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It’s All In The Mix: Do it Yourself and Save on Materials

Mixing your own paint is the single best way to save money on a shop’s material bill – in fact, no other individual change will make a shop more profit than in-house paint mixing.

Internet Insight

You’ve no doubt heard about the Internet. Whether it’s those commercials with guys in suits surfing in the streets, Al Gore talking about the Information Superhighway or somebody on the radio telling you about "dot com," it’s all around you. You may even be a “netizen” yourself.

The Tale of One Shop Continues…

….with Paul and Teresa Slate

The Cost of Going Global

Since each country’s refinish market is at a different stage of maturity, product needs vary – making formulation costly for manufacturers and standardization of VOC rules nearly impossible.

What’s the Bright Idea?

Shop owners share their thoughts on how to make their businesses – and yours – more successful

Legal Insight: Know Laws that Affect Your Business

As a body shop owner, you have a lot to worry and think about. If you’re successful, though, you probably make the time to check the quality of the paint work leaving your shop
– even though you employ painters.

Opening the Books: Balance Sheets

Looking for a way to increase employee productivity and loyalty at your repair operation? You may need to look no further than your monthly balance sheet.

Get More Green from Your Yellow

Most body shops advertise in the Yellow Pages, and many of those shop owners renew their ads every year, leaving well enough alone.

Ask the Executives

There’s no better place to go for advice than to those who’ve reached the top. To help you climb your ladder of success, we asked Clark Plucinski and Russell Verona – both industry leaders and BodyShop Business Executives of the Year – questions ranging
from productivity to customer relations to future trends:

Starting Over

Russ Manley and his father, Ron, have run Manley and Son Auto Body and Paint in Forsyth, Mo., for 34 years. In the early years, custom work was the bread and butter for the shop, but because of poor work conditions, paint jobs that went wrong were as prevalent as the ones that went right.