Why Customers Struggle to Trust Auto Repair [E240]
Thanks to our Partners, Pico Technology, and Autel
In this episode, Matt Fanslow continues the conversation around game theory and economics in the automotive repair industry, focusing on one of the biggest invisible forces affecting customer trust: information asymmetry.
Auto repair is a credence good service, meaning most customers cannot fully judge the quality of the work before, during, or even after the repair. A grinding brake noise may disappear after a $200 backyard brake job or a $500 professional repair, but the customer may not be able to tell whether the work was safe, complete, or performed to a professional standard. That gap between what the shop knows and what the customer can reasonably know creates distrust by default.
Matt connects this to economist George Akerlof’s “Market for Lemons,” originally applied to the used-car market, and explains how the same logic applies directly to auto repair. When customers cannot reliably distinguish quality from poor work, lower-quality providers can drag down trust in the entire market.
The episode then turns toward solutions: better documentation, digital vehicle inspections, before-and-after photos or videos, service information references, and clearer explanations that help narrow the information gap without trying to turn every customer into a technician. The goal is not to overwhelm customers with technical data. The goal is to give them enough context to understand what was found, why it matters, and why the repair has value.
Matt also discusses how YouTube, forums, and large language models can complicate trust by giving customers information that may be incomplete, misunderstood, or flat-out wrong. Shops now have to compete not just with other shops, but with customer fear, confirmation bias, and online explanations that may reinforce distrust.
Key Topics
- Information asymmetry in automotive repair
- Auto repair as a credence good service
- Why customers often distrust repair recommendations
- George Akerlof and “The Market for Lemons”
- How poor-quality providers affect trust in good shops
- The role of digital vehicle inspections
- Before-and-after documentation as trust-building
- Using service information to demonstrate value
- The impact of YouTube, forums, and AI tools on customer expectations
- Why economic and game theory language matters in shop management
Episode Highlights
Matt explains that customers often cannot tell the difference between a good repair and a poor repair if the obvious symptom goes away. That makes trust harder to earn and easier to lose.
He uses the brake job example to show how two repairs can appear identical to a customer even when one is much safer, more complete, and more professional than the other.
The “Market for Lemons” idea is used to explain how low-quality or deceptive providers can create distrust that affects the entire profession.
The episode stresses that documentation is not just paperwork. Photos, videos, voltage readings, service information, and before-and-after evidence are part of how shops demonstrate value.
Matt argues that shops need to use economic and game theory terms because many of the answers to shop problems already exist in those fields. Without the right language, it becomes harder to find or explain the solution.
Notable Quote
“We’re insulating ourselves from a market for lemons.”
Practical Takeaways for Shops
- Use digital vehicle inspections to show customers what is good, what is bad, and why it matters.
- Do not assume the customer understands the significance of a test result. Explain the before and after in plain terms.
- Show comparisons when possible: good versus bad, before versus after, failed versus repaired.
- Reference manufacturer service information when it helps explain why the job requires certain steps.
- Recognize that customers may arrive with fear, skepticism, or bad information before you ever speak to them.
- Trust is not built only by being honest. It is built by making honest work visible and understandable.
Thanks to our Partner, Pico Technology
Are you chasing elusive automotive problems? Pico Technology empowers you to see what’s really happening. Their PicoScope oscilloscopes transform your diagnostic capabilities. Visit PicoAuto.com
Thanks to our Partner, Autel
From drivability diagnostics and TPMS service to ADAS and advanced safety systems, Autel helps technicians follow OEM procedures and repair with confidence. Learn more at Autel.com
Contact Information
The Automotive Repair Podcast Network: https://automotiverepairpodcastnetwork.com/
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