6 tech productivity tips that actually work in a repair shop
There isn't a shortage of articles when it comes to productivity tips. But if you skim through them, you'll realize a lot of them have the same generic ones: scheduling difficult jobs in the morning, pre-planning, holding daily team huddles, and adding buffer time between work orders. While this is good advice, it has also been circulating since 2011.
It's time to switch it up a bit. Way shares some tips that actually work when the phones are ringing, when the bays (workstations) are full, when the parts are delayed, and when someone is out sick.
1. Replace buffer time with transition windows
Setting a 10-minute buffer time between appointments performs well on paper. But when a customer comes in with their "just a quick question," it is enough to leave you with no breathing room. Stop sprinkling buffer time like seasoning and start stacking it into intentional blocks.
Instead of scattered time gaps after every appointment that disappear too quickly, every team per bay gets two real-time blocks. This way, they're not rushing to get to another work order and they get a genuine moment to rest. Since the recovery is scheduled rather than improvised, your actual chargeable hours are more clearly defined and less flexible.
2. Plan a fleet day
A surprise slow day with no planned appointments is a shop's version of a horror movie. You can't create customers, but you can plan for work that's meant for this exact moment. Local small businesses like plumbers, landscapers, delivery companies, HVAC crews, and pest control operators own about three to 15 fleet vehicles. By entering into an agreement with these businesses for a designated fleet repair day, you get a ready pool of work and they get a below-market rate, which is a win-win situation.
The deal is specific:"We service your fleet at a 10% discount. In exchange, we keep the vehicles for up to 48 hours and schedule the work during our slower periods."
The bays get filled, the techs work, and you've quietly built a B2B relationship that gives you consistent revenue every single month, without running a single ad.
3. Invest in shop management software
"How long is this going to take?" is actually one of the most-asked questions in any shop. It's also one of the most distracting questions for busy techs. Every time an advisor walks into the bay to ask it, they lose focus on their current repair job.
What you can do is eliminate the question entirely by having software that shows what everyone is up to. A shop management tool is exactly what you're looking for.
With shop management software, the advisor gets the full picture without setting foot in the bay: which bays are occupied, who's working on what, the estimated times, and what's next in the queue. Any changes can be made in real-time, too, so no one is left guessing.
Here's how it will go: Every morning before the first appointment, your advisor spends five minutes going through the work orders of the day. This replaces at least six interruptions before noon, leaving your techs to complete their work without further disruptions.
4. Provide mini certification courses
Your senior tech is the go-to for everything because they're the only one who knows how to handle the difficult jobs. Meanwhile, your junior techs keep doing the same low-effort ones.
By providing mini certifications, you're giving your techs a chance to become the person you can call for high-level jobs, too.
There are multiple free training programs available online. Start with a few that match your highest demands. For most American shops right now, that's EV basics, ADAS calibration, and either diesel or heavy-duty repairs, depending on your market.
Now, a junior technician who earns the EV Basics certificate gets routed to the EV-flagged jobs, or when an ADAS calibration walks in, you have two certified options instead of one.
Your A-level techs stop being the only people for every advanced job on the board, and your junior techs get a career upgrade without costing you much.
5. Introduce gamified quality challenges
In some garages, speed leaderboards are introduced to check tech productivity. But this can often turn into a disaster. Techs race. Corners get cut. Then, two days later, the vehicles come back and cost you more than what you "saved."
Redesign the scoreboard rather than scrapping it completely. You have to make sure quality wins over speed every time.
Each week, pick specific routine jobs, such as oil changes, tire rotations, or brake pad replacements. Ask the techs to set a target time. The tech who completes the job closest to the target time without generating a rework ticket in the following seven days wins a reward.
The work gets done, and the techs are more accountable. This is also great for creating motivation.
6. Run a monthly comeback audit
Comebacks are the most expensive items on your schedule because they weren't considered in the first place. A customer returns, a tech gets interrupted, a bay is assigned, and the job that should have been closed is opened again. Most shops treat each one as a one-off when it isn't.
Once a month, pull every comeback from the past 30 days. Stop looking at them individually; instead, check for the pattern.
This doesn't have to be complicated. A simple spreadsheet with five columns containing the following information is more than enough:
- Date of the original job
- Date of the comeback
- The technician who worked on it
- The job type
- The root cause, if you know it
Run the audit on the last Friday of every month. If it's a tech issue, that technician stops getting that job type until the gap is closed. If the problem is with the supplier, talk to them. If the conversation doesn't bring any results, you'll know it's a sourcing decision.
Either way, you've just cleared a load from your future schedule without adding a single new process to your day.
Bottom line
Don't overdo it. Just pick one tip in the beginning. Commit to it for four weeks and measure the "before" and "after." Then give the rest a shot. If these tips end up saving time, you know you can go ahead with the same ones. If they don't, you'll know the exact reason why and can adjust it accordingly.
This story was produced by Way and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
Copyright 2026 Stacker Media, LLC
This story was originally published June 25, 2026 at 5:30 AM.