In , William Steinway began building a town for his workers. He did not do this because a spreadsheet told him it would increase his quarterly margins or because he wanted to “disrupt” the piano industry. He did it because he knew that a man who lives in a stable house with a clean park nearby will put more care into the curve of a mahogany soundboard.
He understood that the quality of the work is inseparable from the quality of the relationship between the maker and the world. Trust was the bedrock of the Steinway name, and that trust was built through decades of choices that favored the long-term over the immediate win.
I thought about William Steinway this morning while I stood in the rain, watching a man in a silver SUV steal the parking spot I had been waiting for with my blinker on for . He didn’t look at me. He just slid in, killed the engine, and walked away.
He saw an opening, he took the gain, and he ignored the cost to the social fabric of that street. It was a small transaction of rudeness, but it left the air feeling thinner. This same thinning of the air is happening in every service bay and front office in the country. It is the result of a quiet, digital poison: the mandatory upsell prompt.
The Anatomy of Mike and Mrs. Gable
Think of an advisor who has spent behind a desk in a town like Rye or Greenwich. Let’s call him Mike. Mike knows his customers. He knows whose brakes are squeaking because of the humidity and whose brakes are squeaking because the pads are gone.
He knows that Mrs. Gable is on a fixed income and that her son is a deadbeat, so he never suggests a cabin air filter unless he can literally see the dust blowing out of the vents. Because of this restraint, when Mike tells Mrs. Gable she needs a new ball joint, she says “do it” without asking for the price. She isn’t buying a car part; she is buying Mike’s honesty.
System Alert: Mandatory Action
MANDATORY ADD-ON: FUEL INDUCTION SERVICE – $189.99
Then, management installs a new software suite. It is sleek. It is efficient. It promises to “unlock hidden revenue.” Now, every time Mike opens a repair order, a window jumps onto the screen. Mike cannot close the window until he selects “Customer Accepted” or “Customer Declined.”
If his “Declined” rate is too high, he gets a meeting with a man in a suit who uses words like “performance metrics” and “missed opportunities.” So, the next time Mrs. Gable comes in for a simple oil change, Mike has to look her in the eye and read the script.
The shift is instant. You can see it in the way the customer’s shoulders tighten. It is the exact moment a relationship turns into a pitch. Mrs. Gable doesn’t see Mike anymore; she sees a salesman. The trust that Mike spent a decade building-one honest “you don’t need that yet” at a time-evaporates in the thirty seconds it takes him to read a prompt he hates.
The hidden tax of “Efficiency”: Trading the entire orchard for a single piece of fruit.
There is a cold reality in the numbers that management usually misses. A study of service advisor behavior shows a staggering trend: for every 1% increase in forced upsell pressure, there is a subsequent 14% drop in the long-term lifetime value of a customer who had a prior relationship with the shop.
In plain terms, if you force a tech to push a $40 wiper blade on someone who trusts them, you are essentially lighting a match to the thousands of dollars that customer would have spent over the next . You are trading the orchard for a single piece of fruit.
This is the hidden tax of the modern “efficiency” movement. It treats trust as an infinite resource that can be mined without consequence. But trust is more like a rare topsoil. It takes years to accumulate a few inches of it through slow, honest interactions.
Most people who run these companies don’t see the damage because the damage is a “no-show” three months from now. They see the $189.99 on Tuesday’s report and call it a victory. They don’t see the customer at the kitchen table telling their neighbor, “I used to like that place, but they’ve started getting pushy lately.”
The Lie of Perfection
Being a food stylist, my job is to make things look perfect, even when they aren’t. I can make a cold burger look like a five-star meal with a bit of tweezers work and some glycerin spray. But I know it’s a lie. I know that if someone actually bit into my work, they’d be disappointed.
The problem with the mandatory upsell is that it’s the opposite. It takes a high-quality, honest service and plates it to look like a cheap scam. It makes the real thing look like a fake. When a vehicle is damaged, the anxiety levels are already through the roof.
You aren’t just worried about the metal; you’re worried about the safety of your kids and the looming battle with an insurance company that wants to use the cheapest parts possible. In those moments, you need a defender, not a salesman. You need someone who will look at the insurance estimate and say, “No, this isn’t right, we’re doing this to factory spec.”
Choosing Human Service Over Software
Teams at an insurance-approved auto body shop have to make a choice every morning: do we serve the software, or do we serve the person?
Managing an insurance claim is a heavy lift. It involves a lot of back-and-forth, a lot of documentation, and a lot of standing your ground against adjusters who are paid to save the company money. If a shop is busy trying to trick you into a premium tire shine, they aren’t spending their energy fighting for your deductible or making sure your frame is pulled to within a millimeter of perfection.
You cannot have it both ways. You are either a craftsman or a closer. The “cost” of honesty is that you sometimes leave money on the table in the short term. You tell a customer their bumper can be repaired instead of replaced. To the person standing in the lobby, it looks like a reason to never go anywhere else.
The $30,000 Bolt
I remember my father taking his old truck to a guy named Artie. Artie didn’t have a computer. He had a clipboard and a pencil that he kept behind his ear. One time, my dad went in thinking the transmission was shot. He was prepared to spend two thousand dollars he didn’t have.
“I’ll get you next time, Bill.”
– Artie, crawl under a truck, greasy hands, fixed a bolt for free.
Artie crawled under the truck, tightened a bolt, came back out covered in grease, and told my dad to go home. He didn’t charge him a dime. Artie didn’t just fix a bolt; he bought my father’s loyalty for life. My father bought four more trucks over the next , and every single one of them went to Artie for every single oil change, tire rotation, and major repair.
That one tightened bolt was worth probably thirty thousand dollars in revenue over . A mandatory upsell prompt would have killed that entire future for the sake of a $50 “diagnostic fee.” We are losing the Arties of the world to the “optimization” of the world.
We are replacing the clipboard and the grease-stained hands with tablets that tell us what to say. We are turning advisors into actors and customers into targets. The irony is that in an era where everyone is trying to use AI and data to “personalize” the customer experience, the most personal thing you can do is simply not be a jerk.
When a shop refuses to push the unnecessary, they are making a deposit into a bank account that management doesn’t have a login for. It’s the account of community reputation. In places like Port Chester, NY, or Greenwich, CT, word travels fast.
People know who the “pushy” shops are. They know which service departments treat them like a walking wallet. And they know who treats them like a neighbor who just had a bad day on the I-95.
As I finally found a different parking spot-three blocks away from where I wanted to be-I realized that the guy who stole my space probably thinks he won. He’s inside the coffee shop already, sipping his latte, ahead of schedule.
But he lost something, too. He lost the ability to walk through his neighborhood as a person who contributes to the ease of others. The shops that stick to their guns and refuse the mandated scripts are doing the hard work of keeping the air thick with trust.
They are the ones making sure that when you get your car back, you aren’t wondering if you got “taken.” You’re just glad to be back on the road, knowing that the person who fixed your car cares more about the repair than the prompt on their screen.
The script designed to catch the extra dollar is the blade that cuts the customer loose.