Again tomv, you are missing the point. Granted, everyone knows what responsibility they have with our customers. Our 40% growth each year for the last 2.5 years did not come naturally. However, there are issues, and yes they can be regional, that the factory does have influence, or the general public does. If you are in a market where there are 5 GM stores and one is way below average. then yes, you are right. but tom, what if an entire area, like the San Francisco Bay area, home of 5 million poeple or so, why are the CSI's of this area much lower than most of the country?? If 25 out of 40 GM stores are significantly below average, something other than the dealership (but including them) is having influence. And again, the major manufacturers have a signifiacnt influence in CSI just by their policies. Case in point, many of our customers are reacting extremely negatively about being told their piston slap noise in thier trucks is normal and will not affect the operation of their vehicle. I do believe this is true. However, it will defintely affect the value of the vehicle when it is traded in. GM knows this, but does not want to spend the 5-10 billion dollars to fix it. A Toyota, Honda, etc, may have had a piston slap problem for 1 year, but they would not let it continue from 1999 to 2003. Many of the competing foreign car lines limit their CSI responses, some only wihin the first 12/12. GM may send out a CSI on a 94000 mile vehicle. Now at 94000 miles we do a recall, which generates a CSI, and the customer has to spend $2000 for other reapirs. Do you honestly believe this customer will be completely satisfied?? I think not.
I do accept full responsibility for my customer feelings about me and my company. But all I want is a system that can rate us honestly for what we do. Without having to "hunt" for CSI, many times this will not happen.
California is a foreign car state. Every Toyota store in the S.F Bay area sells more Camrys than all the combined GM stores sell Pontiacs. Most Mercedes and BMW stores sell more of their product than all the Cadillac dealerships combined. In the S.F Bay area. The influence of higher quality vehicles is more negatively affected here, than in the mid west, or Texas or the Florida market. What do you have to pay you car runners and lot attendents? In the Bay Area, it can cost upwares of $16 per hour plus $2000 per month in benefits. A friend of mine in the Arizona market hires hispanics to wash cars, run cars, etc, and pays them minimum wages with no benefits. Their labor rates are not that far below mine.
Again, there are regional influences, and factory influences that dealership groups have to face. One of the ways we have to is to work harder at the number game, because GM requires it. Then 5 dealers hunt for CSI, and GM praises them for ther efforts, and tells the other dealerships if they can do it, why can't you. Then 10 dealerships are hunting for CSi, leaving 10 dealers who are not, Then GM see those dealers and said the other 10 have improved their CSI, why can't you? Ths circle continues.
This had been a great discussion and I have enjoyed it. There is truths and realities in all the posts. Except it is not neccessarily a fair playing field. And to be honest, after all the talks , and analysis made, I do not have a solution to make it perfect or even significantly improved. Improved and more fair?? Yes. But not even close to being perfect. The posts ae not meant to slam GM in any way. GM should be proud of the improvements and efforts they are making in all of their product lines. But discussion is the only way for self improvement. And I have said enough
thanks for the discussion