130 - Look Good, Feel Good, Perform Great – How Branding and Culture Drive Team Excellence
Description
July 2nd, 2025 - 00:58:42
Show Summary:
What if your shop’s uniform was more than just workwear? In this episode, Jimmy Lea is joined by Leah Grubb, founder of Green Bolt Printing, to discuss how automotive shops can turn everyday apparel into a strategic tool for branding, leadership, and culture. Leah shares the origin of her company, born from firsthand experience in multi-shop growth, and explains how the right look can foster pride, unity, and even performance. From choosing the right fabric to using color with purpose, this conversation unpacks the overlooked power of uniforms...and how to get them right.
Host(s):
Jimmy Lea, VP of Business Development
Guest(s):
Leah Grubb, Founder & CEO of Green Bolt Printing
Episode Highlights:
[00:00:23 ] - Apparel is often the first impression before a customer ever visits your website or talks to staff.
[00:02:35 ] - Leah shares her journey from rapid shop expansion to founding Green Bolt Printing out of operational necessity.
[00:04:47 ] - Reframing uniforms as a shop's “constant visual identity” enhances culture, pride, and morale.
[00:08:16 ] - Rebranding with color and design transformed the team’s enthusiasm, professionalism, and sense of identity.
[00:10:15 ] - Differentiating technician uniforms still matters, even if they aren’t customer-facing.
[00:14:24 ] - Biggest mistake shops make: not involving their team in apparel choices.
[00:19:10 ] - Fit, function, and thoughtful design choices affect confidence and job satisfaction.
[00:24:04 ] - Unified looks can range from strict uniforms to flexible, branded individuality, find your shop’s identity.
[00:37:10 ] - Merch stores only work for retail-forward brands or customer loyalty rewards, not just selling uniforms.
[00:49:43 ] - Use color intentionally: blacks evoke sleek professionalism, while red, blue, or green can cue emotion and expertise.
In every business journey, there are defining moments or challenges that build resilience and milestones that fuel growth. We’d love to hear about yours! What lessons, breakthroughs, or pivotal experiences have shaped your path in the automotive industry?
Share your story with us at info@wearetheinstitute.com, and you might be featured in an upcoming episode.
👉 Unlock the full experience - watch the full webinar on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=16XGiHzhxKY
Don’t miss exclusive insights, expert takeaways, and real talk you won’t hear anywhere else. Hit Subscribe, drop a comment, and share it with someone who needs to hear this!
Links & Resources:
- Want to learn more? Click Here
- Want a complimentary business health report? Click Here
- See The Institute's events list: Click Here
- Want access to our online classes? Click Here
________________________________________
Episode Transcript Disclaimer
This transcript was generated using artificial intelligence and may contain errors. If you notice any inaccuracies, please contact us at marketing@wearetheinstitute.com.
Episode Transcript:
Jimmy Lea: Good morning, good afternoon, good evening, or goodnight, depending on when and where you're joining us from today. It is a beautiful day outside. The power is out in Las Vegas, and that's okay. We're okay with that. We have such exciting conversations to happen today. I'm so excited to have you here with me, my friends, as we have this conversation to talk about something that affects every customer interaction.
Jimmy Lea: Today we are gonna talk about this and before any word is spoken. There's something that happens, and our discussion today is with the founder of Green Bolt Printing. She helps automotive shops all over the country turn their gear into a leadership tool, from bold branding to team building through apparel.
Jimmy Lea: She understands how a look can drive culture, confidence, and performance. She's just not about putting logos on shirts. It's about uniting teams through identity. Give a big round of applause as we help to welcome the incredible Leah Grub. Leah, I'm so excited that you are here with us today to talk about your business and what it is you do to affect the shop's company culture and everything that goes with it.
Leah Grubb: Me too. Thank you so much for having me. I'm looking really forward to today.
Jimmy Lea: Yes. This is gonna be a great conversation that we're gonna have to talk. I know you've got a lot put together with a PowerPoint and a presentation. So with that I'm gonna turn it to you as questions come up, just be understanding that we're gonna interrupt and ask some questions.
Jimmy Lea: Yeah. Because marketing is so much fun. This interaction happens before a website. I mean, it's not a website. This is our apparel, this is what we're doing that we wear. Has a uniform to be part of the team. Every team has a uniform and we're now part of it. So Leah, we turn it to you.
Leah Grubb: Awesome. Thank you so much, Jimmy.
Leah Grubb: Hello. Hello everyone, and thank you again for joining me on this Wednesday afternoon and on a holiday week, nonetheless. I wanna start kind of with the concept and how we frame things before we dive in here, right? Because up until today, what you were to work right, is just kind of that what you wear to work.
Leah Grubb: So instead, I'm want to talk about how it can be so much more than just a uniform and instead your shop's visual identity. And I'm gonna be using that word. A lot, and I'm a bit of a fast talker too here. So, because these t-shirts and polos are something that you wear to work every single day, they can be the very vehicle that creates a feel good, ready to perform environment that achieves excellence.
Leah Grubb: But before we dive in, I do want to tell a little bit of my story here. Because right before I founded Greenbelt, I was working as a marketing director for two local automotive shops. One of them was C and J Automotive. And there I am, right there on the end. And at the time we had two shops. One was our HQ that was founded in 1988 and the other one was a second shop.
Leah Grubb: About 20 minutes down the road that was established. Very recently, I guess 2015, so 10 years ago, comparatively to 1988. Then within about a span of a year and a half, we expanded to not just the third location, not just the fourth location, but five locations in, yeah, about a year and a half in total.
Leah Grubb: Within the next closest one being 40 minutes from our hq, one being in a completely different state. New Jersey. Now you could say that we were learning how to build a rocket ship on the way up, or a parachute on the way down, depending on your outlook for that day, because if that wasn't enough, we decided to rebrand and revamp all of these locations.
Leah Grubb: And this was all at the time of. That post COVID supply chain issue, remember this the toilet paper shortages of that time. So it was a bit of a headache to say the least. And doing it at this scale and in this timeframe exposed a lot of flaws in the screen printing and embroidery industry that I thought could be approved upon.
Leah Grubb: So much so that when my employers decided that, that we decided that we could do something better with this. So Jack, who is right there in the center, and then my other employer at the time who owned a collision shop bootstrapped the idea and Greenbelt was born. And I'm saying all of this because I'm sharing a few other stories from my time in this career because Greenbelt truly was born out of necessity and not just general necessity.
Leah Grubb: Right. Actual specific necessities from growing auto repair shops, and that started with the rebranding process. We had to dive deeper into our brand and our visual identity. And where is that? Not if the most prevalent than in the clothing that we're wearing every single day. You don't need to go through a rebrand of your apparel to do all this.
Leah Grubb: Actually, the main thing I want you to do is to reframe your idea of what uniforms are as you know them, right? Uniforms are for identification, for functionality. They help people identify who works where, like going up to someone in a red shirt at Target and hoping they work there. 'cause a lot of people are wearing red t-shirts.
Leah Grubb: So, or functionally they're just more durable for the wear and tear of the day or the task at hand, or protective, like high visibility gear. But what if we took that one step further and recognized uniforms for their higher purpose that they can serve as a consistent or constant visual identity? And that's gonna be our tongue twister of the day because.
Leah Grubb: If you move past uniforms, just being used for purely identification purposes or purely functional needs, a uniform can reinforce a shared identity, build a sense of pride, boost morale, and set expectations, ideally positive ones, both internally and externally with you