Every service department has the same complaint: there are not enough hours in the day. Usually the problem is not the people. It is the handful of workflow bottlenecks that quietly eat the day, one five-minute delay at a time.
A service lane bottleneck is any point in the visit where work stalls waiting on a phone call, a callback, a signature, or a manual lookup. Most trace back to three root causes: no DMS integration, no digital or video inspection, and no approval automation. Fix those three and most of this list disappears.
The advisor calls, the customer does not pick up, the car sits, the bay is tied up. This is the single most expensive bottleneck in fixed ops. Fix: Repair approval automation. The customer gets the estimate by text, taps approve from their phone, and the result flows back to the repair order. No callback required.
A worn part described over the phone sounds like an upsell. The same part shown in a 30-second video looks like a fact. Fix: Video MPI, and the effect is measurable, with J.D. Power 2024 finding that video and photo inspections roughly double approval rates.
Every customer name and repair order number typed twice is time lost and an error waiting to happen. Fix: DMS integration. Customer data, vehicle history, and repair orders flow automatically, and with write-back, approvals and payments push back to the RO on their own.
Customers call for status because nobody told them. Each call pulls an advisor off the floor. Fix: Automated status updates. A text fires when the car is in, when the inspection is done, and when it is ready, so the phone stops ringing with the same question.
Everyone picks up at once, the line backs up, CSI takes the hit. Fix: Mobile payments. The customer pays by text before they arrive and walks straight to the car. Honda and Toyota of Seattle moved 75% of payments to mobile and the cashier line went away.
A tech finds three things, writes them on paper, and an advisor re-keys them into an estimate later, if they get to it. Fix: Findings that convert straight into a digital estimate, closing the gap and stopping billable work from falling through the cracks.
When the lane is full, calls go to voicemail and some never get returned, because there is no record they happened. Fix: Voice AI catches the missed call, transcribes it, and routes it to the right advisor with the context attached, so a missed call stops being lost revenue.
Paper contracts, untracked mileage, fuel and damage nobody bills for, and no idea which loaner is where. Fix: Loaner management with digital contracts and tracking, fixing the paperwork and recovering the fees that were being absorbed.
Pulling VIN lists and matching records by hand can eat half a fixed ops manager's week. Fix: Automated campaigns turn that into minutes, firing reminders and recall notices on their own and letting customers book from the text.
If you cannot see response time, approval rate, CP revenue per RO, and adoption by advisor, you cannot fix what is slow. Fix: Reporting turns the whole lane from a guess into a number, and shows you which advisors need a nudge.
Read the list again and you will notice the same three fixes solve most of it. DMS integration kills the re-typing and powers everything else. Digital and video inspection drives approvals. Approval automation ends phone tag. A platform that does all three, with payments, loaners, Voice AI, and campaigns in the same place, is what dealerships mean when they talk about a Service Lane Operating System. The DMS stays the system of record. The OS runs the actions.
That is what we built Kimoby to do. It integrates with CDK (with write-back), Reynolds, PBS, Tekion, DealerTrack, Autosoft, and Serti, and runs more than 1,000 dealership service departments across North America.
If your day is being eaten by any of these, book a demo and we will show you the fixes on a real repair order.
Approvals stuck in phone tag. The advisor calls, the customer does not answer, the car sits, and the bay stays occupied. It is the most expensive delay in fixed ops because it stalls everything downstream. The fix is repair approval automation, where the customer approves the estimate from their phone and the result flows back to the repair order without a callback.
It removes manual data entry. With DMS integration, customer data, vehicle history, and repair orders flow into the software automatically, so advisors never re-key a name or RO number. With write-back, approved estimates and completed payments push back to the repair order on their own, which closes the loop without anyone retyping anything.
Yes. When a customer sees the problem instead of hearing it described, they approve faster and decline less. J.D. Power 2024 data shows video and photo inspections roughly double customer approval rates. The key is that inspection findings should convert into a digital estimate automatically rather than being re-typed.
Mobile payments. The customer pays by text before pickup and walks straight to the car, so the checkout crowd disappears. Honda and Toyota of Seattle moved about 75% of payments to mobile and eliminated the cashier line entirely.
Software that runs the entire service visit from drop-off to payment in one platform: texting, digital and video inspections, estimates, approvals, payments, loaners, Voice AI for missed calls, status updates, CSI, and campaigns. The DMS stays the system of record while the OS handles the actions. It fixes most service lane bottlenecks at once because the root causes are shared.
Last updated: June 2026