{"version":"1.1.0","producer":"fm.getcarcurious","layer":"official","episode":{"title":"The Hidden Game Running Your Auto Repair Shop: When Systems Undermine Values [E241]","url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/the-hidden-game-running-your-auto-repair-shop-when-systems-undermine-values-e241","audioUrl":"https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/d0e2b400-4d66-4a94-8774-85402fbce5c0.mp3","description":"Thanks to our Partners, Pico Technology, and AutelWatch Full Video EpisodeMatt Fanslow continues his exploration of game theory by examining the difference between a shop’s official game and its shadow game.The official game is what ownership and management say the shop values: quality work, safety, fairness, employee support, customer care, and doing things the right way.The shadow game is what the shop’s systems, incentives, habits, exceptions, and unwritten rules actually reward.Those two games are not always completely opposed, and the gap between them is not necessarily created intentionally. Management may sincerely believe in the official game while remaining unaware of the behaviors being produced by compensation plans, workflow problems, favoritism, poor communication, broken equipment, or inadequate support.Matt looks at how employees can respond rationally to the system in front of them, even when those responses undermine the shop’s stated purpose. That may help explain dishonest, deviant, or destructive behavior, but it does not necessarily excuse it.The goal is not to pretend the shadow game does not exist. It is to identify it, understand what is creating it, and bring it into the light so the shop’s actual systems move closer to its stated values.The episode then takes a much less serious turn as Matt attempts to choose his Mount Rushmore of stand-up comedians. Richard Pryor, Lenny Bruce, Joan Rivers, and Dave Chappelle make the final cut, but not without considerable hesitation and several deserving names being left behind.Topics DiscussedThe difference between the official game and the shadow gameWhy stated values and actual incentives often conflictProduction-based compensation versus quality expectationsUnpaid inspections and the behavior they may encourageFavoritism, gravy work, and inconsistent enforcementSafety claims versus unsafe or neglected equipmentFront-of-house and back-of-house information gapsHow imperfect information allows assumptions to spreadLocally rational behavior inside a dysfunctional systemExplaining behavior without excusing itManagement’s responsibility to understand the real systemEmployees’ responsibility to communicate problems honestlyWhen trying to improve a workplace becomes less reasonable than leaving itGolden handcuffs and the personal cost of remaining in a misaligned organizationWhether mission statements represent actual beliefs or marketing languageMatt’s Mount Rushmore of stand-up comediansQuestions Raised in the EpisodeWhat does a shop say it rewards?What does it actually reward?Do compensation and workflow systems support the quality standards discussed in meetings?Are safety problems addressed when employees report them?Are rules and opportunities applied consistently?What behaviors are employees learning from the system, regardless of what management says?How closely does the shadow game align with the official game?Who belongs on the Mount Rushmore of stand-up comedy?Matt’s Comedy Mount RushmoreRichard PryorLenny BruceJoan RiversDave ChappelleOther comedians considered include George Carlin, Robin Williams, Bill Burr, Chris Rock, Eddie Murphy, Steve Martin, Steven Wright, Sam Kinison, Andrew Dice Clay, Norm Macdonald, and Bob Uecker.Thanks to our Partner, Pico TechnologyAre you chasing elusive automotive problems? Pico Technology empowers you to see what's really happening. Their PicoScope oscilloscopes transform your diagnostic capabilities. Visit PicoAuto.comThanks to our Partner, AutelFrom 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.comContact InformationEmail Matt: mattfanslowpodcast@gmail.comDiagnosing the Aftermarket A - Z YouTube ChannelThe Automotive Repair Podcast Network: https://automotiverepairpodcastnetwork.com/Remarkable Results Radio Podcast with Carm Capriotto: Advancing the Aftermarket by Facilitating Wisdom Through Story Telling and Open Discussion. https://remarkableresults.biz/Business by the Numbers with Hunt Demarest: Understand the Numbers of Your Business with CPA Hunt Demarest. https://huntdemarest.captivate.fm/The Auto Repair Marketing Podcast with Kim and Brian Walker: Marketing Experts Brian &amp; Kim Walker Work with Shop Owners to Take it to the Next Level. https://autorepairmarketing.captivate.fm/The Weekly Blitz with Chris Cotton: Weekly Inspiration with Business Coach Chris Cotton from AutoFix - Auto Shop Coaching. https://chriscotton.captivate.fm/Speak Up! Effective Communication with Craig O'Neill: Develop Interpersonal and Professional Communication Skills when Speaking to Audiences of Any Size. https://craigoneill.captivate.fm/"},"annotations":[{"id":423937,"startTime":661.5,"endTime":672.7,"type":"concept","title":"inspection","url":"/glossary/inspection","quote":"The shops not charging the client for the inspection. Therefore, the mechanical or technical specialist doing, maybe it's an inspection specialist, isn't getting paid directly to do that.","canonicalId":"concept:inspection","priority":0.65,"confidence":0.72,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"In this episode, “inspection” is the shop’s diagnostic step where findings are assessed and communicated to the customer. The host emphasizes that if the shop doesn’t charge for the inspection, staff compensation may still depend on finding billable problems, which can distort how thoroughly the inspection is performed.","simplifiedExplanation":"Here, “inspection” means the initial check to figure out what’s wrong with the car. The host is saying that even if customers aren’t charged for that check, the shop’s internal pay incentives can still affect how complete it is.","sourceStartTime":661.5,"sourceEndTime":672.7}},{"id":423938,"startTime":677.3,"endTime":682.5,"type":"concept","title":"skip things","url":"/glossary/skip-things","quote":"that needs to be addressed, that behavior to skip things is kind of born of that. I think we have to be able to explain things without necessarily excusing them","canonicalId":"concept:skip-things","priority":0.8,"confidence":0.9,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Skip things” refers to the practice of not performing certain checks or not documenting findings during an inspection. The host ties it to incentives where staff only get paid when problems are found, which can undermine trust and thoroughness.","simplifiedExplanation":"This means not doing all the steps you should during an inspection. The host is saying the shop’s incentives can push people to focus only on issues they can bill for, instead of doing a complete check.","sourceStartTime":677.3,"sourceEndTime":682.5}},{"id":423939,"startTime":729.4,"endTime":735.5,"type":"concept","title":"official game and shadow game","url":"/glossary/official-game-and-shadow-game","quote":"explain and probably not going to use such terms as official game and shadow game. But with that knowledge, you can go in and explain how this is kind of what is sold.","canonicalId":"concept:official-game-and-shadow-game","priority":0.7,"confidence":0.78,"source":"hybrid-fuzzy+gpt-5.4-nano","data":{"explanation":"“Official game and shadow game” is a metaphor for the difference between what a shop says it does (the advertised, customer-facing process) and what actually happens behind the scenes. The host argues that misaligned incentives can create a gap between the “story” sold to clients and the real workflow.","simplifiedExplanation":"This is the idea that what the shop tells customers is one thing, but what really drives decisions can be different. The host is using it to describe a hidden mismatch between promises and reality in how inspections and repairs get handled.","sourceStartTime":729.4,"sourceEndTime":735.5}}],"speakers":[{"id":"s1","name":"Matt Fanslow","role":"host"}],"transcripts":[{"url":"http://getcarcurious.com/episodes/the-hidden-game-running-your-auto-repair-shop-when-systems-undermine-values-e241/transcript.vtt","type":"text/vtt"}],"alignmentMode":"scalar","fallbackOffset":0.0}