Take a look at the franchise dealer networks right now, and you will see a system struggling to cope with its own complexity.
New data from Auto Data Solutions (ADS) has revealed massive friction points in the typical dealer service booking journey.
In a mystery-shopping exercise tracking pricing for an intermediate service on a MINI Electric, ADS uncovered wildly inconsistent quotes across different channels within the same dealer networks.
Prices for the exact same car doing the exact same work ranged from £165 to £413.94.
Worse still, the study found that automated booking tools and external contact centres frequently work with entirely contradictory data, including a high proportion of automated service quotes for electric vehicles that explicitly included an oil change.
According to ADS, this pricing confusion and the expectation that customers must be their own maintenance experts causes up to 20% of motorists to abandon a booking mid-journey.
While ADS is using these figures to highlight the launch of SMR iQ, a new real-time OEM data tool developed with Intuitive Dealer Tools that saw a 19.7% booking uplift during trials with the Budgen Motor Group, there is a much bigger lesson here for the independent garages.
This franchise chaos highlights a massive competitive advantage. Large dealer groups are bogged down by fragmented legacy systems, disconnected call centres, and unvetted AI chatbots that do not talk to each other.
If a motorist calls a local independent garage, they do not get passed through an external contact centre. They speak to a service advisor or the business owner, who looks at a single workshop management system and gives them a straight, honest answer.
Independents already excel at the transparency and relationship-building that franchise networks are currently trying to buy their way into via software integrations.
However, we shouldn’t just laugh at a dealer trying to sell an oil filter to a MINI Electric driver.
Why it Matters
This data serves as a critical reminder to audit your own digital footprint. While independent garages rarely suffer from the multi-site data fragmentation seen in large PLCs, automated tools are becoming more common on independent websites.
If you use an online booking plug-in or a generic quote-generation tool, when was the last time you tested it?
Does your online booking form accurately reflect your current labor rates and parts inflation?
If a motorist inputs a hybrid or EV registration into your website, does your system filter out irrelevant service operations, or does it look generic?
Are you making the transaction as easy and transparent as possible to reduce discrepancies between the original quote and the final invoice?
The takeaway here isn’t that independent workshops need to panic and buy more software. The takeaway is that clarity wins business.
If 1 in 5 customers are walking away from businesses that confuse them, the garages that offer upfront guidance and consistent pricing will always secure the booking. SMR iQ combines vehicle-specific service schedules, parts data, and EV guidance to create a ‘single source of truth’ across digital and physical booking channels.
