When Should Auto Repair Shops Raise Labor Rates?
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ナレーター:
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著者:
Henry Rose is the CEO of Neighborhood Car Care in Western New York. He entered the automotive industry from outside the traditional technician path, bringing experience from property management, construction, and operations into independent auto repair.
After first connecting with the business as a customer, Henry became involved with what was formerly Scruggs Automotive Repair and later purchased two of its locations. Today, he leads Neighborhood Car Care with a practical view of auto repair labor rates, customer experience, team support, and shop profitability.
In this episode…
Auto repair labor rates are not just numbers on an invoice. They reflect the value a shop proves, the confidence of the team presenting the work, and the cost of keeping trained people supported.
Shop owners are dealing with rising technician costs, tighter margins, customer price sensitivity, and the pressure to build a business that survives slow months. Henry Rose brings the discussion back to capacity, billable hours, customer trust, and the shop experience behind the rate.
A labor rate becomes easier to defend when the operation supports it. Full schedules, clean facilities, clear communication, easy scheduling, team benefits, and confident advisors all change how customers receive the number.
Here’s a glimpse of what you’ll learn:
[01:10] Introducing Henry Rose of Neighborhood Car Care
[01:20] Henry Rose’s transition into independent auto repair leadership
[03:20] How a garage door invoice reframed labor rate value
[06:22] Why auto repair pricing faces unique customer scrutiny
[13:05] Using hospitality to strengthen diagnostic value and trust
[16:19] Structuring labor rates around business costs and team support
[18:23] Using shop capacity as a signal for rate increases
[20:23] Measuring market response without weakening price confidence
[23:11] Building team alignment behind higher labor rates
[26:19] Protecting long-term stability through responsible profit strategy
[31:19] The work ethic behind sustained shop growth
Resources mentioned in this episode:
- Henry Rose on LinkedIn
- Neighborhood Car Care Website
- Tread Partners
- Gain Traction Podcast on YouTube
- Gain Traction Podcast Website
- Mike Edge on LinkedIn
Quotable Moments:
- “You have to charge what you need to charge, but at the same time, when we’re just nothing but confrontational in our pricing structure, that’s also very scary for the customer.”
- “We have to be huge on building the value when we’re talking with people.”
- “We need to make the money that we need to make, so that our team can do the job they need to do, the training, the education.”
- “If you’re hitting 120 billable hours, and you’re that capacity, and then you’re booking out more than four or five days, you really should consider increasing your labor rate.”
- “We have a fiduciary responsibility to our team members. We need to keep the company healthy because if there’s a weird dip, a bad month, you can’t have everyone wondering, are they going to get paid?”
Action Steps:
- Audit weekly billable-hour capacity before raising rates. Compare the shop’s actual billed hours against the total hours the operation can realistically sell.
- Review the customer experience that supports the price. Clean waiting areas, clear communication, easy scheduling, and visible professionalism help customers understand the value behind auto repair labor rates.
- Train advisors to present price with confidence. A labor rate loses strength when the person explaining it sounds unsure, defensive, or apologetic.
- Track close rate and booking pressure after a rate change. Use customer response, schedule demand, and advisor confidence to find the market’s breaking point.
- Tie pricing to team stability. Build rates around wages, benefits, training, tools, and the cost of keeping the business healthy through slow months.