December 2024 Southeast Edition

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How the 2024 Election Might Affect the Collision Repair Industry

The election of Donald Trump to a second presidency and the coming shift in party control for at least one chamber of Congress will impact the collision repair industry.

namely the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement and the U.S.-MexicoCanada Agreement.

To make sense of the shifting regulatory climate, Autobody News spoke to Bob Redding, president of The Redding Firm, a Washington, D.C.based lobbying group. In his capacity,

Though it’s tough to say exactly how the election will bring specific changes in areas like tariffs, federal right to repair efforts, and auto insurance premiums, it’s safe to assume the new political landscape will alter electric vehicle (EV) mandates and relax the overall regulatory environment.

Further, trade officials in Trump’s first administration prioritized the automotive industry, negotiating new bilateral, protective automotive regulations with countries including South Korea, Mexico and Canada in various free trade agreements,

Redding is the head lobbyist for the Automotive Service Association (ASA).

Redding shared his insights on what a Trump presidency, GOP Senate, and potentially a Republican House, could mean for the collision repair industry.

We’ve seen two recent rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, one in September and another Nov. 7. Combined with the election results, what could this mean for the collision repair industry?

RECAP ISSUE 2024

2025 Southeast Collision Conference Offers Chance To Learn Without Going Far

The Southeast Collision Conference is an opportunity to bring a big show feel closer to home. The event is set to take place May 2-3, 2025, in Richmond, VA, again co-hosted by the Carolinas Collision Association and Washington Metropolitan Auto Body Association.

The event focus will be on managers, owners and technicians,

according to a show press release. Organizers expect to attract vendors with local, regional and national presences alongside industry speakers and educational presenters.

There will be a particular focus this time, according to CCA Executive Director Josh Kent, on covering the whole shop.

“The goal is to try to cover each aspect of running a shop from checkin to repair planning to financial

l CONTINUED ON PAGE 13

Classic Collision Acquires 2-Location Bo’s Collision Center in Florida

Classic Collision announced the acquisition of Bo’s Collision Center in Ocala, FL, marking another step in its expansion across the

Sunshine State.

Known for its dedication to quality repairs, Bo’s Collision Center has served Marion County and surrounding areas for more than 50 years.

The acquisition includes both Bo’s Collision West and East locations, which have been familyowned and operated

DEKRA Introduces QCARE To Help Collision Repairers Manage Assets, OEM Certifications

With body shops placing greater emphasis on obtaining OEM certifications, collision repairers can feel overwhelmed when deciding which program is the best fit for their facility. Those who are already OEM certified may find it challenging to manage the programs they are part of. At the same time, shops often manually collect the information, while trying to complete timeconsuming reporting with valuable resources.

and standards.

“As a safety and standards company, we leveraged our expertise to bring more real-time verification and processes to our partners and provide an opportunity to repurpose important resources like valuable team members who spent a lot of time with spreadsheets trying to stay compliant,” he said.

Whether it’s an independent shop owner deciding which program is the best fit or an MSO that needs traceability throughout two to 2,000 shops, Morley said QCARE brings everyone together so less

“This can be highly inefficient and costly,” said Gabriel Morley, vice president of DEKRA North America. Morley said DEKRA was committed to finding a solution to address the challenges of pursuing OEM certification. Working with its partners and the industry, the company created DEKRA QCARE (Quality Compliance and Risk Evaluation).

The cloud-based platform was designed to assist independent repairers and MSOs in proactively streamlining the management of their assets and certified networks. Morley said QCARE connects OEMs, repairers and other valuable thirdparty partners.

“QCARE can help with holistic network management, facility and asset management, mergers and acquisitions, and OEM certification and compliance,” explained Morley. “It also was designed to leverage the ability to track compliance against both internal and external standards, streamline asset and training management and enhance an organization’s field operations.

Morley said the product aligns with DEKRA’s core values around safety

The following year, the Deutsche Kraftfahrzeug-Überwachungs-Verein (German Motor Vehicle Monitoring Association) was founded and soon became known as “DEKRA.”

The company has grown to include about 49,000 employees worldwide and assists more than 500,000 customers in 60 countries on five continents.

“Through the company’s commitment to cybersecurity and the regulation of artificial intelligence (AI), DEKRA is helping to build trust in new technologies and to master the related challenges, such as future mobility,” noted Morley.

Morley said DEKRA has long supported OEMs in the testing and building of automobiles.

Initially, Morley said attention was focused on technical safety, primarily in the automotive sector.

DEKRA has since expanded its activities into many diverse aspects of daily life “on the road, at work and at home,” all focused on safety.

“Through this experience, the company has helped develop and verify OEM programs in collision, service and sales,” he explained. “Today, we provide various support from technology, audit and personnel services, as well as strategic consulting.”

Morley acknowledged that everyone’s business is different.

“As a result, the company has been cognizant of providing flexibility to QCARE and a feature-rich environment that can be adapted to many market variations,” he said. “However, solutions need to be affordable if we want to see adoption, so we’ve been very mindful of balancing cost with value.”

time is spent on managing program participation and more time can be dedicated to customers and proper repairs.

“Challenges with redundancy, cost and a lack of transparency and insight in the collision repair industry with the current way of administrating a certified network often make it hard for programs to scale,” said Morley. “There is also a level of liability for 364 days after a single yearly audit is complete.”

He said QCARE tracks and manages the critical elements that contribute to compliance, such as assets, tools, people and training. Features include connecting valuable industry partners, self-service capabilities to reduce costs and delays associated with traditional IT development, and the ability to improve operations. QCARE also provides customizable reports and configurable program tracking so that organizations can build upon QCARE’s functionality.

DEKRA was established in 1924 when an industrialist named Hugo Stinnes came up with the idea of creating a voluntary technical monitoring service for motor vehicles.

For nearly 100 years, Morley said, DEKRA has been committed to ensuring people’s safety in all of life situations. What started in 1925 with the technical monitoring of motor vehicles today comprises a wide range of services, notably for

inspecting, testing and certifying vehicles, products, processes and facilities, as well as initial and further training.

The company’s portfolio includes vehicle inspections, expert appraisal reports, industrial and building inspections, advisory, training and personnel management services, as well as testing and certification of analog and digital products and systems.

With more than 500 services offered, Morley said DEKRA assists in transforming sustainable management.

Working alongside its partners, DEKRA provides self-assessment opportunities to help clients make better-informed decisions about certification pursuit, repair quality improvement and shop operations. Future goals include continuing to support partners with a strong foundation and expanding DEKRA’s connected industry partners, which include equipment, paint and distributors. In addition, Morley said DEKRA’s 2025 plans include helping to move certification programs from the expectations of tools and training to more qualitative standards and insights. Additionally, the company will shift its focus to incoming regulatory standards like supply chain risk management, environmental, and information security.

During the 2024 SEMA Show, Morley took part in a panel discussion focused on OEM Audit Tips/Tricks. Christian Ruecker, vice president of mobility sales at DEKRA North America, took part in the Society of Collision Repair Specialists (SCRS) IDEAS Collide Showcase to discuss “Sustainability’s Role in Every Layer of Collision Repair.”

For more information about DEKRA QCARE, email Gabriel Morley at gabriel.morley@dekra.com.

Exclusives

Mike Anderson

Collision Repairers Looking for More than Just Parts Discounts, Find Multiple Systems a Time-Suck 11

Abby Andrews

Possible Strikes Still Threatening to Rattle Collision Repair Parts Supply Chain 31

SEMA 2024 New Product Awards: I-CAR, Revv Win Collision Repair, ADAS Categories 7

Brian Bradley How the 2024 Election Might Affect the Collision Repair Industry 1

Elizabeth Crumbly

2025 Southeast Collision Conference Offers Chance to Learn Without Going Far 1

Wholesale Parts Dealers Should Examine Bottom Line to Determine Profitability, Viability 36

Stacey Phillips Ronak

‘Axalta Nimbus’ Cloud-Based Platform to Increase Refinish Customers’ Productivity 34

3M, Axalta Announce Collaboration on New Training for Collision Industry 24

DEKRA Introduces QCARE to Help Collision Repairers Manage Assets, OEM Certifications 2

REGIONAL NEWS

Classic Collision Acquires 2-Location

Bo’s Collision Center in Florida 1

Florida Auto Body Association

Becomes SCRS Affiliate 23

‘Grandfather’ of Vehicle Gifting Program to Be Recognized During 2024 SEMA Show 10

‘How to Prepare for Collision Industry Innovations, Transformation 18

Leona Scott

Four Ways to Engage, Retain Apprentices in Your Auto Body Shop 28

Ben Shimkus

Automotive Parts Supply Chain Withstands Port Strike 16

Scholarship America Makes Pitch to Close Collision Repair Talent Gap 39

John Yoswick

CIC Discusses Outdated Term ‘Set-Up and Measure,’ Cyber Security Risks for Shops 8

Index of Advertisers

Memphis First Responders Learn New Vehicle Rescue Skills Through NABC F.R.E.E. Program 12

NATIONAL NEWS

Association Announces Executive Director 38

DataTouch Releases New AI Tool 23

Wren’s Collision Group Adds 15th Location in Kennesaw, GA 25

FinishMaster, LKQ PBE Merge to Form LKQ Refinish 32

A:Lower interest rates are going to help everybody from a single shop owner to investment groups, I think, that are working not only in the collision space, but also the mechanical space. We represent both. Even though the mechanical partners have lagged behind collision on consolidation and MSO movement, it is there.

We’re seeing more and more of it — more interest from single shops, and hearing more interest in activity in M&A. So with the trends we’re on now, certainly the ingredients would be encouraging. I think this is going to impact a lot of different segments, not just the M&A piece.

The Federal Trade Commission, structure of the board and appointments and direction, that’s going to be a big change.

But I think it’s encouraging for small business. We did not take an official position [on the election]. We have people on both sides.

But I would say a majority of our folks would certainly recognize the [potential of a coming] shift in tax policy, banking policy and competition policy. And if the House keeps trending and does fold into Republican leaders controlling the House, I think you’re going to see an impact on auto policy that’s significant. And it won’t just be in the M&A space.

Q:Trump has criticized EV incentive programs in the recent past. What do you think a Trump presidency means for EV mandates, as well as the internal combustion engine (ICE) market?

A:I think we have to look back even at this Congress and the dissatisfaction amongst many Republicans in the House — and I’m speaking for them, but I’m saying we’ve heard them say it to us, in meetings and publicly — dissatisfaction with the amount of federal funding that’s gone into incentives and charging stations, for example.

They have a lot of questions about

that. We’ve even run up against it in EV training efforts in trying to get more funding in that space. Not opposition to auto technician training, but opposition to narrow EV training. We’ve got a lot of shops, particularly in rural areas, that may not have had the volume of EV training, EV cars in their shops.

And even up to today, a university town might have half a million people. So, access is what we’ve been worried about.

We’ve had a couple of pilot projects in Colorado and California on EV training. But it’s a funding issue. Paying for these things is hard, and the only way to do it is a public-private partnership. So that impact and the lack of focus on the EV piece amongst particularly many House Republicans, I think now will be incentivized. So, we’ll see.

Federal appointments are going to be critical. If you look at not just the FTC, but you look from our perspective at U.S. DOT. I don’t know who [Trump’s] going to pick. I don’t have an inside track on that. But I know that some of the names that have been thrown around are conservatives who are not advocates of huge federal subsidies in the EV space.

And I think you could see a real directional change in that area, not just in the House of Representatives and the Senate, but also with whoever’s appointed to run the DOT, I think it’s going to be big.

A:Q:What could the next Senate bring for the industry?

[Texas Republican Sen.] Ted Cruz will chair the [Senate Commerce] Committee. And we know Sen. Cruz. He’s been very helpful to us. He’s pro-small business. I can’t imagine a scenario where Sen. Cruz, who now will be Chairman Cruz, is seeking more federal regulation of shops or more federal incentives in the space. I just don’t see it.

Now, some lobbyists may be able to sell that, but I don’t think I can. So, I don’t see that. I think that what we’re watching for is what they’ll do in the auto safety space from our perspective.

We like inspection. We like state programs in the vehicle inspections space. We like states having a lot of rights relative to vehicle safety inspection.

But the federal government certainly has a role in that and what that should look like and any incentives in that area for states that want to do it. That includes post-repair inspections, programs like in New Mexico, where it’s on resale, the vehicle has to have a post-repair inspection after a collision.

I think it’s going to be very different

[in the Senate]. I was surprised at the Pennsylvania Senate seat flipping.

But I’d be surprised if one of the first things out of the box is broad auto policy. When it comes up, I do think it would be in the EV space, but I don’t see a broad automotive emphasis, which we could’ve had under Democratic control.

And in the House, I don’t think so either. We don’t know who’s going to be chairman, but if you look at the mix of potential chairs, I don’t see that as a priority.

Q:

What about federal right to repair legislation? Some view it as favorable to small business and mom-and-pops in collision repair. Do you think there could be pushes to get those efforts off the ground?

A:We talked some about this within ASA this week, after the election with our executive committee informally. But we have an agreement with the Alliance for Automotive Innovation and with Society of Collision Repair Specialists to address the vehicle data access issue.

And we are still working on implementation for the agreement we signed in July 2023. That will be very important for ASA implementation of the agreement, making sure that our shops have access to the data they need.

We like exhausting an industry agreement or an industry process if it’s possible, and it’s not always possible. But that’s always our first choice. If it doesn’t work, you go to Congress, or on this issue, right to repair, in Massachusetts and Maine, you have laws.

What we’re trying to avoid is any activity on this at the state level that will wind right back up where we’ve been with the insurer-repairer-consumer relationship, with it regulated with the authorization being at the state level, a 50-state checkerboard footprint of regulation. And that’s a hit and miss.

A:Q:How might other regulations be affected by the election?

But even not knowing who will chair the House Energy and Commerce Committee or the subcommittees — because that does matter, the committee leadership — I still don’t see the administration encouraging any legislative effort within their own party that dramatically expands the role of the federal government, particularly at the Federal Trade Commission.

Certainly, [car] dealers have taken their share of hits from the current Federal Trade Commission in the regulatory space. I just don’t see, from a direction perspective, that continuing. I may be wrong, but I don’t see that.

One of the things that has concerned us, because we were victims of it, independent repair shops, collision and mechanical, after the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendments, in the service information regulation, the U.S. EPA in a Clean Air Act Amendment said emissions data must be given to independent repair shops, collision and mechanical, across the board, and that repair shops should get the same service information that franchise car dealers got. The Department of Commerce released further rulemaking on data access. Well, the OEs dumped all the info at Commerce.

They were understaffed, didn’t have the funding, and had no clue what they were doing. It was a complete failure. We met with the U.S. EPA. They reversed that policy. It took years to get this new law into a regulatory space that worked, which are the websites that you go to now, the OE websites, are a product of that 1990 Clean Air Act amendment. So, the federal government regulating this and disseminating our data or what we need to repair cars is risky.

And I’m going to be very surprised if we see the House or the Senate, particularly the Senate, going full bore to expand the number of personnel, funding and authority of the Federal Trade Commission to run these kind of programs.

For legislation and laws that are too aggressive and can try and cap out what you as a collision shop owner charge for storage fees, if your storage fee is too high — this is our view — then the consumer or the insurer should tell you, “That’s too high,” and not the government. Then, it’s up to the shop what they want to do.

But controlling prices at shops is not something we want the federal government involved in. And that was clear in our pre-meeting with the panelists, clear from our members over the years and our leadership that these capped storage fees -- in Oklahoma that was proposed, and that legislation could come up again, even though it died this next year -- that is something that we just don’t support.

We think that’s too much of government.

If we go too far on the Federal Trade Commission as a police officer under, whether “Joe Shop Owner” gets data or information from a third-party provider or the OEs or whatever, then that’s a little too much interference.

Q:Trade officials during Trump’s first term prioritized the auto industry, negotiating new bilateral trade rules and imposing more restrictive tariffs. What do you expect to see in the trade landscape under a second Trump term?

Bob Redding.

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A:I think it’s anybody’s guess right now. There’s no U.S. trade representative yet. Bob Lighthizer [under Trump’s first administration] did a fantastic job.

I thought, for Trump’s first appointee, he was experienced. I’m not sure how much. He was involved in steel [litigation before serving as USTR], and I think he had some other clients where he had a lot of interaction with the [U.S. International Trade Commission] and other entities.

I’m just a big fan of theirs. Also, President Trump’s first chair of economic advisors, Gary Cohn, was one of the most inclusive senior staff people at the White House I’ve ever seen.

Where they brought small teams in — not always the same industries in the room — they might have five people from different sectors running things by them that might not be not be a priority for the industry, but had some impact. So, I was impressed with those administration appointments last time.

The establishment of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party is a big deal. They have a serious chairperson there with [Republican] Congressman [John] Molinar of Michigan.

He’s a serious person, very smart, very educated and works well with

the ranking member. There are a lot of members from both parties that are very focused on the China piece.

I can’t imagine a scenario where the Congress doesn’t, as a majority, support what the president tries to do on China. That would be a surprise. Could we see, I mean, China is focused on specifically in the automotive context.

Q:Pundits have raised the possibility that Chinese cars, including EVs and autonomous vehicles, could be exported more to the U.S. in the future. Do you expect automotive trade with China to be a focus area in the trade conservation?

A: If you go back to the U.S.-Canada-Mexico agreement, some of the positions that USTR put on the table that were not accepted, really, I think, are precursors towards a willingness for an aggressive protectionist approach.

I think it’s going to be a very different approach. As you know, [current USTR] Ambassador [Katherine] Tai has been less assertive on trade agreements and certainly that’s just a really different approach than what Ambassador Lighthizer did or others, even going back to [former USTR] Mickey Cantor with Bill Clinton, who was very aggressive in the space, a Democratic USTR. But it’s going to be

different.

I don’t know who [Trump’s] going to pick. He certainly has some good choices out there, including former deputies that may have an interest.

Q:

In September, Trump tweeted that auto insurance rates were up 73% and he would cut them in half once he gets into office. Obviously, that can’t be a clean guarantee for every auto insurance holder. But is there any change that such a rate cut at least progresses toward being a reality, in the case of, say, deflation, or a deregulated supply chain?

A: I hope he does. I mean, my insurance rates are up. They’re certainly going to have a very, very different antitrust division at the Justice Department, a very, very different attorney general.

So, in the FTC piece, you’re going to have a lot of different federal policies. But as you know, the bulk of the regulation of these companies is at the state level. And despite having those major insurers that we focus on at various conferences and symposiums, there are a lot of small companies out there.

They’re small, local and state entities. And that is going to be a really hard job. And, you know, we have a

mix of insurance commissioners, a lot that were in the industry or going to the industry when they leave, as well as consumer activists.

That’s a tough job [to rein in insurance rates].

It’s hard. But it is, as you know, in many states, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Florida and California, insurance rates are high.

Q:

Do you have anything else to add?

A: I think that generally, we are going to see some very probusiness initiatives.

I do think auto will be in the line of things that Capitol Hill addresses relative to the EV piece. I think you’ll see legislation introduced out of the box.

I think this applies to any industry sector: Whatever administrative agency that they follow, whatever cabinet official, but not just that — all the way down to Schedule C’s — I think the Trump administration has been working early, diligently, on the personnel piece, gathering names and gathering policy ideas, and I think it will be a much more hit-the-groundrunning, versus last time when it was slow getting people in place, slow getting appointments to the Senate. I think it will be very different this time.

SEMA 2024 New Product Awards: I-CAR, Revv Win Collision Repair, ADAS Categories

Revv ADAS and I-CAR were winners before the 2024 SEMA Show even opened, as both were named winners of New Product Awards at the Kickoff Breakfast held first thing Nov. 5, the first day of the show.

Revv ADAS won the Advanced Driver Assistance System (ADAS) Product category for Revv ADAS Plus, while I-CAR won the Collision Repair & Refinish Product category for its I-CAR Academy.

Runners-up in the ADAS category incuded Revv ADAS Mechanical, and Vision Automobile Electronics Industrial’s Solar Wireless Driving Assistant.

Runners-up in the Collision Repair & Refinish category included I-CAR’s RTS App, and SagolaSPRAY, from Sagola by Elcometer.

Revv ADAS Plus

Revv ADAS Plus automates ADAS procedures by using AI to identify ADAS calibrations in real time, scrubbing estimates in all three major estimating systems – CCC, Mitchell and Audatex – while referencing OEM repair procedures. Revv ADAS said the product can capture an additional $1,250 per job on average.

Revv ADAS Plus was built for shops

of all sizes, said CEO Adi Bathla in an interview with Autobody News.

“Whether you are a small shop or a large MSO, whether you are an ADAS specialist, static or mobile, you have to through a lot of changes,” Bathla said. “We’re here to support wherever you are, whatever type of business you are, whatever you have in your tech stack.”

Bathla said winning the New Product Award means a lot to his team.

designed to support both new technicians and the shops that employ them.

Dara Goroff, vice president of planning and industry talent programming for I-CAR, accepted the award.

“We think that this curriculum will help us to recruit new talent to the collision repair industry, where we’re suffering a talent crisis, get that new

“It means a lot of the hard work and dedication, listening to our customers, that we did for months to bring this to fruition is making an impact in an industry that is changing,” he said.

I-CAR Academy

The I-CAR Academy program is a comprehensive entry-level curriculum

talent trained, and then help our shops retain that talent by investing in a lifetime of learning and development,” Goroff said at the presentation.

Later, in an interview with Autobody News, Goroff explained in addition to the curriculum, I-CAR Academy includes human resources best practices, instructor guides for CTE educators

using the program in schools, and mentorship guides for a tech doing onthe-job training in a shop.

“It bridges the education from what a technician can learn in a trade school to what they would learn working on the job in a shop, so it doesn’t matter at what point in an education path someone is, if they go from a school to their employer, they will have equal, consistent standardized education,” Goroff said.

The program helps a new tech advance from zero foundational knowledge to being able to work in a collision repair shop.

“What’s great about it is, with the HR best practices, the mentorship and instructor guides, not only are they learning while they’re earning, but the shops are more readily able to accept those new technicians, create an amazing culture for them and retain them,” Goroff said.

I-CAR is “absolutely delighted that the New Product Showcase has recognized I-CAR Academy programming,” she added. “That tells us we’re headed down the right path and that the industry appreciates those who are doing the work to make sure that we fill the shortage with technicians that are qualified and qualifying to build and fix cars correctly.”

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Dara Goroff, center, accepts I-CAR’s New Product Award from SEMA Chairman of the Board Kyle Fickler, left, and SEMA President and CEO Mike Spagnola, right, at the SEMA Kickoff Breakfast on Nov. 5.

CIC Discusses Outdated Term ‘Set-Up and Measure,’ Cyber Security Risks For Shops

With more than 140,000 people, about 1,400 vehicles and more than 2,400 exhibiting companies filling 1.2 million square feet inside and outside the Las Vegas Convention Center, there’s a lot vying for SEMA attendees’ attention.

But for collision repairers, there were key meetings and training sessions throughout the event, held Nov. 5-8, that drew them — at least temporarily — from the trade show itself.

The Collision Industry Conference (CIC), for example, regularly holds one of its quarterly meetings during SEMA week, which it did this year on Nov. 5. Cyber protection was the focus of a presentation by the Data Access, Privacy and Security Committee, offering real-world best practices to avoid having digital systems hacked or becoming a victim of ransomware.

a sudden they tell you that you need to spend money.”

Kennedy said he equates it to having your doctor say your cholesterol is high, yet you don’t want to pay a monthly gym fee. “’I feel pretty good and nothing bad has happened yet, so I’ll just do it on my own,’” Kennedy said some people think. “That’s kind of a failure point.”

He said a cybersecurity expert can help identify areas of vulnerability within your company. “A lot of shops don’t realize that all these scan tools they have in the shop are all running on Wi-Fi,” he said. “How many of their employees are running on the same Wi-Fi? How many of them are also on these social media sites or the shopping sites that happen to be controlled by a communist country? That’s where the real risk comes in.

“That’s why I think it’s more important that you have a security expert that comes in, assesses your individual shop, your weaknesses, your strong points, and sets a plan

Shaughn Kennedy of Spark Underwriters said threat assessment and cyber insurance are among the key steps businesses of all sizes should consider.

“First, you have to realize that most standard business insurance policies out there exclude cyber,” said Kennedy, whose company focuses on the automotive repair industry. “So you actually have to have that coverage added back in through an endorsement or a stand-alone cyber policy.

“People ask me: How much cyber [insurance coverage] do I need? Well, insurance is there to pick the pieces up when something bad happens,” Kennedy continued. “The more important thing is proactively having a cybersecurity expert come in and assess your systems. Then the hardest thing for some people is to actually listen to them because all of

the topics on the agenda at CIC in Las Vegas. The Emerging Technologies Committee continued its discussion — started at a CIC earlier this year — of issues related to low voltage control systems, this time focusing on pure battery electric vehicles.

separate operations.”

He and the committee then showed how the process and equipment used to anchor, measure and pull vehicles has evolved significantly over decades, looking today nothing like the process — and the amount of time — required in the past.

And while developing and maintaining written definitions for the terminology in the industry isn’t always the most compelling content at CIC, the work of the Definitions Committee helps with communication within the industry — and can be key in negotiations and conflicts within the industry.

At CIC in Vegas, the committee received thumbs-up approval from the body for adopting about 30 definitions related to vehicle safety system calibration terms based on the work of the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE). Those definitions, for example, differentiate between dynamic and static calibration procedures, define a half dozen different target types and two types of reflectors, and offer examples of what can be included in a “calibration report.”

“Traveling around the country visiting shops, one of the things that was disturbing was that frame machines are one of the largest investments that a shop owner makes, yet for some reason, it doesn’t seem to be a profit center in a lot of the shops that I visited,” Yeung said. “The reason I know that is a lot of frame machines are just packed away in the corner with 2 feet of dust on them. I don’t know if they purchased them just to participate in a program, or initially they were sold with the idea that it would do a better repair. But when it came down to get compensated for what was involved

“First, you have to realize that most standard business insurance policies out there exclude cyber.”
SHAUGHN KENNEDY

SPARK UNDERWRITERS

for you, and that you actually listen to them. That’s more important than the insurance itself.”

Kennedy said it’s also important to really understand the cyber policy you buy.

“Your insurance has a lot of fine print about what your obligation is under that contract,” he said. “If it specifically lists certain things, like you agreed that you’d have multifactor authentication, things like that, and you didn’t do it, then you put yourself in jeopardy where you may actually have a claim denied because you didn’t uphold your part of the contract. And a lot of times people don’t go through that policy enough, or your agent doesn’t explain it to you, and then there is a jeopardy there.”

Finding Common Language on Calibrations

Vehicle technology was also among

The definitions will be incorporated into CIC’s existing glossary of industry terms, available at the CIC website. Anyone in the industry can submit suggestions for changes or additions to the definitions included in the glossary.

Moving Away From ‘Set-Up and Measure’

Also during CIC in Las Vegas, California shop owner Kye Yeung, who co-chairs a new Repair Processes and Procedures Committee, said he’s stopped using the term “set-up and measure” within his shop.

“When I opened my business in 1975, a lot of things were handwritten, and I think the terminology ‘set-up and pull’ or ‘set-up and measure’ was just us being lazy,” Yeung said during the committee’s presentation. “It was just a term so we didn’t have to do a lot of writing. And unfortunately that term is still used today, yet they’re two

to do the repair properly, maybe the technicians felt — and this is just my opinion — that maybe they weren’t compensated fairly for whatever this [process] was, and decided that if they had a way around it, they would just do it the way they needed to do it.”

Yeung said that’s why his shop has stopped using the “set-up” term. “It’s been antiquated. It doesn’t really say much. There’s no definition of it what’s really included and what’s not,” Yeung said. “What we do as far as dealing with cars that have structural damage is we ‘mount and calibrate to a frame bench for structural alignment and/or structural parts replacement.’”

As appropriate, he said, they add the term “OEM-approved frame machine.”

The Society of Collision Repair Specialists (SCRS) said earlier this year that it plans to conduct a study of structural set-up and measure, similar to its 2022 study of blend refinish labor times, which helped lead all three estimating systems to reexamine their formulas for that procedure and add more flexibility to their systems related to blending.

Several hundred SEMA attendees spent part of their time in Las Vegas at the Collision Industry Conference
Trent Tinsley, right, moderated a CIC panel discussion on cyber security that included, from left, Shaughn Kennedy of Spark Underwriters and Jim Dye of Body by Cochran

‘Grandfather’ of Vehicle Gifting Program To Be Recognized During 2024 SEMA Show

More than 40 years ago, a body shop owner named Dave Adams began giving away refurbished vehicles to those in need. Over time, the giftings were formalized by AkzoNobel as the Acoat Selected National Benevolence Program. Inspired by the impact of these efforts, the National Auto Body Council® (NABC) began donating vehicles as part of the Recycled Rides® program in 2007.

behind this effort. Over the years, he recognized how hard she worked as a single mom raising three boys. While Adams was in elementary school, he remembers a neighbor offering to paint his mom’s old car, a four-door AMC Rambler.

“My mother loved the color purple and he painted it purple metal flake,” recalled Adams. “It was a wreck. Just imagine a four-door Rambler with a purple metal flake paint job.”

Adams considers his first official car giveaway “with thoughtfulness” to be a blue Ford Taurus station wagon. Once it was fixed up and painted, his next thought was, “How do you give a car away?”

Adams will be recognized for his initiative and role in the vehicle giveaways during the NABC Recycled Rides ceremony Nov. 5 at the 2024 SEMA Show in Las Vegas, NV.

Autobody News talked to Adams about what inspired him to gift cars in his early 20s and how the initiative evolved.

A self-described motorhead, Adams began working at his father Kay’s collision repair facility in Utah in seventh grade and continued through high school. After graduating, he joined United States Steel for a few years. Although he enjoyed it, he missed being in the shop. When he was 23, Adams opened his own facility, Dave Adams Classic Auto Repair, in Orem, UT, with two employees.

“I had a pretty good head start because of my involvement in my dad’s business and people knew me locally,” he recalled.

About four years into running his business, Adams started a towing company. Occasionally, he found what he considered to be decent cars with minor damage.

“I didn’t know what to do with them other than take them to the junkyard,” he said.

To help support the community, he started giving away vehicles to people who needed “a hand up, not a handout.”

Adams considers his mother, Beppy DeHaas, who worked at his shop for 20 years, the inspiration

conversation other than me asking how he was doing,” said Adams.

The man remembered Adams and thanked him for the station wagon. He had been working for about three weeks and nearly had enough money to rent an apartment.

“I probably cried driving away because my first thought was, ‘I didn’t only give him a car, I gave him a house to live in while he could prepare for a home,’” he shared.

he said. “It was just so awesome.” The vehicle giveaways were mainly held at his facility during the holidays. Every year, Adams gifted at least one car; sometimes, it was three or four depending on whether he found somebody who really needed help.

He went to the nearby unemployment office and asked one of the counselors if there were any clients who had job opportunities but no transportation.

“The counselor just happened to have a family standing there with two little kids,” said Adams.

With the Ford keys in hand, Adams told the father, “If I could have a minute of your time, I would like to help your family with transportation by giving you a car.”

That was the same year Adams began creating a process to give away vehicles. At the time, he was president of the Utah Valley State College (UVSC) Alumni Association. The school had a technical program where Adams took classes over the years and later became a mentor. The college offered an option called Turning Point, where adults could learn basic skills to help find a job.

Adams contacted the coordinators and asked for a list of people who had great potential but no transportation.

“I would do my due diligence, evaluate the people, and then decide who should receive a car,” he said.

He also received letters from residents who knew somebody who needed help.

In 1999, Adams shared the vehicle gifting idea with his Acoat Selected North American Performance Group (NAPG) members as part of the new ideas contest. At first, the reaction he received from about 70% of the men was very negative.

“They couldn’t believe I would give someone a car and then walk away,” he said.

In response, Adams told them that until they had experienced it, they wouldn’t understand.

“Knowing that you have made such a difference in 10 minutes that would change their life forever is amazing,” he emphasized.

Although many shop owners weren’t in support, he said 100% of the wives, business partners or secretaries at the meeting were blown away.

“The biggest influence in my life is my wife, Shelly,” Adams said. “If my wife told me, David, you’d better do this, that’s something that I would have needed to do.”

Adams ultimately won the new idea contest, although many in attendance wanted proof the program would benefit their businesses.

Following the meeting, Adams contacted local news channels and invited his friends to the next car giveaway. At the following performance group meeting, he showed VHS recordings of every major channel headlining the donation, as well as a full-page color print newspaper ad.

Adams drove the family to the Department of Motor Vehicles, paid to get the car licensed and plated and then funded the first six months of insurance.

About three weeks later, Adams was driving home and stopped at a gas station. He noticed a Taurus station wagon with curtains on the side windows, two thermos ice coolers in the back and a little mattress with two kids on it. He realized the car was the same one he had given to the father in need.

“We didn’t have much

Adams and his employees repaired the vehicles and painted them using products donated by AkzoNobel. He contacted the recipients to let them know they had won something and invited them to bring their families to his shop.

“We never had anybody not come,” he noted.

A luncheon was set out and a big bow was placed on each vehicle. Adams also filled the cars with gifts for the kids and held a presentation, talking about the collision industry and thanking the person for coming to the luncheon.

“Then I would say that the biggest reason you’re here is that you and your family are getting a car today,”

“I gave them solid proof of what they could get financially if that was their goal and the men were eventually blown away, too.”

However, Adams said that was never his intention.

“I never did this, not even once, to get my shop any accolades,” he shared. “My goal always was to help those less fortunate by giving cars away.”

Recognizing the benefits and impact of the vehicle giftings, AkzoNobel adopted the program and named it the AkzoNobel Acoat Selected National Benevolence Program. It became an official part of the Acoat Selected NAPG,

Dave Adams considers a blue Ford Taurus station wagon to be his first official car giveaway “with thoughtfulness.”
To help support the community, Dave Adams gave away vehicles to people who needed “a hand up, not a handout.”
Dave Adams grew his business to include four locations with 75 employees.

Mike Anderson — From the Desk of Mike Anderson

Collision Repairers Looking for More than Just Parts Discounts, Find Multiple Systems a Time-Suck

As I mentioned in previous columns, I’ve conducted more than a dozen meetings bringing together collision repairers with regional wholesale parts managers for one of the automakers. The key goal: to give both sides of the parts purchase transaction a better understanding of each other’s perspective, and a clearer understanding of how the parts processes work between all the various stakeholders.

In the most recent of those columns, I shared some of what collision repairers said loud and clear about what they are looking for in a best-in-class OEM wholesale parts vendor. When they decide who to buy parts from, what are the most important considerations? The list invariably included:

• Acceptance of electronic parts orders.

• Good inventory. Getting the right part quickly can be just as — or even more — valuable to a shop as the discount.

• Knowledgeable, helpful staff.

• Accurate ETAs. Shops said some vendors receiving electronic parts orders may not input the actual estimated time of arrival. The system may default to an ETA of the next day, when in fact that has not been researched and verified by the parts vendor. As I said in my previous column, it is critical that wholesale parts departments understand that collision repairers make decisions based on parts availability. These decisions impact the shop’s employees and customers, their relationships with insurers, their productivity and their bottom line. Accurate communication is critical. If it were possible, shops would love to have the ability to know the part availability at the warehouse.

• Ability to scrub parts order by VIN.

• Prompt pick-up of returns and processing of credits. If parts are returned because the vehicle turned out to be a total loss, and the vendor can’t accept the returns without a parts return fee, shops said they can bill the insurer for that parts return fee.

• Email confirmation of orders received.

• Full and complete orders, with no “orphan lines.” Let’s say a body shop orders eight parts, but the dealership sends them nine,

perhaps because of a supersession. If the shop is electronically ordering parts, and electronically receiving invoices, there’s not a place for that orphan line to go. Tell the shop you’re sending an extra part so they can update the estimating system and have a place to receive all the items in that order. Again, it all comes down to great communication.

expectation mentioned, not ever considered the No. 1 demand. It was usually the fifth, sixth or seventh thing that made it to the list.

The best discount in the world doesn’t matter, for example, if the part is wrong or it takes forever to get the part. I’m sure there are parts vendors reading this and thinking, “Mike, you don’t understand. All my

• Consistent delivery windows. Having drivers arrive at the shop within consistent windows of time each day helps shops plan production. I’ll discuss the issue of shops that have inefficiencies and fail to perform 100% disassembly leading to multiple parts orders in a future article.

• Accuracy of order fulfillment and billing. Most shops said they would like to receive credits back in 48 hours or less.

• It would be great whenever possible to have parts invoiced in sequential order to match the shop purchase order in the management system.

• Shops say it would be useful if a vendor can provide a monthly report showing their percentage of return parts for the month (excluding core charges).

And yes, a “fair discount” always made the list. But I assure you, in meeting after meeting, among shop representatives from all types of shops, all around the country, “fair discount” was never the first

shop clients care about is price or discount.” I promise we will address this in a future article.

Lastly, for any insurers or automakers reading this: Shops are just as frustrated as parts vendors at having to use multiple platforms to order parts. I’ll go into this more in a future column, but here’s a not-uncommon scenario one shop owner recently shared with me about the wasted time these multiple parts systems add to what should be a simple process.

Step 1: He wrote an estimate for a job that was going to require four parts, including a headlight. His estimating system’s parts locating system — we’ll call it Parts System 1 — showed available parts, and he selected parts from that list.

Step 2: As a direct repair shop for an insurer that requires the use of another parts system — we’ll call it Parts System 2 — he dumped the estimate into that system and waited for bids to come back. For the headlight alone, that system found 45 options, so he went

through that list to find the best options.

Step 3: Back in the estimating system, he deleted the previous headlight and entered the one from Parts System 2. By that time — which happened to be the following morning — the estimating system had refreshed its system and so presented new headlight options, including one that was less expensive. He went back into Parts System 2 to document why he was choosing the headlight from Parts System 1.

Step 4: He then scrubbed the estimate for compliance, and that report has its own parts search that has nothing to do with the Parts System 1 search. That identified a headlight that’s even cheaper, so once again he deleted the headlight and added the latest one found, again documenting within the systems why all these choices were being made.

Step 5: With the estimate written to comply with insurer requirements, he then sent the estimate to Parts System 3, one that’s required for the relevant automaker’s certification program. That system identified new OEM parts that match all the pricing on the earlier parts found, but to accurately reflect what is being done to the vehicle, he has to delete all the previous parts found and reenter all the price-matched parts from Parts System 3.

Fifty minutes later, he said, he could finally order the parts. In that amount of time, he said, he could have blueprinted another job. This scenario happened every single day. This is ridiculous. We need to work together on a solution.

I hope at least one person in the insurance industry will reach out to me to better understand the impact of this and how much this delays things for shops and customers. We are stepping over $100 bills to pick up pennies. There is a better way.

Next time: I’ll share what shop owners should understand about what makes them a good customer for a dealerships’ parts department, and what shops and their parts suppliers can do together to each improve their business.

One shop owner told Mike why it took him 50 minutes to order a headlight due to having to use multiple parts ordering systems.

Classic Collision

since inception.

“Our goal has been to provide quality repairs promptly to all our customers daily. When we looked for a company to take over what we built, we knew that Classic Collision was our top-notch choice,” said John McMichael , former owner of Bo’s Collision Center.

“We welcome Bo’s Collision to the Classic Collision family. Their dedication to providing customers with exceptional service and highquality repairs perfectly aligns with our values. This acquisition marks an exciting step forward in our mission to expand our presence in Florida,” said Toan Nguyen , CEO of Classic Collision.

Your leading source for SOUTHEASTERN Collision Repair News!

On Oct. 1, about 30 first responders from the Memphis, TN, area learned new rescue skills, vehicle cutting techniques and approaches to EVs, all as part of a program that saves critical minutes and lives in rescue situations.

The National Auto Body Council® (NABC) First Responder Emergency Education (F.R.E.E.™) program helps prepare local first responder teams to rescue accident victims from late-model vehicles. The program provides education and live demonstrations on working with high-strength steel, airbags, advanced restraint systems, onboard technology and safety around alternative fuel vehicles.

Pinnacle Financial Partners hosted first responders from Memphis-area fire departments for the program. Allstate and Farmers donated the vehicles, Copart provided the towing, HURST Jaws of Life and MES provided the tools and education, and Lucid Motors showcased an EV for a virtual extrication demonstration.

“This kind of training on today’s

advanced vehicles isn’t widely available and it is critical to how we can serve drivers and our community,” said Piperton Fire Chief Reed Bollack. “Learning how to navigate and cut these advanced cars helps ensure we provide the best care for our patients and protect our first responders.”

Department, where he also lives with his wife and child. He has been a volunteer there for six years.

Prior to joining the Piperton Fire Department, Farris worked for the Tennessee Air National Guard, and he was also in the U.S. Army National Guard for six years with an MOS of 13 Bravo.

One of Bollack’s first responders was honored as the 6,000th first responder to participate in the program. Derek Farris, a full-time firefighter/EMT and “B” shift lead with the Piperton Fire Department, recently celebrated his four-year work anniversary. He is also an active volunteer member of the Gilt Edge, TN, Volunteer Fire

“It’s really a surprise and an honor to receive this,” said Farris. “I just want to do my job and take care of my family and my community.”

The first responder education event is part of Pinnacle’s ongoing commitment to giving back to the regions where it does business.

“We’re very proud to bring this program to Memphis to help prepare our first responders to rescue area drivers in accident situations,” said Phillip May, Memphis president for Pinnacle Financial Partners. “We are focused on serving the residents of the Memphis area, and providing the NABC F.R.E.E. program helps ensure they are safer on the road.”

training,” he said. “(It will be) all aspects of a shop from front to finish — our goal is to have a speaker for every topic.”

Emphasis on Education

Education will be at the forefront of the conference, with Collision Professional Repairer Education Program presentations in the form of panel discussions and seminars on both days.

The conference is still accepting presentation proposals in areas including management, vehicle technology, profitability and repair methodology. Proposals should include presentation title; names, companies, titles and email addresses of presenters involved; a description of

the presentation; and three takeaways for attendees.

Those interested should contact Chris Cage at chris@ southeastcollisionconference.com before Dec. 31.

The effort to cover all aspects of running a shop naturally extends to individuals in charge of those operations. Kent said event organizers desire to attract workers like refinishers and technicians so they can enhance their levels of education.

Jordan Hendler, WMABA executive director, emphasized in a press release the importance of the SCC in bringing together industry groups in one place.

“It brings added discussion and networking as well as other associations and pivotal industry groups,” she said. “Higher representation of vendors, OEMs, insurers and more will be present.”

The Importance of Collaboration

This will mark the third year WMABA and CCA have come together to put on the event.

The collaboration, said CCA President Kyle Bradshaw, has elevated the conference through connection between leadership of the two organizations, which has generated new ideas and strength. These benefits, he said, have offset

any difficulties in bringing together two associations to produce a single event.

“Obviously, it’s had its challenges. It’s not all sunshine and rainbows all the time, but it certainly has been able to provide a lot of value for members of both associations, [and] then obviously,

helping us to reach more people than we normally would reach,” he said. “Our conference has seen continued growth year over year due to that.”

Kent echoed Bradshaw’s sentiments about added value from association collaboration.

“Jordan and her team have brought insight with regard to organizations and professionalism — things like that,” he said. “They’ve brought connections — contacts that maybe I didn’t have previously.”

Staying Up to Date and Profitable

In a rapidly evolving environment, the level of education and opportunity SCC organizers seek to provide is key to keeping industry members up to date and profitable, Bradshaw posited.

“Our industry is ever-changing, ever-evolving. Vehicles are evolving at a rapid pace, so certainly for us, we want to be able to provide that top tier level of education that people [need],” he said. “There are a lot of our members that are literally working and grinding in their shops every single day. They’re not afforded the ability or the luxury to go out and spend a week at training or a week at a conference.

“Obviously, we’re able to bring that type of environment to a local trade show. That’s really what we’re looking to do is basically bring education to people, bring resources to people,” Bradshaw continued. “We want to help them continue to sharpen their swords, and for people that are continuing to be in business and continuing to be an independent repairer, we certainly want to help them equip themselves and make sure that vehicles are repaired safely and, obviously, make sure people are profitable while doing it right. That’s the whole purpose of being in business.”

Find more information at southeastcollisionconference.com.

CCA President Kyle Bradshaw.
CCA Executive Director Josh Kent.

Vehicle Gifting

available to all Sikkens users. Later, the name was shortened to the National Benevolence Program.

The goal was to present refurbished cars to deserving individuals or organizations during the holiday season. Participating shops worked with local charitable organizations to help identify an individual or group in need of a vehicle. Many also contacted local vendors to receive donations for insurance coverage, parts, oil changes, car washes, tires, car seats and toys.

program, which led shops through a formalized process to source, repair and gift vehicles.

Two years later, NABC started Recycled Rides.

AkzoNobel ended its National Benevolence in 2018, urging the handful of legacy participants to maintain their giftings under the NABC banner.

Since 2007, more than 3,300 vehicles have been donated as part of Recycled Rides, valued at approximately $47 million, according to the NABC website.

Adams, who was involved with vehicle giftings for about 35 years, has many fond memories of the experiences.

“The mission of the community relations program was to generate goodwill at the local level while improving and promoting the image of the collision repair industry,” said Rick Fifer, central business services manager at AkzoNobel.

To help support participating shops, AkzoNobel provided a media list, an event planning and media relations guide and signage.

In 1999, fewer than five cars were given out. Just five years later, 45 were gifted.

“Participants said that initially, they were looking forward to receiving some free publicity, but after experiencing their first giveaway, most agreed that they would do it again without any publicity because they loved the ‘feel-good’ factor of giving back to their communities in a time of need,” Fifer shared.

In 2005, Fifer said AkzoNobel felt it would be beneficial to involve a nonprofit organization in the initiative to increase its credibility and garner more media attention so it would not come across as a paint company or body shop attempting to get free publicity.

AkzoNobel approached NABC about getting involved in the project and helping it grow. The company also provided its standard operating procedures (SOPs) for the

giveaways. Local wrecking yards offered to donate parts for repairs.

“Sometimes, it took a little nudge, but eventually, I got enough people on board that I didn’t always have to buy the cars,” he said.

When the giftings were coordinated under the National Benevolence Program, insurance companies often donated vehicles.

“Farmers Insurance was one of my largest direct repair facilities that I worked with. A great friend of mine who was an adjuster, Mont Collier, helped me set up part of the program with Farmers Insurance,” he said.

Adams’ wife, Shelly, and children Nick, Tanaca and Noah, always supported the vehicle giftings. Nick and Tanaca both worked at the shop for several years and Adams’ brother, Joe, was employed there for more than 20 years.

When he was 46, Adams sold his business to a small conglomerate. “It was a five-year contract sale and they defaulted in four years,” he explained.

profitable,” he said.

Over the next decade, Adams grew his business to include four locations with 75 employees; he also managed a dealership location. He later sold to Gerber Collision & Glass.

His advice for shop owners considering gifting vehicles is to get involved personally.

“For it to manifest and build and grow, the owner has to have the heart, the willingness and the wanting to do it,” he said. “To do that, you’ve got to dive in headfirst.”

He compares it to unconditional love.

“You have to go into this with a clean heart, have no expectations and know that you’ve done a great thing,” he emphasized. “Don’t look back; just move forward and be proud of helping your community.”

After selling his business and retiring, Adams said it’s an overwhelming feeling to receive recognition during the NABC ceremony.

“After a certain amount of time

Dave Adams said he never donated cars for accolades. His goal was to help those less fortunate.

Automotive Parts Supply Chain Withstands Port Strike

Catastrophic weather and union strikes put the automotive parts industry on edge, but fears of temporary inflation in the collision repair segment seem to have been avoided.

The International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA), which represents port workers along the eastern U.S. coastline, initiated a strike Oct. 1, halting work for 50,000 members and stalling operations at 14 major ports along the East Coast and Gulf of Mexico. The strike came as regional hubs grappled with the aftermath of Hurricane Helene and prepared for Hurricane Milton.

These concurrent events alarmed automotive analysts. European manufacturers ship vehicle parts to

have happened at a worse time [for automotive parts]. Right when there were ships bound for the East Coast, the storm was shutting down ports proactively,” said Greg Horn, chief industry relations officer at PartsTrader. “We dodged a bullet here. It could have been a very devastating strike for the U.S. economy in general.”

Fortunately for the automotive parts industry, the strike ended after three days, with a temporary deal between the ILA and the U.S. Maritime Alliance. The agreement, which will last until January 2025, has helped prevent further supply disruptions. According to Horn, prices have remained stable despite the turbulence.

PartsTrader operates an online marketplace that connects repair shops with parts suppliers,

company can diagnose potential disruptions and evaluate the impact of events like the ILA strike. However, he noted that advanced rerouting and sufficient stock levels helped suppliers avoid significant delays, minimizing the strike’s effect on parts availability.

In preparation for the strike, suppliers rerouted dozens of cargo ships from the East Coast to the West Coast in mid-September. Ports on the West Coast, which had been operating at 70% capacity, absorbed the increased load, reaching 80% capacity without major delays.

“I think the takeaway is the suppliers had enough advanced notice. They altered their plan. They had enough stock already that it is a non-event,” Horn said. “So, good news all around.”

manufacturers streamlined their distribution networks before the United Auto Workers (UAW) strike in 2023. While the limited impact from the

“I think the takeaway is the suppliers had enough advanced notice. They altered their plan. They had enough stock already that it is a non-event,”

initial strike shows that automotive supply chains are more robust than initially anticipated, Horn warned the union’s contract runs out in January. The ILA’s three-month agreement increased union wages by 61.5%,

GREG HORN CHIEF INDUSTRY RELATIONS OFFICER AT PARTSTRADER

Connectors in Collision Repair: What Every Technician Needs to Know

In collision repair, precision and quality matter at every stage. Among the critical components are automotive pigtail connectors, which play an essential role in restoring a vehicle’s electrical systems. These small but vital parts ensure that everything from airbags to headlights functions at peak performance. When you understand how to select and source the right connectors, you save time, reduce costs, and improve repair outcomes. Here’s everything you need to know about choosing the ideal connector for your next repair.

Why Connectors are Vital in Collision Repair

After a collision, the integrity of a vehicle’s electrical system can be compromised, making reliable automotive connectors, sometimes called pigtails, essential for restoring proper function. They connect various components within the car’s wiring harness, including sensors, lights, and control modules, to maintain proper functionality and safety. A damaged or unreliable connector can jeopardize these systems, putting repair quality and safety at risk. This makes choosing high-quality connectors an important step for any repair technician looking to complete repairs with confidence.

The Challenge of Finding the Right Connector

Finding the right replacement connector is a common challenge for repair shops, with so many makes, models, and connector types on the market. Some shops may use generic parts, but an improper fit can compromise safety and repair quality. FindPigtails.com simplifies this process, offering over 350,000 connectors and multiple search options so you can quickly find the right match. You can search by keyword, VIN, make/model/year, pin count, or even upload a photo of the connector you need. Our reverse image search automatically identifies the exact part, streamlining your search so you can focus on getting the job done right.

● Comprehensive Database: Over 350,000 connectors to cover a wide range of makes and models.

● Flexible Search Options: Search by keyword, VIN, make/ model/year, or pin count.

● Reverse Image Search: Upload a photo of the connector, and our system automatically identifies the correct part.

● Pigtail Pros Support: Expert help is available via text, phone, and live chat to answer any questions.

The Value of a Trusted Connector Specialist

Partnering with a trusted connector provider can significantly impact your repair efficiency and quality. Look for providers with deep industry knowledge, rigorous quality standards, and a vast catalog that ensures you’ll always find what you need. FindPigtails.com stands out as a trusted resource, offering connectors that meet or exceed OEM specifications, so you can be confident in every repair.

Our Pigtail Smart App and intuitive search tools help technicians on the job quickly locate specific connectors. With live support from our knowledgeable Pigtail Pros, assistance is just a text, phone call,

or chat away. Working with a reliable source like FindPigtails.com means you get the parts you need with speed and accuracy, avoiding the trial and error that can delay repairs.

Repair vs. Replacement: A Cost-Saving Approach

Repairing individual connectors is often more cost-effective and practical than replacing entire harnesses, which can be costly and labor-intensive. Sourcing high-quality connectors lets you restore functionality without extensive modifications, making this approach both economical and efficient. FindPigtails.com carries a wide selection of connectors across makes and models, allowing you to replace only what’s needed while keeping repairs high-quality and budget-friendly. This approach reduces your repair cycle time and enhances productivity in your shop

Supporting Repair Specialists with Powerful Tools

At FindPigtails.com, we make connector sourcing simple with tools like our Pigtail Smart App. With search options by keyword, vehicle details, or image, we give technicians quick access to exactly what they need. Our customer support team, accessible via chat, text, or phone, provides on-demand assistance, ensuring you have expert help throughout the process.

For readers from Autobody News, we’ve set up a special page with an exclusive offer. Visit our Autobody News page to see how we can help make your next repair even smoother.

Trust FindPigtails.com for Quality Repairs

In collision repair, reliable connectors are key to completing quality work. FindPigtails.com provides the tools, selection, and support to make every repair seamless and effective. Visit us to discover the difference our products and expertise can bring to your next project.

How To Prepare For Collision Industry Innovations, Transformation

Mario Dimovski’s experience working as a 16-year-old plastic repair technician over three decades ago taught him about the importance of innovating to succeed. In his current role as director of circular and repair innovation at The Boyd Group, Dimovski oversees more than 900 collision shops in the U.S. and Canada. He is dedicated to advancing the collision repair industry and focuses on sustainability, plastic repairs, the evolving nature of work and digital transformation, especially in automation and artificial intelligence (AI) platforms.

In addition to his role at Boyd Group, Dimovski is a member of Auto Additive’s 3D Printing Advisory Council and is a global ambassador for the International Bodyshop Industry Symposium (IBIS).

At the recent Automechanika Frankfurt show in Germany, Dimovski presented on “Innovations & Transformation in the Collision Repair Industry.” Dimovski talked about how the industry is transforming and what shops need to know to prepare for the future.

With the fast-paced lifestyle common today, Dimovski said many people are on the run and out of time, both in their personal and professional lives.

They are also reliant on electronic devices and connectivity. “We’ve become a culture of instant gratification and social media is a huge influencer,” he noted.

While shop owners and managers expect new employees to dedicate themselves to hard work and training, he finds many don’t have that level of commitment.

Dimovski recalled when he interviewed prospective employees in the past and asked about their goals, which he found to be ambitious. However, he often notices newcomers lacking focus and patience.

“Everybody wants a pay raise tomorrow and be a boss tomorrow,” he said.

He said this mindset is hampering the industry. At the same time, new digital careers — such as professional gamers — are evolving. “This is forcing our industry and others to transform,” he explained.

Technology & Automation

Dimovski discussed the future impact technology and automation will likely have on the collision industry. “There is a disconnect between where we’re

headed and where the collision industry is today,” he noted.

To help address that disconnect, he said the industry will need to find ways to transfer knowledge to technicians.

He encouraged the industry to watch a video about the Audi Smart Factory (https://www.youtube.

Environmental Impact

In his current role at Boyd Group, Dimovski is very involved in sustainability. He said it will play a significant role in future business.

In terms of climate change, he shared that it is driving consumers and big business to be more ecoconscious. At Boyd Group, for

com/watch?v=ZXOb7yH1Yeo), illustrating how some OEMs are using augmented reality and AI to fix cars. In contrast, most collision repair facilities are unfamiliar with these methods or technologies.

“The actual push for us to transform is being led by the OEMs,” said Dimovski.

He pointed to the increase in electric vehicles (EVs) and cars with autonomous features. abundance of them, which is forcing us to change our repair methods,” he added.

The use of AI and machine learning are also becoming more commonplace. uses AI in some instances, such as creating the images he used in his presentation, he acknowledged it can create issues and challenges.

Other technological innovations he mentioned are wearables, like watches, and devices, such as augmented reality glasses.

He noted that companies like Tesla are building humanoid robots for home and work that will likely be used in the future. 3D printing technology is on the rise, which he said is a huge opportunity for the collision industry.

“Everybody talks about how all these technologies — especially automation and AI — are going to create job losses, but maybe job losses in one sector will be job gains in another,” he said.

the company is going to be conscious about the environment and ensure plastic is handled responsibly.

“No matter where you sit on the fence about it, climate change is happening and impacting our lives,” he said.

As a result, he encourages the industry to be more climate-conscious.

“The collision industry is the second biggest industry that produces polypropylene waste in the world,” he said. “Millions of parts go straight in the ground… we’re probably one of the only industries that actually throws away perfectly good parts.”

He said that circular economies — economic systems based on the reuse and regeneration of materials or products to continue production in a sustainable/environmentally friendly way — are on the rise, and used Apple as an example.

“They [Apple] are constantly running programs where you can hand in your phone and they recondition and refurbish it,” he said.

example, the company produced an Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) report stating

Dimovski talked about the environmental impact of repair versus replace.

“We just can’t keep replacing; it’s

Mario Dimovski, director of circular and repair innovation at The Boyd Group, presented “Innovations & Transformation in the Collision Repair Industry” at the Automechanika Frankfurt show in Germany.

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hurting the environment,” he said. “We have to start repairing.”

He said the push to repair is being driven by transformation and technology.

Driving Transformation in Collision Repair

Dimovski discussed technological advancements in cars with advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) features and radar.

“If you compare a vehicle that was manufactured 10-15 years ago to one that is manufactured today, it’s literally a computer on wheels,” he said. “We need to think about how we fix and calibrate these vehicles.”

Technological changes are also increasing costs, according to Dimovski, leading to more vehicles going to salvage and creating an e-waste issue.

Dimovski commented on new developments in vehicle materials, such as plastic, which is lightweight.

“It’s an easy material to recycle and to source and is growing in abundance,” explained Dimovski.

Previously, an automobile might have a plastic bumper cover. Now, there are trims, side panels, roof panels and fenders made of plastic.

“Metal was the No. 1 component that we repaired and our body techs were trained to repair it,” he said.

“Now, we have a fleet where we have so much plastic.”

With many in the industry unaware of how to fix plastic parts, Dimovski said new skills are needed.

People: Our Problem, Our Solution

Dimovski noted the industry has an aging workforce with technicians on the brink of retirement. “They’ve been doing repairs the same way for so long that they are comfortable and aren’t open to innovation,” he said.

At the same time, new technicians are joining the industry and need to be trained on the “latest and greatest” to work on today’s cars, which is creating a skills gap.

Another challenge with an aging workforce is that it’s leading to a shortage of mentors and trainers, which Dimovski said is critical for success.

He recalled his first job as a technician and being asked to recondition plastic bumpers. He finished the day proud that he completed 10 more than his quota and would receive a bonus. When he went to work the following day, he learned he had been using the wrong side of the sandpaper.

Dimovski said his boss was a great mentor who realized the company lacked a process. He received his bonus and found a new procedure was put in place.

Harper Volkswagen

“That was a great example of not assuming that people know,” he said. “Now, every time I’m involved in recruitment training, I cover even the most basic things because they’re important.”

However, he said shops are so busy and understaffed they don’t have time or people to train new hires, which can lead to a high turnover rate. Poaching employees from other shops is also an issue.

For some businesses, he said the problem isn’t talent; it’s a lack of skills.

“That’s something we’re going to have to overcome quickly,” he said.

To help attract new talent, Dimovski stressed the importance of updating facilities to look their best, especially with other employment options available, such as Apple and Google.

“With a huge demographic of working at home, it’s critical to make the collision repair job more appealing and attractive,” he said.

He advocated focusing on employees’ well-being and building a good culture.

“People these days prefer to work in a great place where they can go and be happy and work with their friends and colleagues, then jump ship for more money, especially this younger generation,” he observed.

Repair Standards & Specialized Training

Dimovski mentioned the importance of standardizing repairs, adhering to processes, and having compliance and auditing tools. He also addressed global versus localized training and advised repairers to adhere to quality and safety assurance.

To help build employees’ skills, Dimovski recommended segmenting training sessions so they’re shorter and more precise.

The Future of Collision

Looking to the future, Dimovski encouraged the industry to prepare for the digital transformation, address green initiatives and the environment and help reduce costs by repairing more than replacing. He advised owners to understand who their real competitors are and tap into new talent pools. Along this journey, he said there’s an opportunity to collaborate with insurance companies and OEMs. He said it’s essential that shops understand the tools, equipment and information needed to fix cars properly.

This requires a mindset of thinking differently, according to Dimovski.

“Innovation is all about preparing to fail,” he said. “The future is in our hands. We have the ability to change and to better our industry, but it’s up to us to make that happen.”

DataTouch announced the commercial release of “P-Pages AI,” an artificial intelligence (AI) technology offered to collision repair shops to efficiently convert estimates received in a PDF format from external appraisal sources into a sharable digital format based on CIECA Standards.

It was designed to correctly interpret and apply the existing Collision Estimating Guide (CEG) Procedure Pages (P-Pages) for each estimating system.

In just a few seconds, P-Pages AI generates an updated electronic estimate that identifies the “not included” operations and costs per the P-Pages that are frequently overlooked by the appraisal source. The P-Pages AI estimate also identifies the section within the CEG P-Pages that documents the operation required to complete the repair for each crash part.

For more information about DataTouch and P-Pages AI, visit www.datatouch.us.

Florida Auto Body Association Becomes SCRS Affiliate

The Society of Collision Repair Specialists (SCRS) announced the Florida Auto Body Association (FABA) is its newest affiliate association.

Serving the entire state of Florida, FABA’s mission is to advance the automotive repair industry through comprehensive education, innovative training programs and proactive legislative initiatives.

“There was an interest from some shop owners about starting up about a year ago,” said Ementi Coary , FABA executive director. “They had approached me, but I was still in the process of getting the Oklahoma Auto Body Association (OKABA) up and running. Once OKABA was doing well enough, it opened

the door to start the new venture in Florida.”

FABA has three-day “Road Shows” planned March 11-13, June 10-12 and Sept. 16-18, designed to visit three different cities and promote the new association to collision repairers across the state.

“Our primary objectives are to make education and training accessible to the shops in this market,” added Coary. “Eventually we can look to bigger initiatives such as legislation that can help our member population.”

FABA elected to affiliate with SCRS to partner with the other associations around the country, and to continue to learn from the collaboration with other likeminded organizations.

“I believe the other affiliate associations, and SCRS at the national level, can both bring exceptional value to the shops in Florida,” he said. “By working alongside the other states, and with SCRS, it is a natural conduit for our members to stay in touch with what is happening in the industry.”

“By working alongside the other states, and with SCRS, it is a natural conduit for our members to stay in touch with what is happening in the industry.”

“I think it’s encouraging to see leadership step up within the Florida market to serve collision repairers in the state,” said SCRS Chairman Amber Alley . “It’s so valuable when there are active associations that are sharing information and creating opportunities for businesses at a local level, and I’m thrilled that FABA becomes a meaningful addition to the SCRS family of associations that helps to extend the voice, size and scope of the groups we serve. We’re thrilled to welcome them.”

3M, Axalta Announce Collaboration on New Training For Collision Industry

3M and Axalta announced a collaboration to introduce a new training content series for the collision repair industry focused on automotive refinishing.

“It is meant to focus on the best practices of process optimization possible for an impactful enhancement to the body shop process around the themes of productivity, efficiency, quality, as well as safety and sustainability,” explained Corey Munn, 3M’s Automotive Aftermarket global commercial director.

“It was a natural fit to work together on this initiative. We wanted to work together to share our insights and guidance to any body shop looking to improve their operations in an

accessible format,” said Patricia Morschel, vice president of marketing and commercial operations at Axalta.

“With the current labor shortages and challenges of attracting and retaining talent, it’s important to continue to provide resources to body shops to ensure the industry’s long-term viability.”

About a year ago, 3M and Axalta discussed the importance of helping the industry understand the proper repair process in a constantly changing environment.

As leaders in training and education, both companies recognized their synergies and decided to collaborate to tackle the challenge together and help drive the industry forward.

An essential aspect of the program was to ensure it was process-based and not product-focused.

“This initiative is not about selling more products,” noted Munn. “We truly wanted to bring together competencies, capabilities and shared values to address the real needs of our industry and help body shops understand how they can optimize their processes.”

He said the output of the collaboration reflects the best in refinish process expertise. 3M and Axalta brought together application

engineers with decades of refinish process experience to share fundamental refinish practices and methodologies.

while reducing errors.”

“For the past several years, we have heard more than ever from our mutual customers that their body

“With the breadth and depth of refinish knowledge that both companies possess, our teams codeveloped the content based on proven processes,” said Morschel, adding, “These modules are designed to be brand agnostic, so no matter which products are being used, the overarching takeaways can be implemented to help improve efficiency and increase consistency

shops are challenged to maintain the same levels of productivity, efficiency and quality as ever,” said Munn. “Today, it takes longer to do a repair, and it’s a more complex process.”

As a result, the training series was designed to help address these challenges. The companies took a unique approach when creating the program.

“Historically, a lot of training has

been centered around the appropriate use of specific products,” said Munn. “This training is specifically based on the underlying processes.”

The objective was to provide understanding and education around common refinish practices irrespective of the products used.

Five co-branded training modules are being developed to help technicians and shops improve their understanding of repair process practices and, ultimately, have greater operational outcomes.

The modules, which range from five to 10 minutes, will include practices that shop leaders and technicians can implement to optimize the refinish process. The first three are planned to be launched in the fourth quarter of 2024. Two additional modules will be available in the first quarter of 2025.

The content will be accessible through both organizations’ learning management system platforms, which include the 3M Academy and Axalta Academy.

There is no cost associated with the education, which is available to all industry stakeholders, whether or not they are using 3M or Axalta products.

“As a steward of the industry, it’s important that we challenge ourselves as to how are we helping to look after the most pressing needs

and challenges of the industry,” noted Munn. “It’s no secret that there is a significant need in the industry for skills development, specifically around the growing shortage of skilled labor.”

The process-based modules are intended to support the technical advancement and career growth of collision refinish technicians.

Munn said that to preserve the industry, everyone must come together to ensure a vehicle is returned to its pre-accident condition as productively and efficiently as possible, while adhering to OEM repair procedures.

“I’m very proud of this collaboration that is truly focused on advancing the industry,” said Munn. “I’m excited to see how technicians and body shops will take this content and apply it.”

“Between Axalta and 3M, we share over 300 years of industry expertise,” said Morschel. “It’s our responsibility to continue to pass that knowledge along to the next generation of refinish professionals. Our vision for this joint initiative is to set a new standard for how knowledge is shared throughout the industry.”

For more information about the training modules, visit: axaltalearning. netdimensions.com/index-sso.html or 3MCollision.com/Learn.

Wren’s Collision Group, the largest privately owned MSO in the Southeast, acquired Collision Tech Inc. in Kennesaw, GA, which has now become Wren’s 15th location.

The acquisition of the Kennesaw facility, at 2115 Cobb Pkwy NW, bring Wren’s Collision Group’s total locations to 13 in Georgia and two in Florida.

The newly acquired shop, which has more than 32 years of experience in collision repair, is known for its community engagement and commitment to quality service.

“Collision Tech’s long-standing reputation aligns with our core values, and we are honored to continue its tradition of excellence,” said James Wren, owner of Wren’s Collision Group, in a statement.

Wren’s Collision Group, a third-generation, family-owned business, has experienced steady growth over the years while remaining focused on providing high-quality service to customers and fostering strong relationships

within the communities it serves. The company’s expansion into Kennesaw comes as part of a broader effort to enhance its service network across the Southeast.

“We are excited about joining the Kennesaw community and expanding our Georgia footprint,” Wren added.

As Wren’s continues to broaden its operations, the company is committed to maintaining its focus on quality service and support for its employees, partners and customers.

For more information, visit wrensbodyshop.com.

Suits Related To Non-OEM Parts, Insurers Suing Shops, Crash Reports See

Court Activity

There was recent activity in five industry-related lawsuits as they proceed through the process in U.S federal courts around the country.

The Florida Supreme Court in September ruled that GEICO cannot sue an auto glass company in that state under the Florida Motor Vehicle Repair Act (FMVRA). Glassco, Inc., had originally sued the insurer over what it called “deeply discounted” reimbursement for insurance claims. GEICO countersued, alleging Glassco would have insured customers assign rights to all insurance payments for repairs without informing the customers what services would be needed.

A federal appeals court ruling in the case asked the Florida Supreme Court whether the FMVRA gives an insurer the right to sue the shop for failure to provide a written estimate. That court now has answered “no” to that question, saying the law in question focuses almost exclusively on the interactions between a “repair shop and the person who

presents the car for repair.” It mentions insurers only once, relative to prohibiting substitution of used parts for new without notifying the insurer.

“GEICO concedes that it is not a ‘customer’ under the statute’s definition of the term,” the opinion said, and the FMVRA only gives a shop’s customer the right to sue. Glassco may have violated the FMVRA, the court said, but that

doesn’t give GEICO a cause of action. The ruling also said violations under FMVRA do not necessarily render “a subsequent repair invoice entirely void,” the other issue the appeals court posed to the Florida Supreme Court. The case now returns to the appeals court.

Dealer Group Gets Its Management System Data

Any body shop that has struggled

to get a copy of its data from an estimating or management system provider when switching to another provider may appreciate that a federal judge in Georgia has ordered the dealership management system firm CDK Global to provide four Asbury Automotive Group dealerships with their data as those dealerships prepare to switch from CDK to the Tekion dealership management system.

Asbury, which has used CDK’s system for more than a dozen years, has said it plans to switch all of its dealerships over to Tekion by 2027.

“CDK’s intent has become quite clear, that it intends to quash its competitor, Tekion, and force Asbury to stay on CDK’s platform by holding [Asbury’s] data hostage in direct violation of the parties’ agreement,” Asbury’s lawsuit alleged.

CDK countersued, accusing Asbury of using software to improperly collect its information stored within CDK’s platform, and saying if Asbury had wanted its data, it needed to switch its customer status with CDK in advance, foregoing special pricing and other

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Consumers Sue Over Release of Accident Reports

In late September, a North Carolina federal judge said the City of Charlotte violated federal privacy law by making car accident reports public in a way that law firms could use the disclosed data for marketing purposes, granting summary judgment and certification to a class of drivers. The city plans to appeal the ruling.

exceeding $1,000.

Although Durham claimed she was contacted only by an attorney who allegedly obtained her information through the accident report, others who could potentially be part of the class action say they were contacted by body shops that had similarly obtained accident report information.

New Documents May Revive Lawsuit

In a possible turnaround in another lawsuit, Repairify, parent company of asTech, told a federal court in Texas that its new counsel has identified a document it says unequivocally demonstrates the company’s rights to patents it argues were violated by LKQ Corporation subsidiary Keystone Automotive, doing business as Elitek Vehicle Services.

related to those two patents.

Counter Suit Against GM Can Continue

Also recently, a federal judge in Michigan denied General Motors’ motion to dismiss an aftermarket parts retailer’s claim that the automaker was behind a government raid of its warehouses. GM is suing Quality Collision Parts for patent infringement, saying the company sells non-OEM parts that violate GM’s design patents.

Quality Collision Parts earlier this year counter sued, challenging the validity of the patents and arguing GM “has unclean hands in the way it pursued whatever patent rights it had before the present case started.” Its tortious interference counter suit

says GM used “false or misleading allegations” to “improperly influence the Department of Homeland Security to conduct a raid on Quality Collision’s warehouses.”

While dismissing some claims in Quality Collision’s counter suit, Judge Denise Hood allowed the tortious interference allegation to stand, saying Quality Collision had adequately stated a claim that GM had known in advance about the raid, cooperated with the government, and knew it would be disruptive to Quality Collision’s business and would help the automaker with its planned design patent infringement lawsuit.

In seeking to dismiss the counter suit, GM’s filing stated Quality Collision’s “delusional allegations are not grounded in reality.”

Heather Durham sued the city, saying its police department improperly disclosed her personal information on an accident report “to persons it knew were acquiring the information for marketing purposes,” violating the Driver’s Privacy Protection Act.

State law requires filing of a police report after any accident involving an injury or property damage

Repairify had sued LKQ related to violations of three patents, but this past summer, a week before the trial was set to again, Repairify agreed to settle the portion of the lawsuit related to two of the patents when the court found the documents Repairify produced did not establish the company owned those two patents. In light of the new document, Repairify is now asking the court to reverse its dismissal

Four Ways To Engage, Retain Apprentices in Your Auto Body Shop

Here are four practical ways Oklahoma and Texas auto body shops are teaming up with local vocational schools, offering flexible schedules, providing mentorship and focusing on hands-on learning to help shops build a strong, skilled workforce for the future.

As the collision repair industry faces an aging workforce, recruiting the next generation of skilled technicians is crucial for the longevity of auto body shops.

Shop owners like Brian Davis of Davis Paint & Collision Auto Centers in Oklahoma City, OK, and Body Shop Manager Joey Walker of Huffines Chevrolet Plano Collision Center in Plano, TX, are paving the way by embracing apprenticeships and creating opportunities for students to enter the field. Both Davis and Walker have decades of experience and recognize that nurturing talent early on ensures a steady pipeline of skilled workers.

Here are four practical ways to hire apprentices and work around student schedules, helping auto body shops build a sustainable future workforce.

Collaborate with Vocational Schools

One of the most effective ways to recruit apprentices is by building strong relationships with local vocational or technical schools. With more than 30 years in the industry, Davis has made this a cornerstone of his approach. He actively engages with schools by visiting classrooms, hosting lunchand-learn sessions, and even judging at SkillsUSA competitions. These interactions allow shop

owners to identify promising students early in their education.

Davis emphasized connecting with teachers to understand which students are committed and driven.

“The biggest advantage of working with vo-tech schools is that we get to vet the students while they are in school,” Davis said. He often starts students with entry-level work, such as detailing cars, and as they gain more experience, they transition into more complex roles. This process allows students to grow within the company, creating a strong sense

of loyalty and job satisfaction.

Walker, who manages an auto body shop in Frisco, TX, shared a similar sentiment.

“Everyone who works here has come well recommended from the school,” Walker explained. By working closely with collision programs, he can identify students who are skilled and passionate about the industry.

Offer Flexible Scheduling

Flexibility is key when working with student apprentices. Many young adults balance their education with part-time jobs, so offering adaptable work schedules is essential.

Walker has embraced this by allowing students to work around their school commitments. He recalled a paint prepper who works in the shop three days a week, scheduling his hours around his classes.

“We need to be more flexible if we’re going to be prepared with personnel,” Walker said. This willingness to accommodate students’ schedules allows them to gain valuable hands-on experience without sacrificing their education.

Brian Davis
Joey Walker

Davis has also mastered the art of flexible scheduling, often working with 17-, 18- and 19-yearold students who are still becoming young professionals. He typically pairs students with an experienced A tech, allowing them to learn while gradually increasing their responsibilities over two to three years. This approach benefits the student and ensures they are fully prepared to transition into full-time roles upon graduation.

Create Mentorship Opportunities

Mentorship is vital in helping students transition from the classroom to the shop floor. Both Davis and Walker stressed the importance of pairing young apprentices with experienced technicians.

Davis highlighted the need for mentorship, noting that many students still develop individually.

“You’re not just turning out technicians; they could be a team lead, an estimator, a painter, a prepper — there are many possibilities,” he explained.

By pairing students with seasoned professionals, shop owners can ensure apprentices learn technical skills and develop soft skills, such as patience, communication and leadership.

These mentorship opportunities foster a sense of belonging and commitment, leading to higher retention rates.

In Davis’ shop, 40-45% of students stay on after their apprenticeships, and many return after brief absences because of the strong support system they experienced during their training.

Walker has witnessed similar benefits. He has seen multiple generations of technicians work side by side, including a body technician and his son. This family atmosphere extends beyond blood relations, as Walker treats every apprentice as part of his shop’s “family.” This inclusive environment helps retain young talent and builds a strong team culture.

Invest in Hands-On Learning

Davis and Walker agree that hands-on experience is critical to developing skilled technicians.

While classroom education is important, practical application in a real-world setting is where students truly hone their abilities.

Davis works closely with instructors to ensure students are gaining the right skills. “I tell the instructors, don’t focus so much on welding — focus on disassembling a car,” he said, emphasizing the

need for practical, hands-on tasks.

Davis’ shop also organizes field trips to give students a sense of what working in a shop is really like. These trips help bridge the gap between theory and practice, allowing students to become comfortable with the shop environment before they start their apprenticeships.

Walker has seen firsthand how hands-on learning benefits students, especially during busy seasons like after the Texas State Fair, when his shop experiences a surge in business. He ensures students get ample opportunity to engage in meaningful work, helping them grow their skills and confidence in real-world scenarios.

Involving students and apprentices in your auto body shop is not just about filling immediate vacancies — it’s about building a sustainable workforce that will keep your business thriving for years.

By collaborating with vocational schools, offering flexible scheduling, creating mentorship opportunities and investing in hands-on learning, shop owners can cultivate a new generation of skilled technicians passionate about the industry.

As Davis put it, “We are breeding our own by hiring students and apprentices,” ensuring the next generation is prepared to take the reins in the collision repair industry.

Possible Strikes Still Threatening To Rattle Collision Repair Parts Supply Chain

As collision repairers deal with the “double whammy” of both part prices and the number needed to finish a job continuing their steady increases, looming strikes at East Coast ports and a German union threaten to add to their woes in 2025 by increasing delivery times.

Greg Horn, chief information officer for PartsTrader, spoke to Autobody News about the company’s latest parts delivery trend report, ahead of its official release Nov. 5, the first day of the 2024 SEMA Show.

The Q3 2024 report shows the average number of parts quoted per job has increased from 5.3 in 2020 to 7.4 in 2024 for passenger cars, and from 4.5 to 6.3 parts in trucks and SUVs.

“We’re seeing the proliferation of accident avoidance systems, the bumper sensors,” Horn said. “That’s really what’s fueling the increase in the number of parts for both passenger cars and SUVs.”

Meanwhile, the average part price by part type shows new OEM parts —which steadily make up 70% to 80% of parts used on a typical job, whether the vehicle make is domestic, Asian or European — has increased from $432 in 2020 to $579 in 2024.

In the same timeframe, aftermarket parts’ average price increased from $260 to a current average of $316, though that is down from its peak of $330 in Q1 2023.

Remanufactured parts — mostly alloy wheels — had the largest average price increase over the

past four years, spiking from $289 to $468. More than $60 of that increase came in the last year alone, the largest increase year-over-year of any part type.

Horn said there are two trends contributing to the increase in prices for remanufactured alloy wheels.

One, the wheels are getting larger. “Seventeen (inches) used to be the standard wheel on SUVs. Now you’re seeing 18-, 19-inch wheels. More material has to be removed by the reconditioning technicians,” Horn said. And two, there’s a shortage of technicians qualified to work on those wheels.

“When people in the insurance and collision repair industries talk about inflation, they usually talk about it on a part-level basis, so it’s a double whammy for this industry,” Horn said. “It’s the number of parts as well as each one of those parts going up in price.

“And that’s the cumulative effect, because parts are the biggest portion of a repairable estimate,” he said. “Labor is a close second.”

Median Part Delivery Days

On the bright side, the median number of days needed to receive

all parts for a job is declining – down to 9.4 in Q3 2024 — despite a brief interruption at several U.S. ports in early October and severe weather events.

PartsTrader looks at both the simple average and the median plus two standard deviations, which better takes into account the “outliers” – for instance, when nine out of 10 parts arrive in a day and a half, but the 10th is backordered.

The median has been steadily decreasing since October 2023, when the UAW struck against the Big Three, driving it up to 14.8 days.

“[UAW President] Shawn Fain is a brilliant tactician,” Horn said. “He took the minimum amount of people to do these wildcat strikes at part distribution centers, knowing that was the area that the vehicle owner, as well as the franchise dealer, would feel the biggest pain. And you see that spike in in OEM parts. Now it’s down to 9.4 days, which is great.”

Horn said that was the effect analysts were expecting on aftermarket parts when the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) struck in early October, but advance planning

A forklift driver moves racks of Jeep Cherokee body side panels at the FCA U.S. Sterling Stamping Plant in Michigan.

LKQ Corporation announced the unification of its LKQ PBE and FinishMaster businesses under a new brand, LKQ Refinish, marking a merger that strengthens its reach and resources in the North American automotive and commercial industries. The combined division now serves more than 40,000 customers across the region.

The rebranding under LKQ Refinish is part of a larger strategy to provide an integrated and robust support network for customers in the automotive collision, fleet and industrial sectors.

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Over the years, the division has grown through the acquisition of established names like Keystone Automotive Paint, Body and Equipment, AkzoNobel’s U.S. company-owned store division, Max Auto, and Cross Canada. The latest merger with FinishMaster solidifies LKQ Refinish’s position as a leading distributor of refinishing products and equipment.

Possible Strikes

minimized it. Those parts averaged 2.5 delivery days in Q3 2024.

“It was well known that Oct. 1 was the date [the strike would begin], so those shipments were diverted to the West Coast,” Horn said. “They had to be trucked, so there’s a delay in getting them to the distribution centers.”

Aftermarket parts aren’t as susceptible to spikes in delivery days, Horn said, because suppliers tend to keep a lot in stock.

Even if the port strike had a greater effect on aftermarket parts, Horn said the median delivery days are always driven by OEM parts.

“They’re still the biggest portion of the estimate. They are still the biggest potential for an outlier, because it’s a trim piece,” he said.

Price-matched parts – when a dealership sells an OEM part at a loss to either match the aftermarket alternative or undersell another dealership in the hopes of winning a shop’s regular business – had a median of six delivery days, more than double that of aftermarket parts.

Horn said that tells him body shops are willing to wait the extra

days to get an OEM-quality part at a lower price to protect their margins.

Parts Delivery Challenges Ahead

Potential strikes could disrupt the parts supply chain.

The ILA strike at 10 East and Gulf coast ports temporarily ended with a contract extension, but it could resume Jan. 15, 2025, if negotiations to finalize a new contract fall through.

“There has been no movement on the biggest sticking point, which is the pledge for no further automation,” Horn said.

The strike was initiated after an Alabama port violated the union agreement by implementing automated gate checks to inspect cargo and confirm the bill of lading matches the contents.

“Ports are a big security threat to the U.S. in general, so automated gate checks are more secure. There are no possibilities of human error,” Horn said.

Automated gate checks also cut down on the chances of smuggling everything from counterfeit watches to knockoff drugs.

“That is actually quite common,” Horn said.

Automating that task affects, on average, about 25 people’s jobs at

Jersey, Horn said, so it’s a “small percentage of workers,” but the union is concerned automation will further spread to other parts of the process.

Strikes could also affect automakers.

In the U.S., the UAW is threatening walkouts at Stellantis facilities, as the company struggles to address declining sales, high frequencies of warranty claims, and its obligation in the contract it signed in 2023 with the UAW to reopen the Belvidere, IL, assembly plant. This could lead to disruptions in the supply of collision parts for Stellantis vehicles.

In Germany, Volkswagen’s announcement that it is considering closing factories there for the first time in its history, citing high energy and labor costs, has sparked tension with the IG Metall union.

The union has threatened a strike at all German VW factories if any plants are closed, and is demanding the reinstatement of a 35-year job guarantee recently eliminated by Volkswagen.

Horn said VW produces a lot of parts in Mexico, but the bigger potential threat for collision repairers in the U.S. is that IG Metall has a history of “sympathy strikes,” which could halt parts production for other German automakers like MercedesBenz and BMW.

“I lived in Germany, and IG pretty much shut down production to argue for a 37.5-hour work week ages ago. And they brought most production to a standstill,” Horn said.

The report said the situation in Germany “remains tense.”

AUTOBODY

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Troncalli Subaru

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‘Axalta Nimbus’ Cloud-Based Platform To Increase Refinish Customers’ Productivity

Axalta recently announced the launch of Axalta Nimbus, the company’s cloudbased global customer experience platform for refinish customers. The application was introduced at the Automechanika Frankfurt Show in September, held in Frankfurt, Germany.

maximize profitability,” said Logan Macpherson, Axalta’s customer experience apps director, global refinish, who led the project team that created the application.

The cloud-based application connects to Axalta’s seven main offerings: product catalog (Axalta Nimbus Catalog), color retrieval (Axalta Nimbus Color), product ordering (Axalta Nimbus Store), inventory management (Axalta Nimbus Stock), training resources (Axalta Nimbus Academy), comprehensive business insights (Axalta Nimbus Insights), and support (Axalta Nimbus Support).

“Axalta Nimbus enables our customers to do business smarter,” said Troy Weaver, president of global refinish at Axalta. “This industryleading technology was designed based

our customers improve productivity and profitability through technology and innovation. We are very proud of Axalta Nimbus and look forward to the impact it has in the market.”

helping customers perform better by innovating and bringing to market high-efficiency products that help customers save time, materials and energy.

She then walked conference attendees through the seven main parts of Axalta’s offerings and shared how Axalta Nimbus is unique.

“I am extremely excited and super proud to announce the new Axalta innovation that will help our customers all over the world perform better every single day and in every single repair,” said Patricia Morschel, vice president of marketing and commercial operations at Axalta, during the application’s launch at Automechanika.

INSIST ON GM GENUINE PARTS

“The cloud-based platform allows our customers to connect with the Axalta products and services in real time,” she said. “The system was designed with the user in mind to be very intuitive and easy to navigate, so users can seamlessly move from one application to the other.”

“For 160 years, Axalta Coating Systems has been leading the market globally and is very much renowned for their high-performance products and advanced technology,” said Michael Collie, a TV and radio journalist who spent much of his

Logan Macpherson, Axalta’s customer experience apps director, global refinish, and Patricia Morschel, Axalta’s vice president of marketing and commercial operations, at the application’s launch at Automechanika.
Michael Collie, a TV and radio journalist and the emcee for Axalta Nimbus’s launch at Automechanika with Patricia Morschel, Axalta’s vice president of marketing and commercial operations.

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Wholesale Parts Dealers Should Examine Bottom Line To Determine

Profitability, Viability

Hurdles abound for auto parts dealers, especially in an age where change is so prevalent across the industry. One challenge these vendors face is leveling with themselves about the amount of profit they’re generating. That number can be tough to determine and tough to internalize.

Recognizing and sorting obsolete parts, accounting for personnel, equipment, technology and facility expenses: these factors all stack up against profit once a part goes out the door.

“Everything is falling into a market that is a low gross market to begin with,” explained Cochran Automotive Group Wholesale Parts Director Justin Kendrick . “So, the pressure that wholesalers feel is you have all this weight coming down, but the margins never change. You’re always getting squeezed for more and more margins.”

Measuring Profitability

So, how are parts wholesalers measuring profitability?

Cochran Automotive Group, based in Monroeville, PA, includes 33 dealerships, 11 body shops and a wholesale parts center. About seven years ago, the group centralized its wholesale parts operations into a single facility, which now measures 90,000 square feet. The company stocks 13 brands and services nearly 600 body shops across Western Pennsylvania and Northeast Ohio.

“A lot of wholesale dealers are only focused on selling parts. They’re not looking at their net profit,” Kendrick said. “It’s getting mixed in with repair order service,

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rather than separating your wholesale number out to say, ‘Is this a profitable business for us?’ And nine times out of 10, when we talk to dealers, it’s not profitable for them.”

There are a few key factors in making that determination.

One, Kendrick said, is scaling. Although dealing in fewer brands is easier, Kendrick asserted, it’s also limiting. Volume and a wider market — one that reaches beyond local — are important in scaling up, he said. It also helps to work with parts brands that offer incentives or matching money, he said.

Taking obsolescence into account is also essential. Having parts 12 months old or older sitting on shop shelves just means “idle capital” is taking up space, Kendrick said.

“Most people don’t look at their obsolescence,” explained Dirk Harper , Cochrane’s fixed operations director. “What are the odds that you might sell the exact same parts on a 2018 F-150 in the next two months, three months? You can’t return it to the factory, so now what are you going do with those hoods and fenders that you don’t sell again?”

And it’s essential to be realistic about gross numbers versus actual net. Initial numbers, Harper said, might look high, but expenses like drivers, transport vehicles, gas and vehicle maintenance cut into those amounts sharply.

Hard Questions and Evaluations

Problems crop up when vendors don’t keep track of the guidelines above and try to exit built-up situations without a plan. Obsolete parts, for example, Kendrick said, might sell for pennies on the dollar,

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Dirk Harper

cutting into overall margins even more.

It’s a mistake, Kendrick said, to allow parts sales to be lumped in with other revenue streams like services and repair orders.

“It (parts sales) needs to be separated, and they need to realize wholesale and service need to be two things, and they need to be measured differently,” he said.

And hard questions, he said, need to be part of the regular evaluation process.

He encouraged parts dealers to ask questions like, “What is it costing us to do this? Is it profitable? If it’s not profitable, what is our way to get out of it?”

Those questions are becoming more and more pertinent as waves of change, such as the increased prominence of electric vehicle manufacturing, hit the industry. As manufacturers change incentive programs for selling parts, sellers — especially single point dealers — can feel the hit acutely, Kendrick said.

“Ultimately, as a single point dealer or even a larger dealer, if they’re just racing to the bottom to chase the back-end money, if that program changes, they’re going to be hurting, and they’re going to be in the negative,” he said. “(If) the manufacturer changes

that program, what happens now? You’re stuck with all this inventory. You’re bleeding out money. It’s a dangerous game that a lot of dealers are playing, and a lot of them aren’t watching what’s actually happening.”

Moving forward, it’s important for parts dealers to turn their attention to what generates revenue, and those hard looks might mean tough decisions.

“I think, as dealers, you’ve got to really start thinking about what generates you revenue and what costs you capital,” Harper said. “I think you’re going to see more and more dealers … just really analyzing expenses and looking into the depths of inventory, whether it’s new car inventory, used car inventory or, in this case, parts inventory, because those are what you own.”

career specializing in the automotive industry and was the emcee for Axalta Nimbus’s launch at Automechanika.

“Axalta’s innovation extends beyond refinish products and services,” he said. “They aim to allow clients’ businesses to work smarter, which is something we all have to do.”

Axalta demonstrated the application during the show, and attendees had the opportunity to take part in a handson experience.

Axalta Nimbus is a culmination of four years of hard work, said Macpherson, who set up the dedicated team responsible for developing the strategy behind the application.

“Leading the team was incredibly rewarding,” noted Macpherson. “They worked tirelessly to create something that we know will have a real impact.”

Because Axalta Nimbus is completely modular, Macpherson said shops of all sizes can benefit from these digital processes, starting with the four basic modules: Axalta Nimbus Catalog, Axalta Nimbus Color, Axalta Nimbus Academy and Axalta Nimbus Support. As a business evolves, it can add more modules.

“It is easy to use with an intuitive user interface for increased efficiency

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and customizable capabilities based on business need,” he added. “This allows skilled refinishers to do other, more productive tasks.”

Macpherson explained that Axalta Nimbus powers the company’s three-step Axalta Irus digital color management process: Scan – Match – Mix.

First, refinishers scan the color with Axalta Irus Scan, the newly launched, next-generation spectrophotometer. Second, they match the color using Axalta Nimbus Color, the platform that leverages proprietary algorithms to find, sort and return accurate color formulas.

Then, Macpherson said it’s time to mix with Axalta Irus Mix, which enables users to work more efficiently, profitably and sustainably.

Axalta Nimbus works with Axalta paint systems and is available in 23 languages, connecting teams regardless of their location.

“It not only helps us to be closer to our 80,000 customers in approximately 120 countries, but it also enables our customers to work smarter,” said Macpherson.

The system will go live in North America and Europe in early 2025 and later be rolled out in Asia Pacific and Latin America.

For more information, visit axalta. com/nimbus.

GEORGIA

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Regardless of the age of your customer’s Audi, Audi dealers have access to over 200,000 part numbers and are supported by a nationwide network of distribution centers to help ensure non-stocked parts are delivered the next day.

Co-President & Publisher

Nathan Gregory

Co-President & Publisher

Paul Stepanek

Editor Abby Andrews

Contributing Writers

Mike Anderson, Brian Bradley, Elizabeth Crumbly, Paul Hughes Stacey Phillips Ronak, Leona Scott Ben Shimkus, Cole Strandberg John Yoswick

Advertising Sales

Norman Morano, Steve Sklenar, Paul Ropski

Office & Media Manager

Kelly Cashman

Director of Digital

Bryan Malinski

Design Director

Vicki Sitarz

Art Director

Rodolfo Garcia

Association Announces Executive Director

The Automotive Recyclers Association announced Vince Edivan has assumed the role of executive director, taking the helm at ARA’s recent 81st Annual Convention and Exposition in Reno, NV.

The move follows a year-long period of transition during which executive director responsibilities were passed to Edivan from professional automotive recycler and ARA Past President Sandy Blalock, who was hired as ARA executive director in 2018 and continues to manage several automotive recycling organizations at the state level.

Edivan joined ARA in 2019 in a member relations capacity and has worked to build a strong rapport with automotive recyclers, industry vendors and stakeholders throughout the country.

He has enjoyed a diverse career in the automotive and recycling industries, starting as an ASEcertified mechanic.

Accounting & HR Manager

Heather Priddy

Content Manager Randi Scholtes

Serving Illinois, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin and adjacent metro areas. Autobody News is a monthly publication for the autobody industry. Permission to reproduce in any form the material published in Autobody News must be obtained in writing from the publisher.

©2024 Autobody News, LLC.

Autobody News P.O. Box 1516 Carlsbad, CA 92018 (800) 699-8251 (760) 603-3229 Fax editor@autobodynews.com

Scholarship America Makes Pitch To Close Collision Repair Talent Gap

The collision repair industry could soon be facing a deep workforce shortage. While experts expect the industry to grow in the short and long term, shop owners have expressed concerns about a need for more skilled labor, particularly with more vehicles deploying tech-based features like advanced driver-assisted systems (ADAS) and battery-electric vehicles (BEVs).

Recent studies by CCC Intelligent Solutions said the shortages are hitting collision shop’s bottom lines. The study found a 4.9% year-over-year wage increase, partially due to a shorter availability of workers. Individual shops are already spotting the education gaps between younger technicians and the current strains in the repair industry.

“This is going to be a real struggle for the industry, to keep and get people that are willing to learn new technology,” John Ling , the owner of NEK Collision Repair in Lyndonville, VT, told Autobody News. “It’s always been a hands-on work industry, and now it’s going to

be a technical industry.”

However, Scholarship America believes it has a solution.

The Minnesota-based organization, which started in 1958, has awarded more than $5 billion of scholarships to more than 3.1 million students across the U.S. since its inception. Scholarship America works with member companies, offering students from diverse backgrounds

“This is going to be a real struggle for the industry, to keep and get people that are willing to learn new technology,”

financial rewards to limit the high costs of higher education. The organization has worked with manufacturers like Mercedes-Benz and Toyota on previous projects. During their four-year programs, students in Toyota’s program received scholarship rewards

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between $5,000 to $20,000.

The organization made its pitch to auto manufacturers and vehicle maintenance companies in a recent blog post for the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA). The organization explained that targeted scholarships can help businesses train future technicians, upskill existing employees, and establish a philanthropic presence in their communities.

“Investing in educational support like scholarships for your employees can have a two-fold benefit: you’re assuring new members of the workforce that they can continue to grow, learn, and develop on the job,” explained Claire Berge Schmidt , associate vice president of marketing for Scholarship America. “And, by supporting them as they complete certifications, acquire new skills and move up the career ladder, you’re also upskilling your own workforce.”

Many students, particularly those from low-income families and historically marginalized communities, face the tough choice of taking on debt or working fulltime jobs alongside their studies, Schmidt explained. Scholarship

programs aimed at historically underfunded groups could provide a pathway into the automotive workforce while alleviating some burdens of student loans.

For private businesses, Scholarship America hopes the upfront costs of early-career investment could alleviate the financial hardships associated with wage inflation and worker shortages.

“In addition, by creating scholarships for employees’ families, you’re also providing a benefit that can help them as they move further into their career and as their own kids grow up,” Schmidt added. “No other benefit keeps on giving quite like a scholarship program.”

More than 3.4 million students are expected to graduate from American high schools each year between 2025 and 2028, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. According to Scholarship America, the hope is that automotive companies at all levels will recognize the benefits of supporting future technicians, help close the skills gap and give back to the communities that support their business.

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2024

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