How to Use MPIs, Photos, and Videos to Increase Service Approval Rates

December 13, 2025

For decades, the most difficult moment in the service drive has been the phone call. It’s the moment an advisor has to call a customer and explain that a simple oil change has turned into a $900 repair. The advisor relies on words alone to build a case, while the customer on the other end of the line holds all the power with a simple, two-letter word: “No.”

That dynamic is now obsolete. The single most powerful tool for getting a “yes” isn’t a script or a sales tactic. It’s the smartphone camera in your technician’s pocket.

Using a Multi-Point Inspection (MPI) with clear photos and videos is no longer an optional add-on; it is the foundation of a modern, high-grossing service department. A well-executed digital service presentation doesn’t just sell work—it builds trust, eliminates arguments, and streamlines the entire repair process. If you want to increase service approval rates, you have to stop telling customers what’s wrong and start showing them.

Why Visual Proof Has Become the Most Powerful Tool in the Service Drive

In a world of skepticism, seeing is believing. Customers have been conditioned to distrust mechanics. They come into the service drive with their guard up, expecting to be sold something they don’t need. Visual evidence is the fastest way to break down that wall.

Photos and Videos Remove Doubt Faster Than Any Verbal Explanation

You can spend five minutes trying to explain what a “cracked compliance bushing” is, and the customer will still be confused. Or, you can send them a ten-second video showing the cracked rubber and the wheel movement. The video does the work for you. It provides undeniable proof that a problem exists, shifting the conversation from “Do I believe you?” to “What do we do about it?”

Visual MPIs Turn an Uncomfortable Sales Moment Into an Educational One

Untrained advisors feel like they are “selling” when they recommend work. This makes them uncomfortable, and that discomfort is transmitted to the customer. A visual MPI reframes the interaction. The advisor is no longer a salesperson; they are an educator. Their job is to present the findings and explain the implications. The visual evidence sells the job, allowing the advisor to maintain a position of a trusted consultant.

Transparency Builds Trust—and Trust Builds Approvals

When you proactively show a customer everything—the good, the bad, and the ugly—you demonstrate transparency. You are telling them, “We have nothing to hide.” This single act of openness is the most effective way to build trust. And when customers trust you, they believe your recommendations and approve your work.

The Customer Psychology Behind Visual MPI Presentation

Understanding service customer decision-making is key to improving your process. Visuals work because they tap into fundamental human psychology. It’s about more than just a picture; it’s about providing automotive repair transparency.

Customers Believe Evidence, Not Technical Language

The average customer does not understand automotive jargon. Words like “solenoid,” “actuator,” and “CV boot” are meaningless and create confusion. Confusion leads to fear, and fear leads to “no.” A clear photo of a torn boot leaking grease is a universal language. Anyone can understand it, regardless of their technical knowledge.

Seeing the Problem Makes the Repair Feel Necessary, Not Optional

A verbal recommendation feels abstract. “Your brake pads are at 3mm” is just a number. Seeing a photo of a wafer-thin brake pad next to a thick new one makes the problem concrete and urgent. The customer internalizes the need for the repair because they can see the potential failure with their own eyes.

Visuals Reduce the Fear of Being “Sold” Something They Don’t Need

The biggest fear for a service customer is paying for an unnecessary repair. Visual evidence acts as a third-party validator. It’s not just the advisor saying it’s broken; the photo proves it’s broken. This assurance gives the customer the confidence they need to approve the work without feeling like they are being taken for a ride.

How to Build a Digital MPI That Customers Actually Understand

An MPI with photos and videos is only effective if it’s clear and easy to digest. A poorly executed digital inspection can create more confusion than a phone call. The key is simplicity and a customer-first approach to digital inspection communication.

Use Clear, High-Quality Images of the Actual Vehicle

Blurry, dark, or generic stock photos destroy trust instantly. The photos must be from the customer’s actual vehicle, preferably with a unique identifier like the license plate visible in one of the shots. They need to be well-lit and sharply focused on the specific component you are highlighting.

Keep Videos Short and Focused on the Finding

No one is going to watch a three-minute video from their service advisor. Keep videos under 30 seconds. The technician should simply point out the problem and demonstrate the failure. For example, a tech can grab a tie rod and say, “You can see this has excessive play,” while wiggling the component. That’s it. Short, simple, and powerful.

Label the Photos With Plain Language, Not Shop Terminology

Don’t label a photo “P0420 Catalyst Inefficiency.” Label it “Failing Catalytic Converter (Causes Check Engine Light).” Use arrows, circles, and simple text overlays to point directly to the problem area. The goal is for a customer to understand the issue in five seconds without needing a decoder ring.

The Advisors’ Role in Presenting MPIs the Right Way

Digital tools don’t replace advisors; they empower them. The advisor is still the one who contextualizes the findings and guides the customer to a decision. This requires specific digital service advisor skills.

Explain the Condition Before Showing the Price

The most common mistake advisors make is leading with the price. This immediately puts the customer on the defensive. The correct process is to confirm they have viewed the inspection, discuss the finding, and ensure they understand the “why” before you ever mention the “how much.”

Connect the Finding to Safety, Longevity, or Cost-Savings

The photo shows the “what.” The advisor must explain the “so what.”

  • Safety: “Because this tire is worn, your ability to stop in the rain is reduced.”
  • Longevity: “Replacing this leaking gasket will prevent the engine from overheating and failing prematurely.”
  • Cost-Savings: “Fixing this seal now is a small repair. If we wait, it could damage the transmission, which is a much larger one.”

Confirm the Customer Understands the Visual Before You Recommend Work

Don’t assume they get it. Ask a simple, open-ended question like, “After seeing the video of the wheel bearing, do you have any questions about what the technician found?” This gives the customer a chance to ask for clarification and confirms you are on the same page before you ask for the sale. This is a crucial part of service advisor MPI training.

Why Timing Matters: When to Send Photos and Videos for Maximum Approval

A great presentation sent at the wrong time will get ignored. To increase approval speed, you have to integrate the MPI into the customer’s daily routine.

Send MPIs Early—Before the Customer Starts Their Busy Day

If you send an inspection at 11:30 AM, the customer is likely in the middle of their workday, in meetings, or at lunch. If you send it at 9:00 AM, they are more likely to have time to review it. The sooner you can get the inspection done and sent, the better your chances of a quick response.

Follow Up Quickly While the Visual Is Still Fresh in Their Mind

Don’t send an MPI and then wait three hours to call. The impact of the visual fades over time. The best practice is to send the MPI via text and follow up with a call or another text within 15-20 minutes. “Hi Mr. Smith, I just sent over the health report for your vehicle. Did you have a chance to see the video of the front brakes?”

Use Text for Faster Response Times Than Email or Phone

Text messages have an open rate of over 95%, and most are read within minutes. Email gets lost in a crowded inbox, and phone calls go to voicemail. Text is the most efficient and effective way to deliver a digital MPI and get a fast response.

What a High-Converting Digital Service Presentation Looks Like

The best digital MPI practices follow a simple, logical flow that guides the customer from problem to solution without friction.

Clear Problem → Visual Proof → Simple Explanation → Recommendation

A high-conversion MPI is a story in four parts. It identifies a clear problem (e.g., worn tires), shows visual proof (a photo of the tread depth), gives a simple explanation (“These tires are below the legal safety limit”), and makes a clear recommendation (“We recommend replacing them today”).

One Main Recommendation Instead of a Laundry List

Don’t overwhelm the customer with a dozen different “yellow” and “red” items. Group related items together and focus on the most critical need first. If the brakes are metal-on-metal, that is the only thing you should be talking about initially. You can address the dirty air filter later.

A Direct, Easy-to-Approve Call-to-Action Button or Link

The online repair approval process should be seamless. The MPI should include a clear “Approve Work” or “Decline Work” button next to each recommended item. Don’t make the customer have to call you back or reply with a long text. One click should be all it takes.

Common MPI Mistakes That Hurt Approval Rates

Many shops have digital inspection tools but suffer from low approval rates. This is usually due to poor execution. Recognizing these low service approval rate causes is the first step to fixing them.

Sending MPIs With No Photos or Videos

A digital checklist with no media is just an electronic version of the old paper form. It builds no trust and has very little impact. If you aren’t using visuals, you are wasting the technology.

Using Blurry or Generic Images That Don’t Build Confidence

A blurry photo is worse than no photo. It looks unprofessional and suggests you are trying to hide something. The same goes for using stock photos. Customers know what a stock photo looks like, and it immediately signals that you didn’t actually look at their car.

Adding Too Much Text or Technical Jargon

Advisors and techs sometimes write long, technical paragraphs in the notes section. Customers will not read them. The notes should be short, simple, and in plain English. Let the photo do the talking.

Not Following Up When a Customer Doesn’t Respond

Sending the MPI is only half the battle. Many customers see the text, get busy, and forget about it. A polite follow-up is not “pestering”; it’s part of the service. A simple, “Just checking in on the inspection I sent over,” is often all it takes to get an answer.

How Visual MPIs Improve Technician Efficiency and RO Consistency

The benefits of a good MPI process extend into the shop. This is how you improve shop throughput with MPI technology.

Faster Approvals Keep Techs Turning Hours Instead of Waiting

Every minute a technician spends waiting for an approval is a minute of lost billable labor. A streamlined digital approval process can cut approval times from hours to minutes. This keeps technicians in their bays, turning wrenches and producing revenue.

Clear Notes Reduce Comebacks and Miscommunication

When the repair is documented with photos and clear notes, there is no ambiguity. The technician knows exactly what was approved, and the customer knows exactly what they paid for. This reduces the risk of comebacks from miscommunication.

Advisors Feed the Shop With Higher-Quality ROs

When advisors can confidently present and sell more work, the average hours per RO goes up. They are no longer just feeding the shop a diet of low-margin oil changes. They are providing profitable, high-quality work that keeps skilled technicians engaged and productive.

The Metrics Advisors Should Track to Improve Approval Rates Over Time

You can’t improve what you don’t measure. Tracking these service advisor KPIs will reveal opportunities for coaching and improvement.

Approval Rate by Advisor

Are all your advisors getting similar approval rates on recommended work? If one advisor is at 60% and another is at 25%, you know who needs coaching on their presentation skills.

Time-to-Approval After Sending MPI

How long does it take from the moment the MPI is sent to the moment the customer approves it? If this time is long, your team may need to work on their follow-up process or the clarity of their presentations.

Average Recommended vs. Approved Dollars

This is the ultimate metric. For every dollar of work an advisor recommends, how much do they actually sell? Closing this gap is the key to maximizing fixed ops profitability.

Decline Reasons and Follow-Up Effectiveness

When customers decline work, are you tracking why? Is it always price? Are you tracking if a follow-up call a week later ever captures that declined work? This data is gold for future marketing efforts.

How to Implement Better MPI, Photo, and Video Training in Your Store

A dealership MPI training program doesn’t have to be complicated. It just has to be consistent.

Review Three Digital MPIs Per Advisor Weekly

Every week, the service manager should pull three recent MPIs from each advisor and review them. Were the photos clear? Were the notes simple? Was the recommendation logical? Provide direct, constructive feedback.

Practice How to Introduce and Explain Visuals Clearly

Role-play it in your morning meeting. “Okay, today we’re practicing how to present a video of a leaking water pump.” Have advisors practice the exact words they will use until it sounds natural and confident.

Standardize When MPIs Are Sent and How Advisors Follow Up

Create a simple rule. “All MPIs must be sent within 20 minutes of the inspection being completed. A follow-up must occur within 15 minutes of the MPI being sent.” This creates a consistent, predictable process that everyone can follow.

Final Word: Visual MPIs Turn Trust Into Approvals—and Approvals Into Revenue

Stop selling and start showing. The modern service drive is built on a foundation of transparency. Your customers want to make informed decisions, and your job is to give them the clear, visual information they need to do so.

The Better Your Visuals, the Easier the Yes

A crisp photo of a failing part is the most persuasive salesperson on your team. It works 24/7, never has a bad day, and always tells the truth. Invest in the tools and training to make your visual evidence undeniable.

Digital Tools Don’t Replace Advisors—They Make Them More Effective

Technology is not a threat to a good advisor; it’s a force multiplier. It automates the low-value tasks and provides the proof that allows the advisor to do what they do best: build relationships, provide expert advice, and guide customers to the right decision.

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