OrbisX Off the Clock Show

OrbisX

The OrbisX Off the Clock Show is an informative discussion for detailers and tinters as well as other auto professionals about business, marketing, trends, fun stuff and of course the incredible OrbisX app for detailers and tinters.

  1. Don't Get Bamboozled: Target the Right Customer, Build Real Community & Keep It 100

    3 hrs ago

    Don't Get Bamboozled: Target the Right Customer, Build Real Community & Keep It 100

    It opens with cultural insights and travel stories — the kind of off-the-clock banter that always ends up revealing something real about how different people think, buy, and do business. And that's exactly where this episode finds its footing: in the uncomfortable truth that most detailers and service businesses are marketing to a ghost. They think they know their customer. They don't. Shawn, Marshall, and their guest kick things off with a conversation about authenticity — what it actually means in business versus what people say it means to sound good online. Because there's a difference between being real and performing realness, and customers can feel it. The "bamboozle" segment hits hard: the moments where businesses overpromise, underdeliver, and lose a customer forever — often without ever knowing it happened. The lesson isn't just don't be shady. It's that shortcuts in customer relationships always cost more than they save. The conversation then zeroes in on one of the most underexecuted fundamentals in the detailing industry: knowing exactly who your target customer is for each service you offer. Not just "car owners." Not just "people who care about their vehicle." The specific human being — their income, their lifestyle, their values, their vehicle — who is most likely to book, pay premium prices, and come back. Shawn and Marshall walk through how to actually identify that person, how cultural and demographic factors shape buying behavior, and why trying to market every service to everyone is one of the fastest ways to sound like nobody. From there the episode pivots to community — and this isn't a fluffy conversation about "building your tribe." It's practical. How do you create a community platform that actually generates loyalty? How do you reward the members who show up, contribute, and help answer questions? How do you turn a Facebook group or Discord into a genuine business asset instead of a place where people post memes and complain? The pirate mentality segment is one of the best moments of the episode — a raw take on starting before you're ready, moving before you have permission, and building while everything is still messy. Because the operators who wait until everything is perfect never start. And the ones who just go — and figure it out as they move — are the ones writing the playbook everyone else copies five years later. The episode closes on something that doesn't get talked about enough in this industry: giving back. Not as a marketing tactic. As a principle. The detailers and shop owners who contribute to the industry — who share knowledge, support peers, and operate with integrity — are the ones building something that lasts. Reciprocity is real, and it compounds. ⚡ Key Takeaways Stop Marketing to Everyone: Identify the exact target customer for each service you offer — demographics, lifestyle, vehicle type, and values — and build every campaign around that specific person. The Bamboozle Always Backfires: Overpromising, misleading marketing, and cutting corners on customer experience might work once. It never works twice. Authenticity isn't optional — it's survival. AI Enhances, It Doesn't Replace: Use AI to sharpen your content and automate the repetitive stuff — but the voice, the story, and the relationship have to be genuinely yours. Customers smell generated content from a mile away. Community is a Business Asset: A well-run community platform builds loyalty, generates feedback, surfaces your best advocates, and creates a moat around your business that no competitor can easily cross. Reward the Contributors: The members of your community who show up, help others, and add value deserve recognition. Incentivize engagement and watch the whole community lift. Diversify Your Customer Sources: If all your leads come from one place — one platform, one referral source, one neighbourhood — you're one algorithm change away from a very bad month. Spread the risk.

    1hr 16min
  2. AI Can't Shake a Hand

    16 June

    AI Can't Shake a Hand

    This week starts with a gut punch: the server got hammered by a bot attack that knocked things offline. Shawn breaks down what actually happened, what it cost, and how the business stayed standing — but that's just the setup for the real conversation. Because here's the irony. The guy who builds AI software spends the back half of this episode arguing that AI is the fastest way to wreck a business if you let it run the show. The big idea: AI is seasoning, not the meal. It should make the work faster, sharper, and cheaper to deliver — but the second it replaces the actual human relationship with your customer, you've automated away the only thing that can't be copied. The guys get into where that line actually sits. Automate the scheduling, the reminders, the follow-ups, the busywork that eats your day — absolutely. But the conversation at the counter? The detailer who notices the kid's car seat in the back and asks about it? The shop owner who remembers you drive 45 minutes past three competitors to come to them? That's not inefficiency to optimize away. That's the moat. And there's a part most people miss: those human interactions aren't just nice, they're intelligence. Every conversation with a customer teaches you something a dashboard never will — why they really chose you, what they're quietly frustrated by, what they'd happily pay more for, what almost made them walk. Automate every touchpoint and you don't just lose the relationship, you go blind. You stop learning from the exact people whose behavior should be shaping your business. The shop owners who win aren't the ones with the most automation — they're the ones who use automation to buy back time, then spend that time actually talking to customers. Along the way: the surprisingly brutal economics of the funeral industry, how big sporting events ripple through local business, and what it really takes to scale a service business without gutting the soul that made it work in the first place. AI is seasoning, not the meal. This episode is the proof.

    1hr 9min
  3. Followers Aren't Customers: World Cup Marketing, Luna Automation & the Consistency Code

    9 June

    Followers Aren't Customers: World Cup Marketing, Luna Automation & the Consistency Code

    It opens with movie recommendations and a brutally honest take on how ratings have become basically meaningless — and that's not an accident. Because this whole episode is really about one thing: the gap between perception and reality in marketing. The gap between followers and customers. Between posting and connecting. Between looking busy and actually building something. Shawn and Marshall kick things off riffing on consumer behavior — how people choose movies, how one-star reviews are actually goldmines in disguise, and how the vibe of a brand influences buying decisions in ways that logic never could. It's a masterclass in understanding what customers actually respond to before a single dollar gets spent on ads. Then the World Cup enters the conversation — and if you're a detailer or service business owner sleeping on this, wake up. The World Cup is the single biggest marketing opportunity most local businesses will see this decade, and Shawn and Marshall break down exactly how to position around it, build campaigns tied to consumer emotion, and turn a sporting event into booked jobs. The energy, the nationalism, the pride — it's all leverage if you know how to use it. The back half of the episode gets tactical fast. Shawn walks through how Luna is automating business processes in ways that used to require a full marketing team — from streamlined campaign execution to email sequences that actually engage without feeling like a newsletter from 2009. And then comes the hot take that needs to be heard in every detailing Facebook group in North America: your social media following means almost nothing if you haven't built real relationships underneath it. Follower counts are vanity. Repeat customers, email lists, and genuine community are the actual business. The episode closes on something that sounds simple but almost nobody actually does: consistency. Not the grind-yourself-into-the-ground kind — the show-up-the-same-way-every-time kind. In a market where most businesses are reactive, inconsistent, and constantly chasing the next trend, the operators who just stay the course are the ones customers keep coming back to. ⚡ Key Takeaways One-Star Reviews Are Opportunities: How you respond to a bad review tells your future customers more about you than a hundred five-star ratings. Stop dreading them — start using them.The World Cup is a Marketing Window: Consumer emotion is running high, national pride is through the roof, and most of your competitors won't think to tie their campaigns to it. That's your lane.Vibes Are a Strategy: The feeling your brand gives off influences purchase decisions more than your service list does. If your marketing feels off, customers feel it too — they just can't explain why they scrolled past you.Luna Does the Heavy Lifting: Automation isn't about replacing relationships — it's about protecting them by handling the repetitive work so you can focus on the human stuff.Followers ≠ Customers: A thousand Instagram followers who never book mean less than fifty people on an email list who trust you. Stop optimizing for the number and start building the relationship.Consistency is the Unfair Advantage: It's not exciting. It's not a hack. But showing up the same way, with the same quality, on the same schedule — over and over — is what builds the kind of customer trust that no ad budget can buy.💥 Vibes. Automation. Real Relationships. All off the clock. #orbisx #hypercleancarcare #offtheclockshow #detailing #worldcupmarketing #lunaautomation #emailmarketing #customerloyalty #socialmediamarketing #ceramiccoating #businessgrowth #marketingstrategy #detailingbusiness #consistency

    1hr 20min
  4. Show Up, Stand Out: Event Marketing, Face-to-Face Sales & the AI Edge

    3 June

    Show Up, Stand Out: Event Marketing, Face-to-Face Sales & the AI Edge

    It starts with casual banter and a dive into personal branding on social media — and quickly turns into one of the most tactically rich episodes the crew has ever put together. This week Shawn and Marshall are joined by guests to unpack two things that might seem like opposites but are actually the ultimate power combo right now: getting in front of people in the real world and letting AI handle everything behind the scenes. The first half of the episode is a masterclass in event marketing. While everyone else is refreshing their Instagram analytics, the operators actually growing their businesses are showing up — at car shows, local events, community gatherings — and doing the one thing algorithms can't do: making a human connection. Shawn and Marshall break down exactly how to work an event, how to identify the right demographics in the room, how to use giveaways and incentives that actually convert instead of just generating foot traffic, and the psychology behind why face-to-face engagement closes at a rate no ad can touch. The conversation on saturated markets is especially sharp — because standing out isn't about spending more, it's about showing up differently. Then the episode pivots hard into AI — and this isn't the usual surface-level "use ChatGPT for captions" conversation. Shawn and Marshall get into the real trajectory of where AI is headed for business owners: automation that builds personal relationships at scale, website and marketing tools that used to require an agency, and the infrastructure being built right now — including floating data centers — that signals just how serious the next wave is going to be. There's also a brutally honest segment on the difference between teachers and practitioners — and why most of the business advice flooding the internet right now is coming from people who've never actually had to make payroll. The guys don't sugarcoat it. If you're learning business from someone whose only business is teaching business, you're getting theory dressed up as experience. The throughline of the whole episode? The businesses that win in the next five years will be the ones that combine the irreplaceable human element with AI running the machine underneath. Show up in person. Build real relationships. Then let automation do the follow-up, the nurturing, and the closing. ⚡ Key Takeaways Events Are Underrated and Underused: Most detailers and service businesses have completely abandoned face-to-face marketing. That's your opening. Show up where your customers already are and you'll stand out by default. Giveaways That Convert: Not all incentives are created equal. The right offer at an event doesn't just collect emails — it starts a relationship. Structure your giveaway around a service experience, not a product. Demographics First, Tactics Second: Understanding who is in the room before you set up your booth determines everything. Same tactic, wrong crowd — wasted day. Know your audience before you spend a dollar. AI is a Practitioner's Tool, Not a Guru's Prop: The shops winning with AI aren't using it to look smart on LinkedIn. They're using it to automate follow-up, build personal touchpoints at scale, and free up time to do the actual work. Teachers vs. Practitioners: Be very careful whose advice you're taking. If someone's never run a real service business, their framework is a hypothesis — not a playbook. Automation Should Feel Human: The goal of marketing automation isn't to remove the relationship — it's to protect it. Build sequences that feel like they came from a person, not a robot. 💥 Events. AI. Real Talk. All off the clock. #orbisx #hypercleancarcare #offtheclockshow #detailing #eventmarketing #facetofacemarketing #AIinbusiness #marketingautomation #ceramiccoating #localmarketing #entrepreneurship #businessgrowth #personalbranding #detailingbusiness

    1hr 28min
  5. The 20-Hour Rule: How Smart Operators Actually Win with AI

    27 May

    The 20-Hour Rule: How Smart Operators Actually Win with AI

    In this episode of Off The Clock, Shawn Gervais and Marshall Hill tackle one of the biggest misconceptions in business right now: people think AI is magic when really it’s just a multiplier. If your systems are weak, your marketing is lazy, or your business lacks consistency, AI doesn’t fix that — it exposes it faster. The guys break down the power of the 20-hour rule: the idea that most people quit right before they become dangerous with a new skill. Whether it’s marketing, CRM systems, AI tools, ad creation, or customer communication, the episode dives into why constantly jumping between tools keeps businesses stuck in beginner mode while disciplined operators quietly pull ahead. The conversation also explores the growing gap between businesses using AI as a gimmick and those using it strategically. Shawn and Marshall discuss how tools like Luna AI inside OrbisX can dramatically improve marketing, customer profiling, inventory management, follow-ups, and ad refinement — but only if business owners are willing to put in the reps and actually learn how to use them properly. Another major theme is brutal honesty. From customer feedback to ad performance to operational weaknesses, the episode highlights how growth only happens when business owners stop protecting their ego and start analyzing reality. AI can help accelerate that process, but systems, consistency, and self-awareness still matter more than shortcuts. They also touch on: Why social media is changing how people learn business The balance between automation and human connection Why repeat business is still king How detailing shops can systematize growth without losing quality And why the businesses winning in 2026 will be the ones combining technology with relentless execution Bottom line: AI is not the advantage anymore. The advantage is the operator willing to sit down, learn deeply, and build systems that actually work. ⚡ Key Takeaways The 20-Hour Rule Works: Most people quit before becoming competent with new tools. AI Is a Multiplier: It amplifies strengths and weaknesses — it doesn’t replace discipline. Stop Tool-Hopping: Mastering one system beats constantly chasing the newest platform. Brutal Honesty Drives Growth: Better feedback = better systems = better results. Repeat Customers Matter Most: Sustainable growth comes from retention, not hype. Systems Beat Hustle: The most scalable detailing businesses are process-driven. Automation Needs Humanity: AI should support relationships, not replace them.

    1hr 30min

About

The OrbisX Off the Clock Show is an informative discussion for detailers and tinters as well as other auto professionals about business, marketing, trends, fun stuff and of course the incredible OrbisX app for detailers and tinters.

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