This theme can be described as disingenuous, insincere or even outside the rules.
The disingenuous or insincere part is that everyone would rather have more than less and if the supply is finite then the only way to get more is for someone else to get less. There is nothing dishonest or sinister about that, it is a big part of how business works. But the tension between parties and the competition to get as much as possible is a reality and does not quite fit with “we are all in this together for the good of our mutual customer.”
It Is Only The Vehicle Owner Paying
Importantly one significant party that does not have a voice in the discussion is the collective vehicle owner, while it is that collective vehicle owner paying the bill. Whether this is by paying for a repair directly, or more commonly by paying an insurance company to cover future repairs, it is only the vehicle owner paying.
The outside the rules part is that It looks suspicious if the parties in the repair industry pretend that “we are working together for the good of the vehicle owner” without including that vehicle owner in the discussion.
Fortunately, and counterintuitively, despite the fact that people like to start conferences with the “we are all in this together” phrase this is not how the industry works. Without the real involvement of the vehicle owners the result is arguably better for the consumer if each active party is looking after their own interests than if these industry parties were working together to split the pie while leaving the vehicle owner out of the conversation.
]]>At the same time that the industry is grappling with unprecedented technological change there is another significant change with a tremendous amount of outside money coming into the industry. The collision repair industry is now seen by private equity firms as an opportunity. To these new operators the better repair is the one that generates the most profit. In many cases this may be the safer repair, but if this safe repair is not mandatory and does not generate more profit then it will not be the first objective.
“Good Enough”
A recent trend of very large multi shop operators is contractual agreements with insurance companies (more in America than Canada to this point) that reward performance through rebates for good performance or penalties for poor performance, with good being lower costs for the insurance company and poor being higher costs. It is seldom that a good repair will result in a lower cost than a “good enough” repair. In an unregulated industry, “good enough” is a very vague standard.
The front end of the operation will look bright and clean, the advertising and corporate image will be good, but if no one is seriously verifying the integrity and correctness of the repair then “good enough” becomes the core of the business model.
]]>The next year at another conference an insurance rep was going on at length on the concept of ‘case by case’, which seemed to have taken over from ‘common sense’ as the theme for that year.
Both common sense and case by case are only valid if the person using the concepts has the background knowledge to apply to each case or situation. In the two examples above the people speaking were not qualified to apply either common sense or case by case.
The question may be why they did; and a good guess at the answer is money. The banner program rep was signaling to insurance companies that he was ready work with them to save money and the insurance rep was signaling that they were putting a lot of weight on saving money in repairs and that they would decide on which OEM procedures to work with and which to ignore.
]]>One of the most publicly visible areas of IIHS work is their crash safety rating system, which is developed based on crash tests in their own testing facility. This rating has real world implications, with a 5 Star IIHS rating used by manufacturers as a selling feature and by insurers as a guide to setting insurance rates.
You will be safer in a 2020 vehicle than you would be in a 2010 or 2005 vehicle in the same type of hit. You will probably be safer still in the 2021 because none of the manufacturers move backwards on safety.
The car may be more expensive to repair, but you will not care much about that if you walk away from the collision with no injury. Your insurance company should be ready to pay an extra $2,000 or $3,000 or even $10,000 to repair your car if tens or even hundreds of thousands in injury costs are saved.
Leaving The Repair Shop With Their Rating Compromised
The insurance company should be ready to pay; but then we run into measurement and reward in a compartmentalized business. The insurance adjuster, and the entire claims department, is judged by the amount of money paid out; lower claim costs are viewed as a good thing and the in-depth quality of repairs is still, in 2021, not measured.
When these insurance companies are working with a repair industry that values throughput and volume it is not surprising that 5 star rated cars are leaving the repair shop with their rating compromised.
In the unregulated world where we work, the insurance companies are probably the best positioned to insist on a proper repair—but the huge emphasis on cost is preventing them from doing this.
There is an irony here; the same company that from one department contributes to the IIHS is from another department rewarding repairs that take that 5 Star car to a 3.
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