Shared Responsibility: Why Workshop Success Depends on Everyone Playing Their Part
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About this listen
Shared Responsibility: Why Workshop Success Depends on Everyone Playing Their Part
In this episode of The Friction-less Workshop, we tackle the age-old complaint that echoes through workshops everywhere: "There are no good people anymore." But is it actually true? Andrew Uglow reveals the uncomfortable reality - yes, it is true, and here's why.
The automotive industry faces a dual crisis: a people shortage (not enough workers) AND a skills shortage (workers lacking necessary abilities). This isn't just about technical skills - it's about foundational values, behaviors, and people skills that previous generations possessed but today's workers often lack.
Andrew explains why this problem is uniquely challenging in automotive: • The industry has experienced exponential technological change unlike any other trade • Cars transformed from mechanical systems with electrical circuits to networked vehicles with mechanical components • New technicians face "drinking from a fire hose" - massive information overload • Cultural clashes and different worldviews compound the skills gap
THE TWO CRITICAL FACTORS:
- ENVIRONMENT PROBLEMS Workshops often apply financial management methodologies to humans, which simply doesn't work. People need leadership, not just management. The environment must be suitable for humans, considering people factors alongside profit.
- THE INSTALLATION PROBLEM Modern workers genuinely lack foundational skills and values. If you want people to hold certain values and behaviors, you must actively "install" them. The industry lacks systems and processes for this installation, particularly for people skills versus technical skills.
THE MISSING PIECE: FOREMAN TRAINING
Andrew identifies the critical gap: foremen are trained for technical ability but not people ability. They have face time with technicians, influence with technicians, and the ability to install values and culture - yet they've never been trained how to do this.
The result? Foremen default to "telling" repeatedly, which doesn't work. They lack frameworks, tactics, and good practices for installing information into people who don't have it. They're using a hammer for everything when different situations require different tools.
INTRODUCING THE PROFESSIONAL FOREMAN METHOD:
Andrew unveils his solution - a comprehensive foreman school launching end of October. This program teaches foremen: • How to lead people, not just manage them • How to install culture and values • How to have challenging conversations • How to influence millennials and modern workers • How to do micro-learning effectively • How to facilitate rather than push
The episode emphasizes that quality technicians are directly proportional to business profitability. You need good systems, efficient management, and great customer service - but without good techs, you're nowhere. And developing good techs requires foremen with people ability, not just technical ability.
Key insights include: • Why "bad company corrupts good habits" - underperformers harm team morale • How the 30-year cycle of complaints reveals systemic problems • Why repeating the same explanation doesn't help learning • The difference between pushing people and leading them • How shared responsibility transforms workshop culture
Perfect for workshop owners frustrated by staff quality, service managers dealing with underperformers,
Andrew has a variety of free downloads and tools you can grab.
Discover if your workshop is Retention Worthy© here or visit his website, https://www.solutionsculture.com where the focus is on bringing reliable profitability to automotive workshop owners and workshop management through the Retention, Engagement and Development of their Technical...