A customer at Troy Auto Care in suburban Detroit was scheduled for open heart surgery, so one of the repair shop owners, Kristi Hudson, picked up a get-well card for the staff to sign. Hudson also recently checked on a customer after not having seen him for a while.
To Hudson, 42, it's all part of taking care of her customers. She said she makes it a point to hire employees who are empathetic and can build positive relationships with customers.
"We can teach you about the car. But I can't teach someone to care," she said. "We make everyone feel like they are special because they are."
This level of customer service is why the independent repair facility 25 miles north of Detroit — one of three under the Troy Auto Care umbrella — was named NAPA Auto Care Center of the Year for 2022. At about the same time, Hudson, her husband, Donnie, and brother-in-law Frank Hudson were named AAPEX Shop Owner of the Year. And to complete the triple crown, that same year Kristi Hudson was named Female Shop Owner of the Year by Women in Auto Care.
Donnie Hudson said his father taught his children two business philosophies that he, his wife and brother live by every day.
"If you take care of your customers, your customers always take care of you," he said. "And if you take care of your employees, your employees will take care of you."
Donald Hudson opened an auto repair center in 1958 — a Shell gas station he ran until 1997, when he died from a heart attack at age 62. His sons sold it that same year and in 1998 purchased their own standalone NAPA repair center called Troy Auto Care. They opened Troy Auto Care II in December 2018 and Troy Auto & Truck Center in June 2021. Among the three stores, there are 30 tow trucks and 120 employees. They respond to roughly 90,000 AAA calls a year.
Frank Hudson, 65, started working with his father when he was 15. A year later, his younger brother was eager to spend time with his father and sibling, so he was put to work at age 5, pulling weeds and painting the curbs around the gas pumps. As Donnie grew older, he considered moving away from automotive repair to pursue law enforcement and firefighting.
"I wanted to give back to the community and help people," he said.
When his father died, Donnie needed to decide whether to continue in the business or leave his brother to go it alone. He ultimately realized that he could satisfy his goal by staying put.
"In the service industry, we are helping people. We're making sure their cars are safe," Donnie, 53, said.
He stayed on but also managed to pursue being a firefighter, a job he's held since 1994. Now a district fire chief in Troy, he juggles his responsibilities at the stores with responding to fires and accident calls.