Given that there seems to be an issue with the manager and the GM, it would seem tough to make it through without leaving. But if you have a talking relationship with the GM then that's where I'd go to try to get it resolved. I'd just tell him that you'd like to talk about the lack of production or sales or whatever is the complaint of the day and try to explain what you can from your observations. If you're shouldering the blame for sales, when there aren't techs to do the work then that's what I'd present (i.e, you sold 100% of "available" tech time, etc.)
My other suggestion is to exactly quantify the turnover situation. For writers we'd expect to see an average job expectancy of 18 months (with some wide varations in upper and lower there). In a normal busy shop I would think it is unusual if the service manager remained the same to have more 1.25 replacements a year. So if you have 8 writers at the beginning of the year, I might expect that by the end of the year there have be ten replacements (that's 18 employees total rotating in those eight positions). Anything much higher than that obviously points that the employees aren't happy or can't get their needs met by the organization. i would think that is a warning sign to the GM.
By the way, how's the store's CSI?? And is there a similar turnover in sales and other dealership positions?
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** Rob, Editor WD&S **Help is only a message post away!
robc@dealersedge.com