Service King: 70 Sites Have Earned Honda ProFirst Certification
Service King announced that 70 of its active locations have earned ProFirst certification from Honda.
Jerry’s ABRA Auto Body & Glass Earns Honda ProFirst Certification
The certification “provides confidence to Honda and Acura vehicle owners that the proper tools, equipment and training are in place for the repair center to perform high-quality auto body repairs.”
Dibble’s Auto Center Receives Honda ProFirst Certification
The ProFirst Certified program identifies a select group of collision repair facilities that have committed to a high degree of training, have the proper tools and equipment, and exhibit professional customer care.
H&V Collision Center Announces Honda ProFirst Certification
Launched by American Honda Motor Co. in March 2015, the ProFirst Certified program identifies a select group of collision repair facilities that have committed to a high degree of training, have the proper tools and equipment, and exhibit professional customer care.
Nagy’s Collision Receives Additional Honda ProFirst Certification
Four of multiple-shop operator’s eight stores now recognized by Honda/Acura as preferred repair shops.
Ohio MSO Achieves Honda ProFirst Certification in Two Shops
Nagy’s Collision Specialists’ locations in Wooster now recognized by Honda/Acura as preferred shops for their vehicles.
From the Sidelines to Center Field: OEM Certifications
If you’re considering OEM certifications for your collision repair facility, take a good look at your playing field, what your competitors are doing in your market and how OEM certifications can make you the winning team.
Drew Technologies’ DriveCRASH Accepted by Honda’s ProFirst Certified Network
American Honda and the ProFirst Certification Team have announced that Drew Technologies has agreed to license the HDS/i-HDS software to run on their DriveCrash remote scanning tablet for scanning Honda and Acura vehicles.
OEM Auto Body Certification: What’s Next?
In 2011, the three major industry associations decided that OEM repair procedures should be the standard. In 2019, we’re talking about taking those repair procedures to the next level and getting that stamp of approval from the manufacturers who created them.
Certification: Not Just a Fad
The technological advancements of today’s vehicles require OE certification, so it’s not going away any time soon. In fact, it may replace the DRP model one day.