by Old Irish » Wed May 30, 2007 10:06 pm
"If they have an accident while you have an open RO that can be a whole new set of problems"
I know that lawsuits can take some strange turns but I am struggling with the idea that an open RO will somewhow divert accident liability from the driver of the automobile to the delaer holding an open repair order. So, customer picks up his car at 5:00 pm today and has an accident at 9:00 pm....and the dealer is brought into the loop because the repair order isn't closed into accounting until the next morning? What has the world come to? Not that mine represents the final word, of course, but in all honesty I have never heard of such a scenario in my 29 years in the business. I'd like to hear from anyone who has and have them explain to me the twisted logic !
And, let's define "closed repair order". Are we talking about simply generating a customer invoice, or actually closing the repair order into accounting?
For instance, on completion of a warranty repair a customer invoice is printed. If there's any "customer pay" on the ticket, the money is collected and on that day (or the next, depending on timing) the customer pay portion is closed into accounting. If there's no money involved the customer pay portion of the ticket is closed as a "no charge".
Now, depending on a variety of factors, the *warranty* portion may not be closed into accounting at the same time and will remain "open" until your warranty clerk or outside warranty company completes the process of submitting for payment and closing it into accounting.
Cheers
DD