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Owned by Michael

Service Leader Academy

55 members • Free

Automotive service advisor training focused on customer-pay sales, approvals, CSI, customer retention, ELR growth, objection handling & income growth.

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1 contribution to Technician Find Community
Your Next Hire Is Already in Your Rejected Pile
Most "rejected" candidates aren't unqualified. They were filtered out by the wrong person on the wrong day. Your next hire is probably one of them. In this post: - Why "rejected" almost never means "unqualified" - The hard-screening mistake that filters out hands you need in bays - The 72-Hour Recovery Sprint — a 45-minute audit you can run Tuesday - The text script that re-opens the conversation - Why running this sprint is the wrong long-term answer Read time: ~4 minutes ___ A shop had 25 candidates in the rejected pile. 2 in the active pile. One of the 25 had 35 years turning wrenches. Former shop owner. Nobody called him. How many candidates are in your rejected pile right now? Here's the 90 seconds that decides who gets called. Someone in the office opens the application. They look at three things — ASE certs, years of experience, and whether the applicant filled the form / resume out correctly. Miss any one of those? Rejected. The applicant might have 35 years working in professional auto repair shops. He might have run his own shop for 15. He might have the exact skills and values that would take your shop to the next level. Doesn't matter. He didn't check the ASE box. Application closed. Rejected. Rejected doesn't mean unqualified. It means filtered out by someone running a checklist. Most owners treat the rejected pile like a graveyard. It's not. It's a holding pen. Some of those candidates really aren't a fit. They don't have the experience. They don't want the work. They're applying to everything that moves. But some of them? Some of them are the hire you've been looking for. They got filtered by the wrong person, on the wrong day, against the wrong criteria. The only way to know which is which is to look. When you screen on ASE certs, what are you actually screening for? If you're trying to find a tech who can produce — ASE is a proxy. Sometimes it's accurate. Sometimes it isn't. There are excellent techs who never bothered with the test. There are mediocre techs with a wall full of patches.
Your Next Hire Is Already in Your Rejected Pile
2 likes • Apr 22
I couldn’t tell you how many times I found good candidates going through rejecteds
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Michael Toledo
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3points to level up
@michael-toledo-9953
Automotive service manager leading with faith, accountability, and discipline to build efficient teams and exceptional service results.

Active 2m ago
Joined Apr 10, 2026
California
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