Honest Garage Podcast

Build the Business, Keep the Craft: Julio Campos on Shop Leadership, Customer Trust, and Growing Dragonfly Automotive

31 min · 3 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Build the Business, Keep the Craft: Julio Campos on Shop Leadership, Customer Trust, and Growing Dragonfly Automotive

Descripción

Julio Campos has built Dragonfly Automotive in San Diego by obsessing over the things most shops treat as "extras." Communication that is clear. A customer experience that feels intentional. A team that is trained and developed, not just thrown into the fire. In this episode, Julio shares what has actually helped Dragonfly grow in a competitive market like San Diego. He talks about creating a premium experience without losing authenticity, how to build consistency across the shop, and why the real differentiator is not the repair itself, it is how the customer feels from the first interaction to the final handoff. You will also hear Julio's perspective on building people. How he thinks about training, mentorship, and creating a workplace where technicians and advisors can level up instead of burning out. If you want practical insight on running a sharper operation and earning loyalty in a market where customers have options, Julio's interview is worth hearing. Links: Honest Mechanic Marketing (HMM): https://honestmechanicmarketing.com/ Dragonfly Automotive: https://www.dragonflyauto.com/

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Honest Garage Podcast!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

42 episodios

Portada del episodio From Chaos to Clarity: Todd Santos on Service Advisor Growth, TechMetric Inspections, and Building Trust at Ken's Auto Center

From Chaos to Clarity: Todd Santos on Service Advisor Growth, TechMetric Inspections, and Building Trust at Ken's Auto Center

Todd Santos did not take the typical straight line into shop leadership. He learned the trade, learned the front counter, and learned what a shop should never feel like for a customer. That mix shaped how he runs the day to day at Ken's Auto Center in San Diego, serving the Mira Mesa and Miramar area since 1999. In this episode, Todd gets specific about what changed everything for their customer experience. Hiring and developing the right service advisor, building repeatable communication habits, and using TechMetric digital vehicle inspections to create real transparency. He talks about why being "thorough" is not a buzzword, it is how you earn trust when you are recommending work. Todd also explains how he thinks about warranties and accountability, including why they stand behind work with clear terms like a 24 month, 24,000 mile warranty on common brake jobs, and why trust gets complicated the moment another shop touches the vehicle. The bigger theme is simple, set expectations early, document clearly, and never sell what is not true. If you want a practical look at improving the front counter, tightening inspection flow, and building a reputation that holds up, this conversation is worth hearing. Links: Honest Mechanic Marketing (HMM): https://honestmechanicmarketing.com/ Ken's Auto Center: https://www.kensautocenter.com/

Ayer37 min
Portada del episodio Build the Business, Keep the Craft: Julio Campos on Shop Leadership, Customer Trust, and Growing Dragonfly Automotive

Build the Business, Keep the Craft: Julio Campos on Shop Leadership, Customer Trust, and Growing Dragonfly Automotive

Julio Campos has built Dragonfly Automotive in San Diego by obsessing over the things most shops treat as "extras." Communication that is clear. A customer experience that feels intentional. A team that is trained and developed, not just thrown into the fire. In this episode, Julio shares what has actually helped Dragonfly grow in a competitive market like San Diego. He talks about creating a premium experience without losing authenticity, how to build consistency across the shop, and why the real differentiator is not the repair itself, it is how the customer feels from the first interaction to the final handoff. You will also hear Julio's perspective on building people. How he thinks about training, mentorship, and creating a workplace where technicians and advisors can level up instead of burning out. If you want practical insight on running a sharper operation and earning loyalty in a market where customers have options, Julio's interview is worth hearing. Links: Honest Mechanic Marketing (HMM): https://honestmechanicmarketing.com/ Dragonfly Automotive: https://www.dragonflyauto.com/

3 de jun de 202631 min
Portada del episodio Specialist, Not Generalist: Alex Rodriguez on Repair, Service, and Building Euro Cars Southend

Specialist, Not Generalist: Alex Rodriguez on Repair, Service, and Building Euro Cars Southend

Alex Rodriguez built Euro Cars Southend around a clear promise. If you own a European vehicle and you want it serviced the right way, you should not have to settle for guesswork, vague answers, or a rushed experience. In this episode, Alex shares how he developed a specialist mindset and why focusing on European platforms changes everything. The tooling, the training, the diagnostic approach, and the standards you have to hold if you want to protect customers from expensive mistakes. He talks about what is working in his shop right now, how he keeps work flowing without sacrificing quality, and why communication is the real difference maker in a premium service environment. You will also hear Alex's perspective on customer expectations. How to educate without talking down, how to set priorities clearly, and how to build long term loyalty in a niche market where reputation travels fast. If you are building a specialty shop, or you want a better playbook for higher end customer experience and consistency, this episode is worth hearing. Links Honest Mechanic Marketing (HMM): https://honestmechanicmarketing.com [https://honestmechanicmarketing.com] Euro Cars Southend: https://eurocarssouthend.com/

1 de jun de 202636 min
Portada del episodio Honesty You Cannot Fake: Brian Parada on Diagnostics, Warranty Level Work, and Winning in the Google Review Era

Honesty You Cannot Fake: Brian Parada on Diagnostics, Warranty Level Work, and Winning in the Google Review Era

Brian Parada did not grow up thinking he would own an auto repair shop. He came in through business school, lawnmower engines, corporate tire stores, and a long stretch of learning how the industry really works when you are the one responsible for the customer and the outcome. Today Brian leads AutoTek Automotive Service and Repair in Raleigh, North Carolina, and in this conversation he gets real about the parts of shop ownership most people avoid. The diagnostic work that eats time under flat rate pay systems, the training gap that separates great techs from parts changers, and why Brian refuses to put his name and his warranty on work unless it is done the right way. You will also hear why customer happiness is not just a nice idea, it is survival. Brian talks about running a shop in the digital age, handling reviews, responding to complaints, and building a reputation where the word honesty actually shows up in what customers write. He also shares how communication and updated estimates matter when jobs change mid repair, and why transparency protects both the customer and the shop. If you want practical insight on diagnostics, training, quality control, and what it takes to earn trust at scale, this episode is worth hearing. Links: Honest Mechanic Marketing (HMM): https://honestmechanicmarketing.com/ AutoTek Automotive Service and Repair: https://www.autotek.biz/

27 de may de 202634 min
Portada del episodio Put Honesty on the Sign: Brandon Todd on Integrity, Pay Plans, and Building My Honest Mechanic in Concord

Put Honesty on the Sign: Brandon Todd on Integrity, Pay Plans, and Building My Honest Mechanic in Concord

Brandon Todd built his entire brand around a promise most shops are afraid to make out loud. Be the honest mechanic people hope they find when they are stressed, busy, and do not know who to trust. Brandon is the owner of My Honest Mechanic in Concord, North Carolina, and in this episode he shares how the name became a mission, not a slogan. He talks about seeing corruption in the industry and refusing to build a business model that pressures advisors and techs to push sales just to protect a paycheck. Instead, he built a pay structure designed to support honesty, with hourly pay and bonuses in the background, so the team can focus on quality work and real customer education. You will also hear why putting honesty in the name creates real accountability. Brandon explains how being a state inspection station can be a breeding ground for shady behavior, and why his shop will not slide illegal tint or cut corners to "help someone out." That conviction is not always popular, but it is the reason customers stick. If you want a clear example of how integrity can be operational, not just inspirational, this conversation is worth hearing. Links: Honest Mechanic Marketing (HMM): https://honestmechanicmarketing.com/ My Honest Mechanic: https://mhmauto.com/

25 de may de 202631 min