
The Simple System That Can Add 5% Profit to Your Shop
Jim Noblitt is the District Manager at Auto Care USA in Houston, Texas, with more than four decades of automotive experience. He entered the industry in 1979 as a mechanic’s helper, advanced into technician and dealership roles, and later helped launch Cornerstone Automotive; a business that contributed to the early operating model behind Christian Brothers Automotive.Noblitt went on to build and operate Mission Car Care in Katy, Texas, for 20 years before selling the business in 2022. His experience as a technician, owner, consultant, and multi-location operator gives him a practical view of recovering lost profit in an auto repair shop through disciplined processes, stronger financial controls, and better use of shop data.In this episode…Revenue does not disappear only through weak sales or low car count. It also disappears through unreturned cores, defective parts, missing credits, incorrect shipments, and paperwork that never gets reconciled. Noblitt estimates that these overlooked details can represent four to five percent of annual sales losses, money the shop has already earned but failed to collect.Multi-location operations carry even greater exposure because the same process failure repeats across every store. A return shelf filled with aging parts represents trapped cash, and an unverified credit slip represents money that has not reached the bottom line.Shop metrics expose another layer of lost opportunity. An extremely high close ratio often signals that advisors are presenting only the customer’s original concern. A very low close ratio signals that customers are receiving large estimates without clear priorities. Digital vehicle inspections, average written repair orders, and close ratios reveal whether advisors are identifying needed work, communicating value, and separating urgent repairs from services that belong in a future visit.Recovering lost profit in an auto repair shop requires owners to study what the numbers are saying, assign accountability for routine financial controls, and correct small operational gaps before they spread across multiple locations.Here’s a glimpse of what you’ll learn: [01:17] Jim Noblitt’s four-decade automotive industry career[03:25] Advancing from technician to dealership operations[04:12] Helping shape Christian Brothers Automotive’s early model[08:46] Building and selling Mission Car Care after 20 years[12:20] Applying decades of experience through shop consulting[14:24] Recovering profit through stronger parts return controls[18:55] Using shop metrics to diagnose operational weaknesses[22:54] Why experienced shop owners still need business coaching[24:34] Leadership built on fairness, trust, and quality workResources mentioned in this episode:Tread PartnersGain Traction Podcast on YouTubeGain Traction Podcast WebsiteMike Edge on LinkedInQuotable Moments:“The numbers will usually tell you where your holes are.”“Knowing your numbers is so important.”“You’re presenting all the facts now.”“Nobody cares like the owner, you know.”“Do a good job and treat people the way you want to be treated.”Action Steps:Audit every return shelf tomorrow morning.Assign one person to own parts returns and credits.Create a weekly return-credit report for every location.Review close ratios beside average written repair orders and DVI results.Build recovering lost profit in an auto repair shop into the management scorecard.













