AUDI service. © copyright JE Robison |
I receive a surprising number of messages from motorists who
are unhappy with dealer service departments.
Who can repair my BMW right? Where do I find a competent shop to work on
Mercedes? Who repairs Land Rovers? One of the biggest sources of distress comes
from intermittent problems with certified used cars that are out of new car
warranty, but still covered by certified warranty. This recent missive typifies what I hear:
For the past few
months I've had both the check engine light and tire pressure monitoring system
warning lights come on and off. I check
the gas cap and the engine runs fine. My
tires pressures seem ok, too. I've taken
my Mercedes to a dealer three times for these warning lights, and every time
they've returned the vehicle saying it's fixed. After driving the car again for
a few hours, or a day, the lights come back on. The dealer said that as long as
the check engine light is not flashing, it's not a critical problem. I'm just tired of dealing with this dealer's
service department.
Why does this happen?
Is the dealer incompetent, or the problem so intractable? In most cases, the answer is neither. Much of the time, the answer can be boiled
down to four words:
No pay = no work.
To explain what this means in the context of car repair I
need to start by explaining some things about warranty and service. When a car is new, it is backed by a
warranty from the manufacturer. With
rare exceptions, there is no limit to that warranty, and the dealer is not
responsible except as the service agent.
The manufacturer cannot say, “we’ve done all the warranty repair we are
going to do,” and abandon you.
If a new car has a really intractable problem the
manufacturer will usually offer a replacement vehicle or in some cases a refund
or lease cancellation. Carmakers go to
great lengths to satisfy customers.
They also expect a lot of their dealers. One thing they expect is that the dealer will
do something in response to customer complaints. If a car comes in with an intermittent fault
the dealer will often change the most likely parts even if the fault is not
present at that moment, because that gives the best chance of cure, and the
manufacturer stands behind them and pays the bill. If a subsequent repair is needed, they
generally stand behind that too.
If a lot of time is needed to diagnose a difficult problem
the manufacturers have a policy of paying the technician as needed. Knowing that, they usually get the job
done. Problems can still happen but the
vast majority of new cars get fixed successfully.
Cars covered by certified programs are a whole different
story. Once the new car warranty expires
the manufacturers unlimited obligation comes to an end. The certified program is often administered
by a third party company who didn’t make the car and has strict limits on their
responsibility for it.
In most cases, there is no longer provision for paying to
diagnose difficult problems. Indeed, many
used car warranties – technically called service contracts because they are not
actual manufacturer warranties – don’t pay for diagnosis at all. Those that do often pay a fraction of the
real time taken.
Yet customers don’t know the difference. They just expect
their problems to be solved. But that
can’t happen when no one is willing to spend money to find a problem. It’s not the dealer’s car – so he’s not
writing a blank check if the trouble can’t be found in 15 minutes. The car’s owner thinks warranty covers
everything and the dealer must be trying to cheat him if they ask for any
money. The result – the dealer says “no
problem was found” and boots the car out the door. One day, they figure, it
will come back with a visible failure and they can fix it then.
The focus of carmakers is to make money by keeping customers
happy so they buy more cars. Good
service on new cars is part of that. The
dynamic for a third party administrator is totally different. They make money from finance, by collecting
fees for service contracts and paying out as little as possible.
Once those folks manage the car’s service, everything
changes.
Yet the motoring public knows nothing of this. Everyone tries to hide this ugly truth. Many dealers are told they cannot charge
customers extra for so-called certified repairs. That is presumably meant to prevent gouging,
but in practice it ensures no dealer technician will waste a single unpaid
minute chasing a difficult intermittent problem.
The system works for most people, most of the time, because
most problems are not intermittent and motorists learn to ignore the rest.
For the rest of you . . . .
We’re here in Springfield, Massachusetts, and we’ll diagnose
and fix anything at our regular shop rate.
If an extended warranty pays us, great.
If not, the owner can pay. From
the shop perspective that’s the only fair way to do this. We get our clients everything we can from
their service contracts and they pay the balance. We charge for actual time worked, and WE WILL
solve the problem.
J E Robison Service Co, Inc
Springfield, MA, USA
Bosch Authorized Car Service
Specialists in Audi, BMW, Jaguar, Mercedes, Porsche, Land Rover, Rolls-Royce and Bentley
2 comments:
Sounds reasonable. I tell people all the time: "We can do anything you want. Just bring money."
I LdoL. Every time my wife asks why it isn't done, I merely reply, "All it takes is time and money... simultaneously!" :-)
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