Earl Scheib
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Earl Scheib was a company which specialized in repainting and collision
repair of automobiles, with locations in 23 states in the US.
It ceased operations nationwide on July 16, 2010.
Company
history
Founded by Earl Scheib (February 28,
1908 – February 29, 1992) in Los Angeles
in 1937 the company grew quickly following World War II
and by 1975 had branches in Germany
and England,
all company owned, with Scheib manufacturing his own paint through a wholly owned subsidiary.
Earl Scheib's paint-coating systems
were used by its company-owned paint and collision repair shops. The paint also
was sold to original equipment manufacturers and architectural construction
firms.
Scheib's policy of one-day service
and production line techniques flew directly into the face of state-of-the-art
professional Auto Body standards and caused the company to become a national
joke at the time.
Scheib was plagued with a high employee turnover rate due to the demands of attempting to paint up to five
cars a day. The company's main criterion in hiring and promoting management
trainees was based on sales skills only. Knowledge of auto body repair or painting
techniques was not required. Trainees underwent a short training period and
were then assigned to their own shops. Managers who failed to increase sales
for three successive months were fired, regardless of seniority.
Advertising
In the 1950s, Earl Scheib expanded
his company with locations across the nation and started a national ad campaign.
Earl wrote the commercials and became the company spokesman.
He became famous for his slogan, "I'm Earl Scheib, and I'll paint any car, any color
for $29.95. No ups, no extras." This campaign and slogan was maintained
until Earl died. However, the price was slowly increased over the years. By
1970 it was $99.95, still a very low price for 1 day service.
Fast
Track Management
In 1997 the company devised a
"Fast Track" Management training program and recruited college and business school
graduates for immediate placement in upper middle management positions, requiring relocation to another state upon
completion of the program. Scheibs' corporate office and shareholders were
dismayed to find that 85% of those participating in the program resigned upon
relocation. After Scheib's death, the company was sold to former college
basketball champion Chris Bement and Dan Siegal, who made his fortune in Las Vegas
winnings, and other investors. Improvements were made in the quality of paint
and a corporate restructuring.
Restructuring
In 1999, the company began closing
branches and selling company owned properties to show a profit to shareholders.
The organization reduced the number of its shops as a result of this practice,
with most of its remaining centers in the western States, where rust and corrosion
is less likely to be a problem.[1]
On February 18, 2009, Earl Scheib
and Kelly Capital LLC, a private equity firm, announced the signing of the merger agreement. Kelly Capital LLC
acquired the company in the second quarter of 2009 following shareholder
approval of a merger agreement.
Earl Scheib ceased operations
nationwide on July 16, 2010. The corporation can no longer honor its customer
warranties. The company allowed many of its shop managers to become small
business owners by allowing them to purchase the equipment and fixtures in
their shops, and to use the Earl Scheib name for their business. Many shop
managers became business owners under this model. The majority of shops were
closed; leased locations were turned back over to the Landlords, and if the
real estate was owned by Scheib, then those locations were sold.
The wiki link on the subject can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_Scheib
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