FI showroom red and grey logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Stop Wasting Your Service Manager’s Time

If you asked your service manager to list every daily task they complete, you might be embarrassed. Focus their work hours on profit-building and watch your fixed ops revenue soar.

by Leonard Buchholz
June 26, 2018
Stop Wasting Your Service Manager’s Time
4 min to read


Asking your service manager to track their daily tasks is the first step toward focusing their time and energy on profit-building activities and assignments. Photo by Tero Vesalainen via Pixabay

In every dealership service department, there is a desk. Behind that desk sits someone with the ultimate responsibility to increase profits. This person is called the service manager.

When I am asked to visit a store that is not profitable, I typically find the person responsible for those profits working on everything not related to profits while believing that they are working on everything related to profits.

Ad Loading...

I call it the “Theory of Unprofitability”: Profits equals time dedicated to process implementations multiplied by the number of completions. Simply put, the manager must dedicate their time to making sure service sales processes are being followed with every customer.

In stores that are not profitable, the manager spends more time on things that have nothing to do with profit and everything to do with nothing. The tasks they are focused on have no bearing or impact on service department profitability.

Stay Focused

Let me give you an example: The service manager is working the service drive when he is approached by the sales manager. The sales manager tells him the tethered marketing balloons for the sales department’s front row, which should be in position first thing in the morning, are not up yet. “Could you take care of that as soon as possible?” he asks. Profitable or unprofitable task?

Another example: The service manager is working in his office when he is informed that the lights on the front lot are not on. “Can you do something about it?” Profitable or unprofitable task?

Ad Loading...

Are these important to the daily business functions of the dealership? Yes, they are. Is there a person who is not the service manager capable of taking care of these items and directing personnel? Yes, there is.

If anyone can flip a light switch, why does the service manager have to do it? Work with managers to reassign noncritical daily tasks to lower-level staff. Photo by SnorkTV via Pixabay

Years ago, the owner of the store I worked at handed me yet another daily task not related to profit growth. After he left, I decided to write down all the tasks that had been thrown my way over the past year just so I could get a handle on it. The list grew to 40-plus items, and guess what? Not one of them had anything to do with making more money.

Were some of them important? Yes. Necessary? No doubt about it. But on the fifth of the month, when you want to know why fixed ops revenue is off by 13% and what your service manager plans to do about it, don’t be surprised to get a list of unprofitable tasks in return.

By the way, when I handed the owner my list and asked him to specify which of those tasks were “Top Priority” and which were not, he apologized. He had no idea how bad it was until I pointed it out to him.

Back on Track

Ad Loading...

Here are a few things you can do to get your service manager back on track and instantly increase fixed ops revenue:

1. Make two lists. Ask your service manager to track the tasks they are assigned. Separate the items into two lists: “Tasks That Make Money” and “Everything Else.” Give top priority to training, monitoring, coaching, and managing the service sales team. Give zero priority to everything else.

2. Share your lists. Share the lists you created with your leadership team. Ask them to delegate “Everything Else” to other managers and staff and remind them that some of those items are their responsibility.

3. Empower your service manager to say ‘No.’ Your personnel will test the limits of your new policy. Authorize your service manager to decline “Everything Else” and stick to what makes money and makes sense.

Lastly, you and I work in the real world. If you’re a GM, and the owner drops their keys off and asks your service manager to get their demo washed and gassed, that is not a good time to share your lists. That is a great time to observe the “20-Foot Rule”: Walk 20 feet outside the building, look up 20 feet, and see whose name is on the sign.

Ad Loading...

Leonard Buchholz is the founder of CarBizCoach. He helps dealers meet performance objectives in service sales, CSI, and profitability, and has extensive experience in evaluating fixed operations and providing corrective training and guidance. Contact him at leonard.buchholz@bobit.com.

Topics:F&I

Originally posted on Auto Dealer Today

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More F&I

Under the hood of a Toyota Prius EV Hybrid car.
F&Iby StaffJune 15, 2026

New Lifetime Battery F&I Product Meant to Drive Dealer Traffic

EFG Cos. offering is intended to create lifetime auto dealer engagement with customers.

Read More →
Several illustrations of question marks on a surface
F&IJune 10, 2026

The Psychology Behind Menus That Increase Add-On Sales

There is a science to crafting a menu that gives customers confidence in the choices presented, and moving the process outside the F&I office can further boost results.

Read More →
Man holding magnifying glass over sales volume paper.
F&IMay 29, 2026

Why Your F&I PVR Is Misleading You

Here’s a handy checklist of the numbers to track in 2026 instead.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of woman typing on a laptop as she sits on a couch
F&Iby Hannah MitchellMay 29, 2026

Auto Consumer Anxiety Presents Opportunity

A survey of U.S. drivers found the majority are concerned about finances and the economy, but those fears make many ready to buy vehicle-protection products.

Read More →
Dustin Gingerich standing on stage giving a presentation
F&Iby Lauren LawrenceMay 28, 2026

Humble and Hungry: 12 Rules for an F&I Life

Dustin Gingerich, with a decade in the F&I business under his belt, shares his thoughts on leadership, building trust with customers, and the importance of learning and innovation.

Read More →
Photo of businessman's hands resting on files on a desk
F&Iby John TabarMay 27, 2026

Focus on the Opening

F&I managers must learn as much as possible about their customers, starting before they walk into their offices. The bulk of today’s consumers expect that, and good results will follow.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of a three-seat vehicle back seat
F&Iby Hannah MitchellMay 22, 2026

F&I Reaches for the Sky

The increasingly important profit center continued making gains in the first quarter, according to StoneEagle data, ancillary products proving more popular as consumers hold onto their buys longer.

Read More →
Cover image for a BOK Financial report titled “Timing the market: How avoiding volatility entirely can hurt long-term reinsurance program performance.” The image shows several road construction barricades with flashing amber warning lights lined up in a nighttime work zone. Beneath the image, red text explains that avoiding volatility can mean falling behind inflation and missing market rebounds that drive long-term surplus growth. The BOK Financial logo appears at the bottom right.
SponsoredMay 8, 2026

What Market Timing Mistakes Mean for Your Reinsurance Program

When volatility hits, dealer-owned reinsurance programs face a familiar temptation: pull back and wait for calmer waters. New data from BOK Financial shows why that instinct can quietly cost you years of surplus growth.

Read More →
Ryan Ruff, The 90/10 Rule, Automotive Training Academy, Sales Series
F&IMay 6, 2026

The 90/10 Rule

In this video, Ryan Ruff explains the rule that elite sales professionals use to turn ordinary conversations into unforgettable customer experiences.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Photo of essential oil diffuser on desk next to laptop
F&IMay 4, 2026

Your Office Is Talking

What’s the atmosphere saying about you to your customers? You can make minor adjustments and additions that transform your space into one that creates trust with the people on the other side of the desk.

Read More →