Title: FCE and Managing Service Profitability
1FCEand Managing Service Profitability
Presented by Wes McArtor President BEI
Services
2Goals
- Identify key service reference points
- How these points have an effect on profit
- Opportunities where and how much
- Managing the numbers
- Creating action plans and goals
- Raising the bar for service performance
3Service Reference Points
- Service Dept Profitability
- Many dealers allocate revenue and cost in a way
that make this more difficult than it sounds - If you dont already have reliable financial
benchmarks, Globals benchmarks would be a good
place to start.
4 Model 1 Variations among dealers
5Model 2 Variations among dealers
6Service Reference Points
- Model Cost per Copy by volume
- Technician performance by model
- First Call effectiveness
- Benchmarks for the above items
- Call Back Rates
- Hold for part rates
- Parts Cost per Copy
7Service Reference PointsModel Cost per copy by
volume
- The most common mistake made by dealers today is
placing the wrong machine in the wrong volume - As of Dec 05 the average analog seg 4 machine was
doing only 7303 copies per month, Digital Seg 4
is doing almost 21000, but well below its
capacity - Overall CPC for Digital seg 5 is .005, at its
optimum volume its .0017, at 20000 per month
its .007 for service only. - You must have checks and balances to prevent
sales from overselling the customer
8Service Reference PointsModel Cost per copy by
volume
- As illustrated you must know where each product
runs its best, and adjust maintenance pricing to
the volume being committed to by the customer. - The lower the volume the higher the CPC.
- There is significant profit lost due to
negotiated retail CPC without tying it to print
volume. - If retail CPC is governed in some measure by the
marketplace, and your costs vary as much as 70
from the best volume to the worst, wouldnt you
want the most profitable volume?
9Service Reference Points Technician performance
by model Model 5
10Service Reference Points Technician performance
by model
- MCBV varied by 71
- CPC varied as much as 50
- So the worst performing tech created 70 more
service calls than the best. - This, in fact, reduces your potential profit on
the machines that the poorer tech services. - Increases customer dissatisfaction
- Increases your manpower needs
- There are multiple causes, calls per day
expectations, training, technical skills or
abilities, management support, machine placement
activity, application or environment and
territory.
11Service Reference Points First Call Effectiveness
- FCE, is the percentage of time the technician
resolves a customers complaint without incurring
a callback or a hold for part call - What is a call back? For most dealers this is a
shot in the dark number and the criteria tends to
track the owners expectations. If the owner
wants 18 call backs, the system can be set up in
a way to get that number - BEI controls that criteria so everyone is
measured equally and is tied to the national
performance of each model. This creates an
equitable criteria even if the machine has issues
12Service Reference Points First Call Effectiveness
- CB is the number of call backs divided by the
number of EM or customer generated calls - Hold for parts calls are those calls that
required the tech to create an additional call
because they didnt have the required parts - More often than not this stems from a few key
problems Lack of trained personnel in the parts
department, lack of systems training, lack of
inventory management training, techs controlling
car stock, or an X-Tech managing parts - HP is the number of HP calls divided by the sum
of EM and CB call types
13Service Reference Points First Call Effectiveness
- FCE is primarily the dealers responsibility.
- On the Model 5 this number goes from a -48 to
67, this cant be related to the quality of the
product - This data is made up of 45 different companies
who are servicing this product. 33 of the 45
dealers are at less than 30 FCE - Think about this, When the customer calls for
service, 70 of the time the tech will return for
a call back or a hold for part call! - We laugh because the tech has a reserved parking
stall, not much wonder
14Service Reference Points First Call Effectiveness
- What drives FCE?
- More often than not, FCE problems stem from a few
critical areas Listed in order of occurrence - 1. Calls per day expectations
- 2. Response time expectations
- 3. TRAINING
- 4. Number of units placed
- 5. Lack of inventory expertise
- 6. Wrong compensation model
- 7. Wrong people
- 8. Mis-interpreting benchmarks
15Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness - Calls per day expectations
- Calls per day guidelines are okay, however,
setting this requirement in stone forces techs to
choose between quantity and quality - There is a balance, but expertise, experience,
territory distribution, and machine mix all play
into this number - A less experienced tech cannot do as many calls
per day as a tenured/experienced tech can - Consider quality first, quantity second. Few
techs can deliver the same quality at the same
speed
16Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness - Response time expectations
- Response time is based on TWO factors Incoming
call load and the number of technicians - As call load goes up so does response time, this
forces techs to work faster, which decreases
quality, which in turn creates more calls, which
increases call load, that starts the cycle all
over again - Staffing As staff increases response time gets
better - Geography The larger the geography, the more
staff or the longer the response time will be
17Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness - Response time expectations
- A significant portion of your staff is doing
un-necessary repeat work - If your call load rises and stays high, the only
way to meet your market driven response time
target is to increase manpower - OR, require quality, and reduce the total number
times a customer is required to call for service,
this reduces incoming calls, betters response
time, and reduces manpower
18Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness - Training
- Its a given that training is key to
effectiveness - For a technician to troubleshoot and resolve a
customers complaint right the first time,
training and experience are paramount - Initial training gives them an overview of the
machines specific components and requirements - Solving problems in the field is the experience
they need to become effective - Which leads to units placed.
19Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness Units placed
- Many dealers marketing organization jump on every
new machine that is made available, without
consideration to what happens in service - If you place only a handful of products in the
field, the techs will never be effective at
repairing them. They simply dont see enough
variety in the problems to get good at it - The moral here, is dont get into a new product
unless you are confident you can promote and move
enough product to ensure your service profit
stays in tact
20Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness Inventory Expertise
- For the average dealer lack of inventory
expertise costs them a 20 increase in manpower
and 30 to 40 increase in inventory that is kept
on hand - Roughly 60 of the incomplete for part calls
happen because the technician does not have a
part that he routinely uses. The remaining calls
happen because of parts that are needed too
infrequently, are to expensive or environmentally
sensitive, which makes it hard to justify
carrying them - The first problem above, is based around
restocking intervals. Daily should be the target
21Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness Inventory Expertise
- Techs should not be allowed to determine
inventory, they are pack rats! - For yield sensitive parts you should monitor this
by tech and by model to ensure each tech is
maximizing the yield potential. - Each tech should be restocked daily, this will
reduce the number of HP calls and reduce the
amount of inventory in the car - Your parts manager should be trained in
forecasting, to reduce shipping costs and improve
the restock schedules - They should also pay special attention to
obsolete parts, which tend to come from techs
controlling parts ordering
22Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness Compensation Model
- The old saying, you get what you pay for is
truer than ever with technicians - Many dealers find that the cost of living
alive and breathing raise leaves them with high
tenured, high paid techs whose performance isnt
commensurate - Most comp plans simply pay the tech to show up
each day and take calls, the fact that the tech
generates calls isnt even considered - The fact that many techs waist your parts dollars
isnt considered
23Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness Compensation Model
- Techs are in the cost control business, they are
not responsible for revenue! - So your comp plan must be based around
controlling expense, not necessarily profit - We believe that 20 to 40 of a techs total
compensation needs to be productivity, based and
dependant on measurable requirements and goals - Performance expectations should be laid out and
reviewed at least every quarter - Failure to meet these goals should exclude the
tech from the variable portion of their
compensation or end in termination
24Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness Wrong people
- Not everyone is the right one. Finding good
people is one of the hardest challenges we face - Ive counseled hundreds of dealers and virtually
every one has had someone they wish they didnt
have but were afraid to do anything about it - Many of my successful dealers, have told me that
once the poorer performers were gone the entire
department improved. In many cases these techs
generated more calls than they took - You must set the performance bar and
expectations high enough to ensure everyone's
success
25Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness Wrong people
- Objective tech measurements often uncover
technical deficiency that is being masked by good
customer service skills. You need BOTH - Itex has a power hour on addressing
underperformers. A must attend for your service
manager - Many techs have become experts at managing their
managers - Many dealers that see objective performance
measurements on their techs are shocked to see
their best tech is at the bottom and the
mediocre tech is at the top
26Service Reference Points First Call
Effectiveness Mis-interpreting benchmarks
- I hear complaints all the time from service
managers who are being asked to achieve
performance benchmarks that their owners learned
about at a conference - Benchmarks are great, but understand, how you
manage your systems, allocate your revenue and
expense, and how accurate, the data you are using
is, will all impact these benchmarks - If you are going to use them, make sure you
understand them, and standardize your business in
a way that will make them meaningful
27Service Reference Points Call Backs
- This is a contentious point. What is the
criteria for a call back? - Currently, most dealers are averaging nearly a
60 call back rate, using our definition. The
more successful dealerships are in the 20 range - Our criteria is model based and includes a set
number of copies OR set number of days the
machine must run before the next customer call.
This number is based on the national performance
of that model - This ensures uniformity in the measurement and
allows for increases and decreases in machine
performance over its life cycle
28Service Reference Points Call Backs
- Key to callbacks is remembering that the largest
percentage of these calls are CAUSED by the tech
and the way they approached the service of the
unit - If you have a 50 call back rate and you could
reduce it to our target level of 20, almost 30
of your techs would not be necessary - Im not suggesting elimination is necessary, you
could grow into the manpower, but if the previous
discussion about under performers is true, then
these are techs you could truly do without - The only solution to call backs is a change in
compensation, management follow up, and
enforcement of standards
29Service Reference Points Call Backs
- You can contact BEI for our call back standards
- Another issue confusing call back rates is the
calculation method - If a customer calls and then calls back the next
day for the same problem, what's the call back
rate? 100 right, one EM and one CB - Now lets say the tech has to incomplete the
second call (HP), the CB rate is still 100 and
the HP rate is 33, - In most systems CB is taken from total calls so
the CB would be 33, HP is 33 and EM is 33. So
you can reduce your call back rate by doing more
HP calls? This isnt the goal and your techs
know exactly how to play the game to get the
number you are after
30Service Reference PointsHold for parts
- These are calls where the tech has to return for
additional parts - BEIs standard is 8 to 12, calculated as stated
before. - To achieve this you need timely restocking,
accurate parts usage data and absolute control
over your inventory - A techs car stock should be inventoried once a
month to begin with. If they give you two months
in a row with no variance, then go quarterly. If
they give you two perfect quarters then go semi
annual. - Bar coding is a must, dont wait
- The compensation plan should force a payback of
inventory variances from their commission
31Service Reference PointsParts CPC
- This is critical Parts dollars, parts as a
percent of revenue, parts per call are all common
measurements - They are not as accurate as parts cost per copy
- Parts usage, is in large part, determined by copy
volume and technician competence - You should be benchmarking Parts CPC. Techs that
do a low parts cpc will tend to have high call
back rates. Techs with a higher parts CPC dont
always see an increase in CBCs, so again, your
comp model should include a provision for
monitoring parts CPC
32Service ProfitabilityReference Points
- CPC by volume, will allow you to maximize your
service profit by placing product where your
service cost is the lowest and adjusting your
retail where your costs are higher - Tech performance by Model Not all techs perform
equally. You will need to make incremental
improvements tech by tech, model by model - FCE There is huge potential in this number.
Standardize the measurement, set goals and follow
through to see they are met - Parts CPC Page volume requires parts usage. Be
sure you are not losing profit from excessive
parts usage or increasing your manpower needs
from using to little
33Action Plans Goals
- Each qtr you should have a plan that addresses
theses performance issues as follows - 3 models, with 10 to 15 selected serial numbers
- The poorer performing techs on each of these 3
models - The models selected establish minimum call
procedures and goals for improvement - The techs determine if additional training or
ride with's will be necessary - In 90 days review the performance of these items
- If model performance does not improve, change the
minimum call procedure - If the techs performance doesnt change put them
on notice and offer no more than an additional 90
days to meet expectations or they will be let go
34Service ProfitabilityOpportunities
- CPC by volume There is direct correlation
between sales compensation and mis-placed
equipment - Tech performance A significant portion of your
daily call load is CREATED by your techs because
they are working on models they cant repair
effectively, address this and your margins will
improve - FCE For techs a call is a call is a call.
Unless the customer is mad when they arrive, how
many times they are there is not a concern - Parts CPC This adds up to substantial dollars
each month if not managed properly
35Service ProfitabilityOpportunities/Management
- Im consistently faced with problems that relate
to management. Your key profit center is the
service department - whos running this? A
promoted or tenured technician, an MBA? - Our experience, as well as our data, indicates
that most of the issues weve discussed are there
because the service manager has had neither the
training, the data, the coaching, the backing
from the owner or the experience to solve them - Ive had customers where the techs have more to
do with running service than the manager - How else can we explain the fact that the techs
were only accounting for half the available hours
to work in the month? - Recognize the importance of this position, train
them in the business and people skills necessary
to maximize your service resources
36Service profitability
- Summing this up
- Retail margin is driven in part by competition,
most of which know less about their real CPC than
you - Ensure you have a skilled manager running service
- You must control your service cost. Reduce your
cost and you can reduce your retail and still
make the necessary margins - You must compensate service techs to control
cost. Which means complete every call as
thoroughly as possible with the exact parts
needed, no more no less - Understand CPC and how its effected by copy
volume, usage, application, environment and
geography and work your sales organization
accordingly - You set the standards by which performance is
measured, set the bar high. Not everyone will
reach it but the right people will try