perfume counter at Macy's makes and that Macy's allows these outside vendors to set up displays, etc. GM will next rally against the evil of "do you want fries with that?" Dont you know that fries arent good for your customers and can lead to long-term health issues? What kind of heartless bastard tries to sell fries?
5. GM's biggest problem with getting involved in service merchandising is THEY CAN'T DO IT RIGHT!!! Send the $39.95 coupon to the guys I haven't seen in a year - not the guy I serviced last week for $79.95. These types of pieces barely move your car count because they are basically marketing to customers we already have. Stop cannibalizing our own customer-base, it is all we have.
6. That's right sir ... the dealer's name is on the side of building. GM is just a product they sell. They sell other products as well. I remember when GM used to also say 22" rims where the death of us all - there is a long, long list of GM being wrong about fixed ops. Things are never a problem once GM figures out how the can make money on them (exhibit one GM Fuel System Treatment PLUS).
7. I would LOVE to see a similar letter to the dealer about GAP, etch, etc. But they know the dealer knows the front-end and would kick GM in the teeth. They do this in the back because it reinforces a suspicion that even some dealers might hold about fixed ops.
8. Finally (one because I have to get back to work), if you follow GMs advice on everything about fixed ops I can guarantee you wont have to worry about customer retention because your dealership will be closed. Maybe that is what GM is after anyway.
[This message has been edited by robc (edited 03-04-2009).]