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Date:         Wed, 13 Dec 1995 12:59:22 -0900 (AKST)
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From:         JOHNSON THOMAS H <rsthj@aurora.alaska.edu>
Subject:      Re: Butting Heads with Transform

Greetings all, I had a completely different experience with Rocky Mountain Motor Works that I thought I'd pass along.

I ordered two $.95 reduction box gaskets and they sent the wrong ones. When I called to tell them, they never questioned me and were extremely apologetic. They offered to send me new ones w/o my first returning the old ones. I'd already made my own so I declined. Then they offered to credit my account or send me a refund (still didn't want the old gaskets back) I told them that it wouldn't be necessary--I had just wanted to let them know that they had goofed. They made more apologetic remarks then we hung up.

About a week later a box arrived. RMMW sent me two of their "Invest in Precious Metals" Bus coffee cups along with a short note apologizing for their error. In so doing, they made a customer for life.

-Tom

> To All: > > Seems to be my day for it. First, JCW overcharges me ninety bucks for a pair > of front wheel bearings then Transform sends me some junk... and has the gall > to tell me "You received exactly what you ordered." > > Isn't that neat? Jeff the Omnipotent, guru of customer relations at > Transform is apparently able to project his mind the hundred miles from his > office to my shop and peer over my shoulder as I opened the package. > > Having pulled the tranny on my '65, I saw it as a good opportunity to replace > the nose cone and hockey stick, installing a '67 or later nose cone to get > the backup-light switch, and a new hockey stick, which 'Jeff' (no last name > offered) at Transform implied they carried. > > What arrived today was a nose cone WITHOUT a backup-light hole, although the > bill read 'NC RB Swg-bus w/switch hole'. So much for 'getting exactly what I > ordered.' To top it off, the nose cone, which was used, as I expected it > would be, had a nice shiny coat of paint glopped onto it... but spots of > hardened crud on the inside. And the hockey stick wasn't new, it was used, > although plated with cadmium to bring the shaft back to spec. > > I wanted a NEW hockey stick. I've already got USED hockey sticks that are > closer to spec than this piece of crap. If I wanted junkyard parts I'd go to > a junkyard and pay junk prices, not the $107.51 floating there on the bottom > line. > > Called them. Got the 'exactly what (you) ordered' bullshit. I said > something appropriate to the occasion, hung up. I've no time for idiots. > Then Jeff calls ME, upset that I might have 'misunderstood', finally agreed > that I could return the mechandise "...if that's what you wish." Eh? Did > he think I was just kidding when I ordered a post-'67 nose cone? Or that I > would really pay forty bucks for a USED hockey stick when I've got a coffee > can full of the things under the bench? > > Having been in business, and dealt with the public, I understand that errors > can occur in the best-run organizations. A good rule is to make things right > with the customer and try to learn from the exception. What I ran into with > Transform was the assumption that they were incapable of error -- that the > customer HAD to be wrong ("You received exactly what you ordered.") > > When I was in business I had this quaint notion that I should listen to my > customers before shooting off my mouth. Just old fashioned, I guess. > > -Bob > > >


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