The dealership culture wars
The dealership culture wars
My experience has been that each department's employees "always" know how the other departments should be doing there job but have yet done that job. Let them walk a mile in the other person's shoes. Their attitude and respect will change.
The dealership culture wars
PHoskins,
We all know the symptoms.... Ithought we were discussing real solutions.................
We all know the symptoms.... Ithought we were discussing real solutions.................
The dealership culture wars
Actually, PHoskins has hit a great solution on the head. We have a great working interdepartmental relationship in our dealer group, and although it's not perfect, it seems we are enjoying a much better relationship than many. When new managers are hired in any dept, they must spend a day working in the other depts with the managers of those depts. That, and hiring the right people, with the right attitude go a long way. Might not work for all, but it works for us.
The dealership culture wars
My reply is based largely upon performing many different duties at a dealer. I have been a parts warehouse manager, parts counterman, service advisor, dispatcher, parts manager, service manager, body shop manager and fixed ops manager. What I learned from this is that every employee needs to treat others as customers not fellow workers. It also made me rethink my "parts man ATTITUDE" which 90% of parts countermen have or develop. I realize it is not realistic to expect a counterman to sell cars but as a manager it opened my eyes to an improved management style which is where it all starts no matter what department you are managing.
The dealership culture wars
PHoskins, I truly believe that a culture such as that can and should be fostered in a dealership or any business, for that matter. It takes time and more than lip-service to accomplish it but the environment is so great to work within.