Why Your Effective Labor Rate is Lower Than It Should Be
Your effective labor rate may be 20–30% lower than it should be due to skill bottlenecks, not lack of bays, techs, or demand.
Read MoreExplore how stronger career progression, faster ramp-up, and improved proficiency can influence operational performance.
Your effective labor rate may be 20–30% lower than it should be due to skill bottlenecks, not lack of bays, techs, or demand.
Read MoreTechnician development doesn’t have to be a cost center. Learn how labor efficiency improves throughput and profit.
Read MoreLearn how Mentor Mentee’s career path management system helps automotive and diesel leaders turn technician development into measurable ROI.
Read MoreClosing the ELR gap requires building proficiency systematically. Learn the two things that help shops achieve 15-25% ELR improvement within 6-9 months.
Read MoreYour ELR and hours per RO are telling you something is wrong. You can see the numbers, just not see what's driving them. Here's what changes when you can.
Read MoreYour door rate is $150-180, but your effective labor rate is probably $110-130. That 20-30% gap costs $150K+ annually. Here's how to close it.
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