This survey data is eye-opening, especially the NPS of -60. But here's something I haven't seen discussed much: how much of technician dissatisfaction is driven by poor operational systems that create stress?
Think about it from their perspective: they're trying to do quality work, but the shop's constantly chaotic because of missed calls, double-booked appointments, and advisors running around frustrated. That chaos cascades down to the techs on the floor.
A few practical things I've noticed shops with high tech retention do:
**Communication systems that work for techs, not just customers.** When advisors can actually handle calls smoothly (without dropping them or overbooking), the bay stays organized. Techs don't spend half their day dealing with appointment reschedules or emergency callbacks because the shop was disorganized.
**Predictable work schedules.** The survey mentions techs want 4-day/10-hour weeks. But they also need predictability. If the shop's running on chaos and constantly adding emergency jobs, even a four-day week feels exhausting. Clean workflows = predictable schedules.
**Respect for their expertise.** This ties to the "specialist" language point. But it also means: don't interrupt them constantly. If advisors have systems in place that handle routine customer questions (callbacks, follow-ups, reminders), the techs can focus on the actual diagnosis and repair without constant interruptions.
The shops I know winning on the talent side aren't necessarily the highest-paying. They're the ones with smooth operations. The technician prefers working somewhere that feels organized.
Just a thought: fixing NPS might be as much about operational excellence as it is about pay and benefits.