Automotive Shop Management Saint Paul MN

Boost the efficiency and profitability of your auto body shop business by really taking a look at your shop’s financial performance. This process begins with quality auto body shop management. You can’t just run business as usual and expect changes. This is a competitive business and there’s always room for improvement. Listed below you will find local management consulting agencies around Saint Paul that can help you increase employee productivity by creating performance benchmarks, enhance customer service and follow-up, revise production scheduling and tracking procedures and maintain paint and material control.

Advanced Strategies Inc
(651) 229-0009
445 Minnesota St
St Paul, MN
Ken Muellerleile Consulting
(651) 917-3557
1315 Larpenteur Ave W
Roseville, MN
Expense Reduction Analysts
(612) 208-1668
4749 12th Ave. S.
Minneapolis, MN
S4 Sales
(612) 455-7100
404 3rd Ave N
Minneapolis, MN
Accenture
(612) 277-0000
333 South Seventh St.
Minneapolis, MN
Seminar Clearing House
(651) 293-1044
360 Robert St N Ste 411
Saint Paul, MN
C. Anderson Associates - Sales Executive Search
651-695-8555
2136 Ford Parkway
Saint Paul, MN
T. D. Nelson
612 751 1024
617 Jefferson St. NE
Minneapolis, MN
MDA Leadership Consulting
(612) 332-8182
150 South Fifth St., Ste. 3300
Minneapolis, MN
Roselle Leadership Strategies, Inc
(612) 605-6121
100 South Fifth St., Ste. 1900
Minneapolis, MN
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Automotive Shop Management

Looking for a way to increase employee productivity and loyalty at your repair operation? You may need to look no further than your monthly balance sheet.

4/1/1997

Research shows employees are inclined to work harder if they're familiar with how the company makes money. In fact, in a survey by Ernst & Young, a U.K.-based consulting firm, 86 percent of employees said they'd be more motivated to help their employers succeed if they had access to the company's financial data.

That's the premise behind a philosophy called open-book management - a concept in which employers treat employees as if they're business partners.

"Open the books so people can understand the financial aspects of the business and find out how the shop makes money," says John Case, writer for "Inc." magazine and author of the book, "Open Book Management." "Sit down with employees in regular meetings and explain what the numbers mean.

"But don't expect employees to become accountants overnight," he says. "Repeat, repeat, repeat. Once they realize how a shop's success benefits them and how much impact they can make, they'll snap to attention."

Case says shop owners should make a game out of teaching employees about the company's income statement. But keep it simple. He recommends keeping track of the shop's financial success on a large scoreboard that hangs in an area accessible to everyone. Each week, update the figures in the following ...

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