The Joke’s On You at Smiley’s - BodyShop Business

The Joke’s On You at Smiley’s

Jeff Smiley usually has a fake grin on his face as he walks around his shop in New Castle, Ind. But it’s not the typical fake grin worn by someone who’s trying to look happy when he’s really pissed. Rather, it’s a “smile-on-a-stick” prop, one of several hundred gag gifts he has collected over the years and displayed in a glass cabinet in his office at Smiley Body Shop for all to see.

The fact of the matter is, the 55-year-old Smiley doesn’t need the prop at all. True to his last name, he’s smiling all the time and loves to play pranks on his em-ployees and an occasional hapless appraiser. His odd collection of magic tricks and novelties keeps everyone loose in the shop and makes an indelible impression on customers who can’t help but ask about them when they come into his office.

“It has become a big conversation piece in my business dealings,” Smiley says. “Customers know I like this stuff and will sometimes bring in gags for me. I’ve got boxes full of them upstairs.”

Smiley has had a passion for these gag gifts every since he was kid, when he would order them from the back of comic books. Now, he orders most of them by the dozens from Loftus International in Salt Lake City, Utah, or may spot one while traveling and scoop it up. He’s got so many now that he frequently gives them away to children and customers. Whether it’s two-foot-long rubber feet, fake cigarettes or noisemakers, they never fail to make someone’s day a little better.

One of Smiley’s favorite magic tricks involves putting a lit cigarette out on someone’s tie.

“You’d swear your tie was destroyed, but when you open it up there’s no damage,” Smiley says. “I could teach that trick to anyone in 60 seconds.”

He’s also fond of a little princess and a mirror, both of which are magnetized so that when you hold the mirror up to the princess, she dances and spins around.

“Things like that are harder and harder to come by,” Smiley says.

As far as some of the pranks Smiley has pulled, one time he put a tailpipe whistle in an estimator’s car. Shortly after leaving the shop, the estimator came back and said something was wrong with his car. Smiley stalled him for about 15 minutes with a cup of coffee while his technicians “looked” for the problem. He then announced they had “fixed” the “problem.”

“What do I owe you?” the grateful estimator asked.

“I told him, ‘Don’t worry about, we’re friends,’” Smiley says with a chuckle. “So I’ve kept him owing me one to this day.”

Another time, Smiley had his staff of conspirators jack up the back of a parts guy’s van so the wheels were barely touching the ground. Naturally, when the guy put the car in drive it didn’t go anywhere, so when he really got aggressive and the van took off, the sound he heard made him think the transmission had dropped out.

But regularly playing jokes on others comes at a heavy price: Smiley has to be on guard at
all times.

“I’ve done lots of things to my friends, but I get it back sometimes, too,” he says.

Writer Jason Stahl is editor of BodyShop Business. He can be reached at (330) 670-1234 ext. 226.

You May Also Like

Exit Strategies: Personal Vision & Financial Planning

The most critical first step in an exit or transition plan is to develop a financial plan and personal vision of what your life will look like post-business.

Jerry was a 63-year-old auto body shop owner who contacted me regarding putting together an exit strategy. Like most shop owners, he had become tired of the day-to-day grind of dealing with the back-and-forth fights with the insurance carriers, yet he still loved the idea of being a part of a business he built from the ground up. Ideally, he would have liked his production manager, Evan, to become his heir apparent, yet he had no idea if Evan was interested in owning the shop or if he was even capable of doing so. His shop was a prime candidate for a consolidator, and he had received an offer from one, yet he cared about his employees and wanted to make sure they were taken care of. Also, he was unsure what he would do with himself if he did not have a place to go. He did not know where to turn.

Collision Repairers: Will You Take the Oath?

Today’s collision repairers are challenged with a new set of concerns, one being the need to follow OEM repair procedures.

Three Generations Keep Trains Running on Time at CARSTAR Jacobus

CARSTAR Jacobus Founder Jerry Jacobus and son Dave share a passion for collision repair and also model railroading.

Auto Body Repair: The Right Way, the Wrong Way and Another Way

In a perfect world, every repairer would make the right decisions in every repair, but we don’t live in a perfect world.

The Digital Blitz

We talk so much about how much collision repair is changing, but so is the world of media!

Other Posts

Auto Body Shops: Building a Foundation for the New Year

For the new year, it’s important to conduct a thorough audit of your finances to look for areas of opportunity and things to change.

Auto Body Consolidation Update: There’s a New Buyer in Town

The good news for shops that want to sell but do not fit a consolidator’s
profile is that there is a fresh pool of new buyers.

Is Your Auto Body Shop a Hobby … or a Business?

So you want to provide safe and properly repair vehicles to your customers … even at a financial loss?

BodyShop Business 2023 Executives of the Year

Greg Solesbee was named the Single-Shop Executive of the Year, and Charlie Drake was named the Multi-Shop Executive of the Year.