Having never worked in a dealership service dept, I am not really qualified to post an opinion on this. But of course I won't let that stop me
I will say that I did sell a few ADP systems by bringing ERO (Electronic Repair Order) into the sales process. It seems to me that one way to move beyond the dispatching "bias" perception is by having a completely automated process that electronically dispatches work based on the tech's skills and availability. Allowing the technicians to be part of the "setup" of the skills, etc... made the buy in even greater.
ERO was always a pain in the $%# to implement, but once it was in and things settled down (and if set up correctly), many of the dispatch problems were minimized.
Since I no longer work for ADP it should be obvious I am not "plugging" the product. I just have always thought that ADP's ERO and R&R's ESI applications were so often undersold by the vendor and underestimated by the dealership. I don't think many ADP reps knew the product good enough to really understand it's value and provide a true return on investment analysis to the dealer, and I don't think R&R reps ever wanted to bring ESI into the picture and have the dealership make a decision based on ERO vs. ESI (just my take, doesn't mean it's right

. In my opinion, ERO was/is the best product ADP has introduced into the automotive dealership. Im just not sure they knew it. I know the products have always been perceived as expensive (they are

, but for me it was the one product I truly believed could add tremendously to the dealership's bottom line.
I am curious what the perception is these days about completely automating the service department (i.e. ERO, ESI, and UCS's version), and also why others think the products never really penetrated the market on a large scale.
David