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Collision Coffee Talk

Podcast de Kristen Felder

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Hear the latest from Kristen about what's going in the collision industry. Collision Hub can help you make new connections, better follow industry events, and catch up on industry news and job opportunities.

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74 episodios

episode State Farm Just Changed The Game In Texas And $7,000 Shoes?? artwork

State Farm Just Changed The Game In Texas And $7,000 Shoes??

State Farm just made a major move in Texas by suddenly deciding to pay all RTAs directly — and that raises a much bigger question for the collision repair industry: what changed, and why now? In this episode of Collision Coffee Talk, we dig into the latest shift in Texas claim handling, what it could mean for shops, and why this may be another sign that documentation, itemization, and pressure are finally starting to move the needle. We also talk about the difference between respect and money. One industry veteran spent 20 years being treated like he mattered while he owned a business and bought products from vendors. But once he no longer owned that business, the phone stopped ringing, the calls stopped being returned, and the truth became impossible to ignore. Were people respecting him — or just chasing his money? That conversation matters for every shop owner, estimator, manager, and industry professional. You need people around you who will tell you the truth about your business, even when it is uncomfortable. Because the worst time to find out you were surrounded by salespeople instead of truth-tellers is when you need real help. We’ll also cover: PPG raising material prices again — for the second time in 2026 — and why shops can no longer afford to “bundle and hope” when it comes to paint and materials. Why itemization matters more than ever, especially now that shops are reporting State Farm has started paying itemized material bills. Reports that shops are being removed from insurance company DRPs, possibly as insurers negotiate repair volume with large national MSOs. The uncomfortable connection between Al Capone, mob tactics, and the way insurance claims can feel like a racket. Business lessons shops can learn from Al Capone, power, loyalty, influence, and control. Where the claims are going as vehicle technology reduces certain accident types, including a GM-related study showing backing accidents may be reduced by 86%. And finally, if adjusters believe they deserve over $100,000 a year to review documents, why do they act like body shops are overcharging when they bill for the skill, labor, liability, and documentation required to repair modern vehicles? This episode is about power, money, leverage, truth, and the collision industry’s changing future. Like, follow, and subscribe to Collision Coffee Talk for real conversations about claims, collision repair, insurance behavior, DRPs, total losses, and the business decisions shaping this industry.

18 de may de 2026 - 1 h 4 min
episode State Farm Talks Smack And Threatens The Entire Industry! Bloomington In CRISIS Mode! artwork

State Farm Talks Smack And Threatens The Entire Industry! Bloomington In CRISIS Mode!

From California wildfire claims to Ohio total loss lawsuits, from DRP funneling to supplier pressure and OE repair history, this episode connects the dots the industry cannot afford to ignore. Because when the biggest players in the room start acting like accountability is optional, someone has to say it out loud. Just when you thought State Farm’s response to their consumers could not get any worse, corporate doubled down and threatened the entire state of California.  If that was not enough last week, GEICO’s claims funnel is reveled to show consumers can not turn in a claim without selecting a DRP shop for their service.  We’ll talk about BASF’s massive growth, PPG’s second price increase in just a few months and could Maaco be the dream job we never knew we wanted.  We also talk about some industry history that can not repeat. We’re looking to Assure that Performance never makes it’s way back to the OEs  For the claims process discussion we’ll talk about the Thorton vs State Farm lawsuit from Ohio and the role it plays on owner retained salvage and total loss claims.  If this episode makes you think, makes you mad, or makes you look at claims differently, make sure you like the video, subscribe to Collision Coffee Talk, and share it with someone in the industry who needs to hear it. These conversations only matter if they get outside the room.

11 de may de 2026 - 1 h 23 min
episode Progressive CEO Makes RTA Statement While State Farm Squares Off With Former Supreme Court Justice artwork

Progressive CEO Makes RTA Statement While State Farm Squares Off With Former Supreme Court Justice

This week on Collision Coffee Talk, we dig into one of the biggest themes reshaping collision repair and auto claims right now: the growing gap between what the insurance industry says is happening and what shops, consumers, and claim professionals are actually experiencing. We start in Texas, where the Texas Department of Insurance has issued revised rules involving Right to Appraisal and who can act as an adjuster. These changes matter because appraisal rights are becoming one of the most important tools consumers and repair professionals have when an insurer’s valuation, estimate, or claim decision does not reflect reality. Then we turn to Progressive, where the company’s CEO made an official statement involving a Right to Appraisal dispute Progressive was handling on a total loss. That raises a much bigger question: when a carrier takes a public position on an appraisal issue, what does that tell us about how seriously insurers are treating the process? We also cover the growing trouble surrounding Driven Brands, which failed to meet the deadline to refile its financials, received a NASDAQ deficiency notice, and is now facing the pressure of potential delisting concerns along with multiple lawsuits. For the collision industry, this is more than a financial headline. It raises real questions about consolidation, corporate repair models, investor pressure, and what happens when financial stress starts affecting operations. State Farm’s ongoing situation in Oklahoma also continues to expand, now involving a retired former Chief Justice of the Oklahoma Supreme Court. The story keeps growing, and it adds another layer to the legal and political scrutiny surrounding one of the largest insurers in the country. We also look at the arrest of a Louisiana sheriff, which opens the door to a larger conversation about Louisiana’s long and troubling history of insurance-related public corruption, including multiple former insurance commissioners who were convicted and sent to prison. On the repair side, we discuss another failure involving asTech’s rules engine, which once again did not identify all required calibrations. That matters because calibration misses are not paperwork problems. They are repair planning, liability, and vehicle safety problems. State Farm has also started placing YouTube videos directly on estimates, which raises a new set of questions about how insurers are trying to explain, justify, or influence repair decisions through estimate documentation. Finally, we talk about what happened at the latest CIC and SCRS meeting in North Carolina, including an open mic session where I got very personal about the disconnect between collision repair and insurance. The conversation revealed something important: too many people are still talking as though the old claims world exists, while the real claims environment has already changed. This episode is about appraisal rights, insurer accountability, financial pressure, calibration failures, total loss disputes, and the uncomfortable truth that the collision repair industry may be seeing the claims crisis more clearly than the people still pretending the system is working.

4 de may de 2026 - 1 h 38 min
episode Ford’s 24-Hour CARFAX Disaster, Insurers Are Writing eBay Parts?! & the DRP Problem artwork

Ford’s 24-Hour CARFAX Disaster, Insurers Are Writing eBay Parts?! & the DRP Problem

This week on Collision Coffee Talk, we’re looking at some of the biggest red flags hitting collision repair, insurance claims, OEM certification programs, and consumers right now. Insurance companies are now writing eBay parts on repair estimates — and that raises a serious question: do they really expect shops or vehicle owners to chase used, non-returnable parts from strangers just to complete a proper collision repair? We also break down Ford Motor Company’s stunning 24-hour CARFAX mistake. Ford announced a program to share repaired-vehicle information from certified collision repair shops with CARFAX, then reversed course within a day after industry feedback. What happened, and why did it matter so much? This episode also digs into the growing problem of point-and-click estimating, where estimators rely on diagrams instead of true damage analysis — and how that can lead to incomplete repairs, missed operations, and unsafe outcomes. Then we get into the bigger battle: DRP programs. Insurance companies are not just using DRP shops to control repair severity. They may also be using them to reduce liability exposure, avoid diminished value conversations, suppress OE parts demands, and redirect third-party claimants away from the full value of what they may be owed. We also cover possible major changes coming to OEM certification programs, BMW’s certified collision repair conference, and the legal concerns around new software tools claiming they can “prevent” total losses. If a shop follows a tool that helps keep a vehicle repairable when it should have been totaled, who owns that liability? Plus, we discuss new class action concerns involving Safeco, Liberty Mutual, and Progressive, including issues in Arizona and South Carolina, and why claim handling around RTAs may become a bigger legal fight. And finally, we look at Carvana’s dealership buying strategy — and why this may not just be about selling cars. With access to parts, service, auction infrastructure, and collision-related assets, Carvana could become a much bigger competitor to collision repair shops than many people realize. This episode is packed with the claims issues, legal risks, repair industry shifts, and insurer strategies every shop owner, estimator, technician, and consumer advocate needs to understand. Subscribe to Collision Coffee Talk for real conversations about collision repair, insurance claims, OEM procedures, legal risk, and what is really happening behind the scenes in auto physical damage claims.

27 de abr de 2026 - 1 h 33 min
episode GEICO Secrets, State Farm Under Fire, DRPs Exposed artwork

GEICO Secrets, State Farm Under Fire, DRPs Exposed

We’re talking about GEICO claims handling practices and the internal “secrets” shops and consumers say they are never told while claims are still being denied. We also cover the bizarre California bear suit fraud case, where a group was arrested after allegedly faking animal damage to support insurance claims. We dig into the growing pressure on State Farm, including new federal attention over Missouri hail claims tied to the May 2025 storm, and why this is just the latest legal and public-relations problem facing the company. Also in this episode: Why DRPs will always be wrong for proper repairs New updates on claims handling, AI, and insurer staffing problems Why insurers are discovering the system cannot run without enough skilled people SEMA’s ADAS push and the legal risk it could create for collision repair shops PPG’s latest price increase The latest on Aztec, Opus, and the merger controversy Why viewers may want to sound off And why the Florida AI bill dying in committee matters If you work in collision repair, claims, estimating, shop leadership, or advocacy, this episode is packed with real-world issues that affect your business, your customers, and the future of the industry.

20 de abr de 2026 - 1 h 59 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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