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Like a Rock: Southwest Collision of Alsip, Ill.

Ask anyone in the collision-repair business in suburban Chicago about the work and reputation of Southwest Collision of Alsip, Ill., and the adjectives they'll use can be summarized in two words - rock solid.

3/1/1997

The shop is established in a village five miles from the Chicago city limits. But the shop's next generation of ownership - Glenn Lochow, who rejoined the business in 1996 to work alongside his parents, shop founders Bill and Joanne Lochow - is prepared to meet future challenges. "The entire industry is becoming more efficient and competitive, and there are fewer repairs available," Glenn says. "We'll have our work cut out for us."

And work is just what the Lochows have been doing. Founded in 1969 in two small buildings on its current property, the business has grown steadily and now occupies a brand-spanking-new, 11,000-square-foot facility that would bring a smile to the face of any efficiency expert.

Glenn, who is expected to take over the shop in the coming year, will take on a business with a solid foundation and reputation. But he's also ready to put in the hours and to make the necessary changes that will be needed to keep this successful ship afloat. "We've been through a tremendous amount of change in the past few years," says Joanne, executive vice president. "It's been 28 years since we founded the shop, and the industry has changed dramatically. Glenn's involvement in the business will let Bill and I back off a bit and bring a fresh perspective to the way we do things."

Offering Customers More

Once strictly a collision-repair operation, the business today includes a successful mechanical-repair shop. Tremendous synergy exists between the two operations - a satisfied customer of the collision shop inevitably becomes a client of the mechanical-repair business, and vice versa. As a result, Southwest competes from a position of strength with three nearby full-service collision-repair operations and dozens of smaller businesses.

Southwest serves the needs of virtually any vehicle owner with any collision-repair or mechanical-service need. "We don't have a specialty," says Joanne. "The one thing we don't do, though, is focus on wholesale work, where they want their jobs done right now and for very little money, which detracts from the value we can offer to our other customers."

To enhance Southwest's already-strong closing ratio with retail customers, Glenn worked with a local graphic-arts firm to produce an attractive brochure, describing the shop's capabilities and commitment to quality. A more far-reaching step toward achieving this goal: the Lochows' decision to join the NAPA AutoCare Collision Center program, a value-added program that offers shop benefits from technical training to marketing support.

In addition to hundreds of retail customers, Southwest serves a growing collection of commercial accounts, including a local rental fleet, a cable-television company, a chemical firm, two heating-and-air-conditioning businesses and a stationery-store chain. Another steady commercial client is a nearby manufacturer and distributor of premium-quality tow trucks. Southwest paints three to five tow trucks per month, which is no easy feat.

The shop's strategy of attracting commercial accounts while also delivering unmatched service to retail customers is consistent with the owners' 10 to 15 percent projected annual sales and revenue growth. A major piece of this growth program was put into place with the opening of the new facility.

Growing and Changing

In planning the new, U-shaped building, Bill, shop founder and president, spent months visiting other shops, researching building design and productivity, and tinkering with an architect's scale model. The end result of this painstaking process is a facility that Henry Ford would have loved. Production follows the building's contour: metal work at one end of the "U," prep and painting in the center and detailing just beyond the spraybooth. The mechanical-repair department is located at the far end of the building, and the customer-reception area is as clean and bright as a doctor's office.

In addition to a new facility, the business has the very latest in repair and refinishing equipment for its eight technicians - six in the collision-repair department and two in the mechanical-repair operation. (Of the six collision technicians, two work in body repair, three specialize in prep and refinishing, and one is a detailer.) Southwest replaced its old crossdraft booth with a Saico drive-through, downdraft unit and also acquired two prep stations and two post lifts. The most recent additions are two Edwin Trisk infrared curing lamps.

The shop also changed paint lines. As of 1995, Southwest has been using NAPA/Martin-Senour Finishes. The NAPA/Martin-Senour technical team helped the Lochows "dial in" their products more effectively and integrate short-wave heat lamps into the shop's production operation.

A Continuing Commitment

Southwest has established itself, but its managers realize the reality of change: to do so is to survive. "We've earned our place as a leader in this market," says Glenn, "but we're going to have to compete even harder and smarter to stay there."

In order to do this, Glenn expects to spend a greater percentage of his time identifying and implementing programs and procedures to help the shop continue to grow without further expanding its facilities.

"Finding ways to become more efficient will be a permanent challenge for our industry," Glenn says. "I have an economics degree, which will help me keep track of our total performance and make sure that we're the most productive shop in our market. That's the key to our continued success."


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