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How to Write a Service Update Customers Actually Read

BlogWorkshop · By ·

The customer update most workshops send is too long, sent at the wrong time, and ignored. Here's how to write one that actually gets read.

Why most updates get skipped

The average customer reads the first sentence of a workshop message and decides almost immediately whether to keep reading. If the first sentence is "Dear valued customer, we hope this message finds you well", they've already lost focus. By the time they reach the part that matters, they've started skimming.

Update messages aren't marketing. They don't need an opening. The customer cares about three things: what's happening, what it costs, and what they need to do next. Lead with one of those.

The three-sentence rule

A great service update fits in three sentences:

  1. Status, where the car is right now.
  2. Reason, why that matters (or why it doesn't).
  3. Action, what the customer should do, if anything.

Example: "Diagnostics complete, front brake discs need replacing, total €340. We can have it done by 5pm today; reply 'yes' to approve."

Three sentences. Forty words. The customer reads it in one breath and knows exactly what to do.

When to send

MomentSend whenWhat to include
ArrivalWithin 1 hour of drop-offConfirmation that work has started
DiagnosisAs soon as you know the scopeFindings, price, timeline
Approval neededBefore doing extra workPhoto, cost, yes/no question
ReadyThe moment it's donePickup time, total cost

Templates that work

Diagnosis complete:

"Diagnostics done on your [make/model]. Found: [issue]. Repair: €[amount], ready by [time]. Reply yes to approve."

Extra work found:

"While replacing your [original part], we found [new issue], photo attached. Extra cost €[amount], adds [time] to the job. Approve?"

Ready for pickup:

"Your [make/model] is ready. Total: €[amount]. We're open until [time]."

Copy these, adapt the language to your shop's voice, and use them every day. Consistency makes the customer learn the format faster than fresh wording every time.

What to never say

Some phrases reliably make customers nervous. Avoid them in status updates:

  • "Give us a call when you can", sounds like bad news. Send the information directly.
  • "We're still looking into it", feels like avoidance. Say what you're checking and by when.
  • "It's a bit more complicated than expected", vague. Tell them exactly what changed.

The photo rule

Whenever you're asking for approval on extra work, attach a photo. A worn brake pad in a photo is more persuasive than three paragraphs of explanation. It also moves the conversation from "do I trust this workshop?" to "do I want to pay for this?", which is a much easier question for the customer to answer.

The takeaway

Short messages. Specific information. Clear action. That's the entire formula. If you wouldn't read your own update past the first sentence, neither will your customer.

Try MechMind, service update templates are built into every work order, and customers can approve extra work with a tap.