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There’s a better way to ensure technician adoption at your company


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HVACR contractors are not investing in new technology for fun. They are doing it to protect margins, create consistency, and build long-term financial stability. 

Yet for many businesses, adoption does not translate into measurable improvement. 

One common example is new CRM platforms like ServiceTitan or Scope Pro. The platform is purchased. The training sessions are held. The workflow is rolled out. But months later, the performance gains leadership expected have not materialized. 

According to a Rand Group analysis, 55% to 75% of technology implementations fail when driven primarily by top-down mandates. 

The problem is rarely the software. It’s how the change lands with the people expected to use it. 

Two different definitions of “success” 

Ownership evaluates new tools through a business lens: profitability, visibility, and operational control. Cleaner reporting. Standardized processes. Fewer surprises. 

Technicians experience those same tools at ground level. They’re thinking about how long the job takes, whether they’ll have to return to fix something, and whether they’ll face an angry homeowner. 

When a new technology or process feels disconnected from that reality, it becomes something to complete rather than something to believe in. That’s where adoption falls apart. 

Checklists get filled out solely because it’s mandated. Temperature splits look identical across jobs. Blurry photos are uploaded to close the ticket, not to document performance. The workflow exists, but belief in it does not. 

Framing determines friction 

How a new system is introduced often determines whether it gains traction. 

If leadership emphasizes tracking, oversight, and tighter control, technicians hear monitoring. If leadership connects the tool to protection, fewer callbacks, and clearer expectations, technicians hear support. 

The system itself does not change. The perceived purpose does. 

That distinction becomes even more important in today’s labor environment. 

Adoption is now a retention strategy 

The HVACR industry is currently facing a shortage of roughly 110,000 technicians nationwide, according to ACHR News. Skilled labor remains one of the primary constraints on growth. 

In that context, adoption strategy carries real risk. 

When a new initiative becomes a daily frustration, it doesn’t just reduce productivity. It increases the odds that an experienced technician starts looking elsewhere. 

Replacing a technician can cost well into six figures when recruiting, lost revenue, and onboarding time are considered. In a competitive labor market, the idea that you can “fire your way to compliance” is not just outdated but financially dangerous. 

At the same time, highly engaged teams consistently outperform disengaged ones. According to Gallup, companies with high engagement see 23% higher profitability than those with low engagement. 

The generational reality 

Younger technicians entering the trades expect modern systems. They are accustomed to digital workflows in every other part of their lives. Disorganized processes signal stagnation. Professional systems signal growth. 

Technology, in other words, is now part of your employer brand. 

Companies that implement tools thoughtfully and tie them to clear standards are more likely to attract technicians who want a career, not just a paycheck. 

Moving from mandates to measurable standards 

Initiatives like ACCA’s Quality Installation certificate program, powered by the measureQuick app, can deliver meaningful benefits for HVACR business owners. Performance-based standards reduce ambiguity, create consistency across crews, and provide documented proof of quality. 

But you’re destined for failure if you roll out the change by announcing, “We’re using this now. Everyone needs to get on board.” 

The changes that produce significant improvements in a business often require significant changes from the people inside it. New workflows alter routines. New documentation standards add steps. New performance expectations raise the bar. 

Successful adoption requires explaining the purpose behind the change, demonstrating how it improves the work itself, and giving technicians a clear role in making it successful. 

A strong system creates opportunity. 

Whether that opportunity turns into real performance gains depends on whether the people using it understand its value and choose to support it. 

ACCA members can read this article and more in the Spring 2026 edition of ACCA Now Magazine online. 


Posted In: ACCA Now, Employee Training, Technology

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