by 3760Guru » Mon Jun 06, 2005 7:58 am
I have to agree with chrabo,
It's not so much catering to the service department, but rather the mutual service customer. There are several things we do not know about the situation, though. Did the parts department get the tires without letting the advisor know the originally requested tires were not available? Did they try to keep the prices the same, and absorb the difference to GP (since counterpeople are typically paid off of GP), and was the customer informed about the diference?
From a CR standpoint, would putting on the cheaper tires been a good fit for the customer? Dealership service usually isn't the same prices as the independent stores, but that is where the level of service steps in. You can go into any McDonalds and get a burger that is similar to the best steakhouse in town. The difference is the atmosphere, and the way you are treated. Having said this, today's consumer has more options available to research pricing, products, and perform comparisons. If you think that they're not, go out and google some of the competition & see for your self. They're gunning for your business, and if you aren't making decisions that will be assistive toward their satisfaction, then you're just the Mcdonalds.....
Just my $.02