When Bill Jaap opened his northeast Minneapolis Volkswagen and Audi repair shop in 1997, he vowed to go out of his way to satisfy his customers.
We're talking a long, long way, as it turns out.
Consider the Twin Cities lady whose aging VW van broke down in Fargo, N.D., and called Jaap to coach a mechanic unfamiliar with the vehicle's unusual mechanical configurations on how to repair it.
When that failed, Jaap hooked up a trailer to his van and drove 250 miles to Fargo to pick up the ailing vehicle and his weary customer.
His charge for the trip: The price of the gasoline he used.
But there was a payoff, Jaap insisted: "She told a lot of people about it, and that meant business down the line."
All of which reflects Jaap's corporate slogan -- "What Goes Around Comes Around" -- and the name he gave his company: Good Carma Inc.
OK, so he misspelled Karma, the Buddhist concept of how people's actions and conduct determine their destiny. But he did it on purpose, to reflect the nature of his business: cars ... Carma ... get it?