When most people look for innovation in dealership service retention, they rarely look to Australia. But they should. The market may be small, yet it’s one of the most competitive in the world. And that pressure has forced OEMs and dealers to rethink how they use data, digital tools, and customer experience to keep service customers coming back.
In a recent Retention Roadmap conversation, Michael Johnson, Director of Customer Success for Infomedia (APAC), shared how Australian programs and technology frameworks are evolving and why many of those lessons apply directly to dealership leaders everywhere.
Australia’s Advantage: A Small Market That Innovates Quickly
With more automotive brands per capita than almost anywhere else, Australia has become a proving ground for OEM-led service strategies. According to Michael, this environment creates conditions where innovation has to happen:
- More brands competing for fewer customers means retention is a survival strategy.
- OEMs regularly test new programs in Australia before rolling them out globally.
- Dealers adapt quickly, because a minor edge in experience or convenience can shift loyalty fast.
What emerges is a market where experimentation is normal and customer lifecycle thinking is more mature than its size suggests.
The Shift to “Service Intelligence”
Traditional retention relies on time and mileage reminders, often paired with broad, reactive marketing. But customer expectations, and the systems available to serve them, have evolved.
Michael described a clear shift toward service intelligence, where dealerships use smarter data inputs to anticipate needs before customers articulate them. This includes:
- Predictive maintenance, powered by historical patterns and real-time signals.
- Connected vehicle inputs, rather than relying solely on interval logic.
- Proactive messaging that aligns with actual vehicle conditions, not guesswork.
This evolution changes the focus of retention. Instead of trying to win customers back after a lapse, service intelligence helps prevent the lapse from happening at all.
Convenience Is Emotional Now
Operational conveniences are no longer strong differentiators. Most dealers offer some combination of them, and customers expect that.
Where dealers can truly stand out is in delivering emotional convenience:
- Clear explanations
- Transparent processes
- Consistent communication
- A sense of trust and ease throughout the experience
Technology plays a major role here. When tools help advisors communicate better, personalize updates, and close the loop reliably, customers feel taken care of, instantly raising the likelihood of long-term loyalty.
Connected Car Data: A Missed Opportunity for Many
Most OEMs already collect connected car data, but historically, it sits within engineering or quality teams. The result: the people responsible for customer-facing retention rarely see the data that would help them most.
Michael explained how Infomedia helps bridge that gap by enriching connected car signals with DMS data and translating them into human-friendly insights. The output isn’t a marketing email. It reads more like:
“Your vehicle has detected an issue and may need attention.”
This approach works because it feels personal and relevant. The communication is:
- Timely
- Contextual
- Rooted in the customer’s real situation
And critically, it positions the dealership as the natural next step, not just a vendor vying for attention.
OEMs & Dealers: Data Works Only When Value Flows Both Ways
Data-sharing tension isn’t unique to the U.S. Michael has seen the same push-and-pull in Australia. Dealers want clarity around:
- What data is being collected
- How it will be used
- What they gain in return
Programs fall apart when data collection feels one-sided. But when OEMs show a clear value exchange, dealer participation increases dramatically.
Michael’s takeaway was simple:
The best retention programs work because OEMs and dealers benefit together, not because one gets more data than the other.
What Dealership Leaders Should Take Away
Australia’s service market may operate on a smaller scale, but its lessons translate easily into larger ones. Across every example, one theme stands out: retention is shifting from a reactive discipline to a proactive, intelligence-driven one.
Dealers who embrace that shift will create:
- Smarter outreach
- Stronger trust
- More consistent service return rates
- Better use of the data already at their disposal
Those who don’t may find themselves managing retention the old way in a market that’s no longer built for it. Listen to the full episode here.
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