By
Jamie Redmond
An overview to Service Advisor Accreditation in the retail automotive industry
Commercial considerations The role and structure of Service Advisors across the
industry Numbers of Service Advisors employed Recruitment and retention Training and development Career paths Remuneration Core competencies to perform the role Accreditation models and testing methodologies
Research Areas
An accreditation scheme would raise levels of customer service, therefore gives business an opportunity to improve competitive advantage.
Customer demands continue to raise and this trend is predicted to continue.
Setting standards across the sector will allow for benchmarking and encourage more training and development for staff.
What value could accreditation offer?
The role and structure of Service Advisors
Service Advisors are front line customer facing staff that also require technical knowledge and the ability to sell additional products and services.
There are 2 different types of structure:- SA reporting into a manager that also runs the workshop
and parts operations SA has direct control over 2-3 technicians
Approx. 10% of the workforce of the sector that equates to 25,000 staff.
The fast fit operations do not employ specific staff to perform this function.
Independents often mix this with other roles, e.g reception, warranty etc.
Numbers of Service Advisors employed
Mixed approaches to recruitment, both very poor and some examples of excellence.
Landrover and Jaguar system- People Solutions illustrates that recruitment has the largest hit rate from the dealership user groups
KHA conducted assessment centres for SA from 1996 to 2001, 782 candidates were put through the process and the pass rate was 56%
Published labour turnover rates vary enormously on %
Recruitment and Retention
Very little information available from the independent sector.
Some excellent training available from the manufacturers, some of which is linked to the national occupational standards for customer service.
Automotive Skills are to develop national standards that will be specific to the Service Advisor role.
Training and Development
This varied appertaining to the part of the sector and size of organisation.
Less than 50% surveyed aspired to onward promotion to a higher rank.
Those that wanted promotion saw the next step as a Service Manager or After Sales Manager role.
Career Paths
Remuneration
The RTS survey 2004 stated pay as the largest influence on turnover.
Bonus and commission structures are predominately paid on sales targets.
A small percentage of organisations include an element of bonus for achieving satisfactory customer service scores
Core Competencies
Interpersonal SkillsEffective communication, influencing others, building relationships and innovation and creativity.Personal CommitmentMotivation,Customer Service, Resilience and flexibility and CPDBusiness OrientationSelling skills, Technical ability and Business awarenessManaging PerformanceSelf management, continual process improvement and legal understanding
Industry experience
Influence and autonomy
‘Bolt on Competencies’
Other requirements
The proposed accreditation model would be graded accordingly:
Service Advisor
Senior Service Advisor
Service/Aftersales Manager
These would be mapped to the national occupational standards for customer service and to ARMS for the management grade
Proposed model
Assessment centres using actors to play case studies and assessment made of the role plays.
Online testing of knowledge and technical aspects of the role.
Scheme to be governed by the IMI in the same way as ATA.
Testing Methodologies and Governance
Thank you
Any Questions?