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Gain Traction

Gain Traction

著者: Mike Edge
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The Gain Traction Podcast features top tire and auto repair professionals, shop owners, industry executives, and thought leaders.© 2025, All Rights Reserved. Gain Traction Podcast. マネジメント マネジメント・リーダーシップ リーダーシップ 経済学
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  • When Should Auto Repair Shops Raise Labor Rates?
    2026/07/15

    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:

    1. Audit weekly billable-hour capacity before raising rates. Compare the shop’s actual billed hours against the total hours the operation can realistically sell.
    2. 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.
    3. Train advisors to present price with confidence. A labor rate loses strength when the person explaining it sounds unsure, defensive, or apologetic.
    4. 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.
    5. Tie pricing to team stability. Build rates around wages, benefits, training, tools, and the cost of keeping the business healthy through slow months.
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    36 分
  • How On-Demand Grip Could Change Winter Driving
    2026/07/08
    Wes Boling is the Senior Communications and Content Manager for Nokian Tyres, where he helps explain product innovation, dealer education, and the company’s North American story. Based in Nashville, Tennessee, he has been with Nokian Tyres for nearly eight years and joined the company as it prepared to open its North American production factory in Dayton, Tennessee.Before entering the tire industry, Boling worked as a sports reporter in Knoxville, earned his MBA from Belmont University, and built experience in public relations and family business. His role gives him a clear lane for explaining on-demand grip winter tires in terms that connect engineering, safety, and the conversations happening inside tire dealerships.In this episode…Winter driving has become harder to explain with old tire categories. Drivers still need control on ice, but they also care about road noise, dry-road performance, road wear, and the limits tied to traditional studded tires. Multi-location tire dealers need a cleaner way to talk about winter traction without turning the counter conversation into a technical lecture.Nokian Tyres is bringing that conversation into a new place with on-demand grip winter tires. The studs respond automatically to the road, absorbing when conditions are warmer or dry and engaging when cold conditions call for ice grip. That changes the selling conversation because the value is not hidden inside a compound chart. The customer problem is visible: changing winter roads, black ice, and the need for control before the driver loses confidence.The business lesson is bigger than one tire launch. Product knowledge only works when the counter team knows how to translate it. Drivers walk in with an immediate problem, and the dealer’s job is to connect the right technology to the risk sitting in front of them.Here’s a glimpse of what you’ll learn: [01:04] Who Wes Boling is and why his role matters[01:38] Wes Boling’s path from sports reporting into tire communications[04:44] How on-demand grip winter tires automatically respond to road conditions[06:51] Why modern studded tires are trying to reduce old tradeoffs[08:21] How double stud technology supports braking and turning on ice[10:22] Why black ice makes changing winter conditions harder to manage[12:52] How Arctic testing shaped years of winter tire research[14:19] What dealers and journalists noticed during the tire launch[17:36] When dealers and consumers can expect the tire rollout[18:12] Why asking better questions builds stronger industry relationships[23:29] How tire shop counter staff help customers understand safetyResources mentioned in this episode:Wes Boling on LinkedInNokian Tyres WebsiteTread PartnersGain Traction Podcast on YouTubeGain Traction Podcast WebsiteMike Edge on LinkedInQuotable Moments:“It is the first studded winter tire to come with what we call on-demand grip.”“The tire kind of makes that decision itself.”“We were able to essentially reduce the studs’ negative impact on the road while increasing its safety properties.”“What this tire delivers is that responsiveness.”“We’re crafting it on a foundation of more than a decade of incredible research.”Action Steps:Build a winter tire talk track for every counter team. Start with the driver’s real concern: ice, black ice, loss of control, noise, and confidence on unpredictable roads.Train advisors to explain on-demand grip winter tires without engineering overload. Use plain language: the tire adjusts to the road, the studs engage on ice, and the customer gets a clearer safety story.Audit old objections around studded tires before winter selling season. List the concerns customers bring up most often, then create direct answers around noise, road impact, dry-road comfort, and legal limits.Use changing winter conditions as the sales context. Shoulder-season ice, warmer dry roads, and sudden black ice events give dealers a practical reason to revisit winter recommendations with customers.Make the counter team part of the product launch strategy. Technology does not create revenue until the person across the counter connects it to the driver’s daily risk.
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    30 分
  • The Succession Plan Most Tire Shops Overlook
    2026/07/01
    Brad Templin is the owner of Scott’s U-Save Tires & Auto Repair, a four-store tire and auto repair business serving Indiana and Illinois. His family’s automotive roots go back more than a century, starting with a parts distributorship in Chicagoland before the next generation moved into the tire and auto repair side of the industry.Brad returned to the business after studying aerospace engineering at Purdue and working in a corporate technical sales role. He came back through the shop floor first, working as a tire tech, learning the counter, and earning his way into leadership. His experience gives him a practical view of tire shop succession planning, especially for owners who already have future leaders inside the business.In this episode…Shop owners talk often about technician shortages, training, and recruiting. Brad Templin brings up a different issue that sits closer to the owner’s seat: who carries the business forward when the current owner starts thinking about stepping away.The next owner is not always a son or daughter. The next owner is sometimes the manager who has been there for 15 years, the lead tech who already knows the crew, or the trusted employee who opens the shop when the owner is gone. Brad’s point is direct: second-generation ownership does not have to mean blood. It means culture, trust, experience, and the ability to protect what the business already means to the people inside it.For multi-location operators, the succession question gets bigger. Growth creates opportunity for the next layer of leaders, but owners still have to decide who gets a real path forward. A sale to an outside buyer changes the financial picture. A handoff to someone inside the business changes a life, protects the shop’s identity, and keeps the business tied to the community that helped build it.Here’s a glimpse of what you’ll learn: [01:01] Brad Templin’s role at Scott’s U-Save Tires[02:55] How Brad’s family history shaped his view of the industry[04:06] Why second-generation ownership does not have to mean family[06:10] Why blue-collar shop ownership still offers serious opportunity[08:18] How self-awareness shapes stronger leadership decisions[11:30] Why technician-minded owners struggle to think like visionaries[15:39] How owner financing can create a practical succession path[20:55] Why Brad had to earn leadership by working every shop role[22:20] How the next generation can improve what the founder built[24:36] Why independent shops matter beyond the services they sell[29:13] How endurance training connects with business leadershipResources mentioned in this episode:Brad Templin on LinkedInScott’s U-Save Tires & Auto Repair WebsiteTread PartnersGain Traction Podcast on YouTubeGain Traction Podcast WebsiteMike Edge on LinkedInQuotable Moments:“I have now fallen so in love with this industry, I see so much opportunity and runway in front of it.”“Second generation ownership doesn’t even have to be blood.”“Taking over a succession plan of an already successful shop that you’re familiar with, you have such a great runway opportunity.”“Shop ownership is very rewarding.”“We’re needed as much as a doctor, a lawyer, an attorney, an accountant.”Action Steps:Identify one person inside the business who already operates with ownership-level trust. Look at who opens the shop, handles pressure, protects the culture, and keeps the team moving when the owner is not there.Start tire shop succession planning before the exit feels urgent. Build a path around responsibility, financial structure, leadership development, and clear expectations instead of waiting for a forced sale.Let future leaders work every major seat in the business. Counter work, tire tech work, customer conversations, and store operations create respect that no title can replace.Separate technical skill from ownership readiness. A strong technician is valuable, but ownership also requires leadership, vision, decision-making, and the ability to carry people through change.Use growth to create opportunity for the next layer of leaders. Multi-location operators need people who see a future inside the business, not just a job inside the shop.
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    36 分
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