T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1169.1 | | TRUCKS::RANDALL | | Wed Aug 29 1990 05:46 | 13 |
|
Please bear in mind that I write from the U.K. but....... I wouldn't
have thought that the LG02 was a customer installable option since
there are shipping brackets etc to remove, this is the case when
they are bought from DECdirect over here I think. Could this have some
bearing on Customer Services response ? You imply that the customer
himself has done it all himself so far.
Seems like a good chance to go in and get some system maintenance
business if we respond well to his printer problem; or am I being
too simplistic.
Regards Mike Randall
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1169.2 | Where did you find the LG02 warranty?? | ODIXIE::GEORGE | | Wed Aug 29 1990 10:09 | 25 |
|
I arrive at just the opposite conclusion - it looks like the LG02
*should* have Basic Hardware Support. I no longer have a copy of the
GSA Schedule, but I think commercial and GSA warranties are the same.
This is my logic, based on the commercial pricebook:
The LG02 is not specifically identified in the warranty chart. But
since the pricebook has the printer listed in the "Options" section, I
assume the printer is an "add-on hardware option". The STANDARD
warranty for "Add-on hardware options not installed at time of system
installation" is warranty K. Warranty K provides, in part, the
following -
. If the system warranty or system maintenance agreement expires
prior to the installation of the hardware option, hardware option
warranty will be provided at the Basic Hardware Support level.
Halifax Engineering (Alexandria, VA) still is, I believe, technically
classified as a TPM. Digital has bid base-wide opportunities with
them, however.
Steve
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1169.3 | Rot'sa Ruck y'all | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Aug 29 1990 13:59 | 8 |
| I agree that the customer is entitled to one year hardware Basic
Service. As previously mentioned, it is not specifically called
out in any of the warranty examples in the USPL, but certainly has
to fall into one of the warranty "buckets". The MINIMUM warranty
for this kind of option is one year Basic.. I don't understand why
being attached to a foreign VAX would have anything to do with it.
So much for our "simplified" warranty system.
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1169.4 | Parts is Parts, but STANDARD ain't standard | ODIXIE::GEORGE | | Wed Aug 29 1990 15:23 | 14 |
| I just had a thought...Did the author of .0 mean the printer had
standard warranty or STANDARD warranty. Digital now provides only two
kinds - LIST and STANDARD (I know, GSA won't catch up 'til the next
schedule). One could say "Digital's standard warranty is LIST and our
premium warranty is STANDARD". Wouldn't you love to have the inventor
of all this live next door to ya ;>}
In any case, if DECDirect is quoting "Digital's standard warranty" (and
they really mean LIST or Product Foundation J) then the service
provided is, in fact, Return to Digital - regardless of what kind of
service the CPU has.
If, however, DECdirect is quoting Digital's STANDARD warranty, then my
previous reply stands.
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1169.5 | | BOLT::MINOW | Cheap, fast, good; choose two | Wed Aug 29 1990 16:52 | 9 |
| As a stockholder, I certainly hope that someone went out and fixed the
silly thing while we continue to argue who ends up eating the cost.
When Dec sold its first PDP-10 in Sweden, the purchaser (government) said
they didn't want to have to read everybody's different terms-and-conditions.
Just send us an invoice: "the consumer protection law says it'll work for
one year: that's good enough for us, so set your price accordingly."
Martin.
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1169.6 | Frustrating | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Wed Aug 29 1990 18:35 | 12 |
| I agree .5 that we are probably stepping on ourselves again here.
Instead of fixing the damned machine, we are trying to make the
customer understand our internal complexities. There was a recent
blurb on the net on how HP does exactly the opposite, and is winning
big.
I work in the general area of warranties and service contracts, and
I can tell you that after four years of daily exposure, I don't
understand it all. I don't know how in the world we could expect DD or
the sales force to. I wonder sometimes if we couldn't just offer to
"fix what we sell", period. Think of the thousands of staffees (me
included) that could go away.
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1169.7 | A la carte | KYOA::LOGRANDE | Stone Carver | Thu Aug 30 1990 12:43 | 5 |
| I seem to remember some time in the past when everything we sold came
with one year warranty. Than some customer satisfaction genius???
decided we should unbundle warranty.
Another scam to make us more cost competitive??? which backfired.
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1169.8 | Better than before | COOKIE::LENNARD | | Thu Aug 30 1990 12:47 | 5 |
| It was a competitive issue. At least what we've got now is better than
the four (4)!! levels of warranty we had before. NOBODY understood
that. The problem is that there are real people who sit around and
think this crap up. Think what they could do if put on real
problems.......on second thought.......
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1169.9 | SUBJECT TO INTERPRETATION | LAGUNA::CLAY | | Thu Aug 30 1990 14:16 | 24 |
| Hmmmmm....interesting responses. Today, customer services is
repairing the LG02, under warranty, to prevent it from turning
into a KO call. The one-year, on-site issue is still being
debated because DD and my customer services manager have
different interpretations of Warranty K.
DD agrees with the other noters here that it should be construed as
at minimum, Basic hardware support. My CS manager (and myself)
believe that if the writer of the warranty had wanted it to be
Basic hardwre support, it would say so. Instead, the paragraph
that mentions that it would be covered even if the service agreement
or warranty of the system expired, is intended to give a blanket
of coverage for our valued customers who buy our contracts or
on-site warranty with systems. It is not to say that we don't
care who you buy maintenance or warranty from, we'll fix it
anyways. We DO care who they buy maintenance from and we will
not fix things attached to unsupported systems -- our stockholders
wouldn't by too happy about all the lost money in that type of
a venture.
Ok, so what we've got here is just plain old different interpretations
of Warranty K. I wish this simplified warranty really was.
Regards,
KClay
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1169.10 | A paraphrasing of Ken Olsen's view | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Thu Aug 30 1990 17:51 | 12 |
| Well at today's DVN Ken Olsen had a lot to say about support and
products. The basic message is that we're moving aggressively in the
direction of separating support costs from hardware/software costs.
From now on we'll sell hardware/software packages at the same price
and competitive with all the others in the industry that don't provide
good service.
For our good service we'll charge extra for the service. In that way we
are competitive with the box shippers and we have our value added to
sell as well.
Dave
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1169.11 | Where's the Problem? | GRANPA::RPHILLIPS | | Thu Aug 30 1990 19:52 | 9 |
|
Is the problem with the printer or the system? Certainly, if it is a
printer problem I HOPE Digital resolves the problem.
On the other hand, if it is a system problem, the TPM organization owns
the problem. Sadly, I've seen too many similar cases where everyone
points fingers, and the customer is left high and dry.
rkp
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1169.12 | DECdirect Reply | CGVAX2::SLOSEK | | Fri Aug 31 1990 12:03 | 13 |
| On behalf of DECdirect, I want to supply some details on the activity I
have taken to get the warranty definitions clarified. I have spoken to
folks in Customer Services Marketing and gotten their take on how the
definition of K warranty should be interpreted in this situation. I
have spoken to the Sales Rep and her C/S manager to relay that
interpretation. The definition DECdirect used to administer the issue
was written by and intrepreted by C/S.
The C/S manager had some very valid input as to the lack of clarity in
the definition which I have passed on to C/S Marketing with the request
that they discuss the concerns and come to a conclusion on a remedy so
similar situations will not occur.
At the present time, our scripts at DECdirect are in line with the
warranty definitions provided by Customer Services.
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1169.13 | WHY DO I EVEN BOTHER? | LAGUNA::CLAY | | Fri Aug 31 1990 12:52 | 17 |
| This issue was escalated to the District CS manager, who also agrees
with the interpretation of my local CS manager -- that Warranty K is
not intended to be at minimum, Basic Service. I understand tht
your marketing people say otherwise, but, why don't they change
the definition to reflect that intention?
How long is this confusion going to continue? (Of course, in the
meantime the LG02 has been repaired -- we don't leave customers
out there with equipment down while we debate policy interpretation
internally.
I think our debate here is interesting, however, will anything ever
come from it -- will the warranty definition be re-written? I doubt
that anything will be done until some next major warranty change
occurs. Somebody please, just put a wall in front of my head to
bang on -- the results are the same.
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1169.14 | Warranty *this* | ODIXIE::GEORGE | | Wed Sep 05 1990 09:29 | 17 |
| RE: .13
> This issue was escalated to the District CS manager, who also agrees
> with the interpretation of my local CS manager -- that Warranty K is
> not intended to be at minimum, Basic Service.
I've missed something here. Warranty K *SAYS* "...will be provided at
Basic.." How does your Unit Manager and District justify that K "is
not intended to be ... Basic"? What is the logic? I really would like
to understand.
I hope this is not one of those arguments where someone says "Well,
yes, it _says_ that - but they couldn't have meant it that way" :-(
Thanks,
Steve
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1169.15 | THERE WAS NO EXPIRING CONTRACT | LAGUNA::CLAY | | Fri Sep 21 1990 20:38 | 9 |
| Sorry Steve, the price book says Warranty K is "The Warranty
level is the same as the system to which the hardware option
is directly attached."
It is attached to a system that we don't maintain at all, hence
our interpretation that it's not covered on-site.
Regards,
Kay
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1169.16 | Film at 11 ! | ODIXIE::GEORGE | | Tue Sep 25 1990 11:07 | 10 |
| But the last sentence of the 2nd "bullet" of the Warranty K description
says "If the system warranty [...] expires prior to installation of
the hardware option..." Wasn't the system under warranty at one time -
ever? If so, then the "warranty expired prior to installation of the
option" and thus the option will get warranty "provided at the Basic
Hardware Support level".
Isn't this fun? ;-)
Steve
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1169.17 | THE LAST WORD | LAGUNA::CLAY | | Thu Sep 27 1990 12:32 | 11 |
| Now that's an angle no one else has thought of yet! I like it!
Just to keep you up to date on this particular situation; customer
services repaired the printer at no-charge and did not send a letter
to them saying from now on, you're on your own. They said nothing
to the customer about the rest of the year's warranty coverage.
I believe they're conceding to the on-site warranty coverage by
not saying anything to the contrary.
I'm tired of this topic, aren't you?
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1169.18 | Help fix the Solutions ... | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early Dtn 264-6252 T&N EIC Engineering | Fri Sep 28 1990 10:33 | 93 |
| re: -< THE LAST WORD >-
>I'm tired of this topic, aren't you?
Topics like this frustrate me to no end !!
I've been with DEC for 11 eleven years, and my first few contacts
with DEC (before I came here) were very mixed ... from Stupendous
Company to "Rip offs" ... and the circumstances were also widely
varied.
Now I am here, and have been.
I get frustrated with these topics, because we are in the process of
clearing an "obvious misunderstanding" with the CSC/CS on a couple
of products.
I feel very bad when customer is given my phone number by "someone"
in the CSC/CS because they "will not" help the customer, nor
escalate it internally.
We have some of the most conscientious people in the world in our
CSC/CS, and we have a great cooperative enterprise with most of
them. Even as you read this, I would bet that any one of you would
agree that no matter how hard we try, we still can't quite get the
support to the customers that they need. Yet, here we are,
commiserating with each other, over the pitfalls of the "system'.
Not only do I support, but I have used DEC products as an external
customer; internally as an IEG customer, as a DEC EMPP Program, and
I read STARS and Write TechTIPS, and talk to customers, DECUS,
Marketing, Sales, and when my phone rings I never know whether it's
a person who bought from a 3rd party vendor looking for a "freebie"
or a "high level VP without a contract" or Joe of Smallcompany
frustrated by our "bureaucratic" style of support (".. 7th person
I've talked to...").
What I recommend is this: (it is also what *I* do when I get
frustrated with ".. a break in the system...".
First to remember.
It's not a witch hunt for the culprit. It is a flaw in the system
which needs to be found and corrected. I am sure several of you and
I have spoken on occasion, and often it's a "little" glitch that
causes the big hacks (like a EPROM chip with one bit altered or your
paycheck with the decimal point in the wrong place).
- Help the customer first. Its easier to beg forgiveness than to
get permission.
- Get all the significant details (call log numbers, names, phone
numbers, etc), and send this information to:
o Your supervisor
o The product manager
o The other "named" people
o Provide all the known details, and why you think the
process is "broke".
o Encourage those people to forward the information the
supporting people, if known.
o Double-check with the alleged perpetrators.
Example: Three years ago we "heard" one of the CSCs was passing
"bad data" to customers. We called the CSC, and said we had a
problem of that type. The support person repeated the "bad data"
to me. We then informed the person who we were, my relationship to
the product, and asked them to have their supervisor call me on
the DTN.
That call began one of the longest running cooperative
relationships I've ever been in, and the synergy we developed
continues. We corrected the data; put the CSCS on our "pre-ECO"
and "pre-TECHtip Review" distribution list, and the process
continues.
Some people tell me this is not possible for them. I believe it.
I believe that some people need to follow metrics based on some
printed document, instead of what makes sense, for that
situation.
It's important to remember that any of us can misinterpret the well
meaning intentions of our peers, employees, and supervisors. It is
up to us, whoever discovers the flaw, to try to get it fixed, as
best as we can. If it means calling Corporate Customer Satisfaction
ourselves (see Inside cover DTN Tel directory); then by gum and by
golly "DO IT !"
-BobE
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