I am originally from a small town. 3000 in the actual town, maybe 8000 in the entire district.
Word of mouth is god.
There is no better advertising than doing the right thing.
I have been a buyer, a seller and a small time manufacturer in various forms throughout my life.
I know what it is like to be squeezed both ends by the customer and the manufacturer/national/state distributer.
I know how much it sucks when the product you spent good money on only lasted like a cheap copy.
I know what it is like to sit down and factor into costs, what parts/ installation may fail.
How difficult will it be to support this product?
Are there third party bits and pieces that may not be able to be procured to repair something of my own creation?
How many of these should I stockpile for remote possible failures?
How long should I support my own product?
Now days, the typical retail chain is, made in china/ wherever, imported by wholesaler, sold to customer by retailer. Or simply a retailer buying from generic manufacturer and then skipping the middle men.
Now, as a retailer, your response to a warranty claim is a direct result of the backup that you receive from higher up the manufacturing chain.
If a customer comes in with a legit problem and you know you have proven good backup, you simply replace the thing out of your own stock, knowing that your supplier will get one to you immediately.
These are the good guys.
The wholesaler has good shipping, has good inventory and common sense trust of the retailer.
A good supplier will ship you out goods before you even send the defective ones back.
Some even say don’t worry about sending it back, use it for parts or dump it.
The bad ones are not reachable, argue about whose responsibility it is, and leave you to self warranty the stuff to keep good customers happy.
After this sort of treatment from one supplier that I was spending roughly $15000 a month with, I simply stopped ordering anything from them and went elsewhere.
It just wasn’t worth the crap.
They call me up a few weeks later to see why I had not been ordering anything from them, I told them why, and there reply was, ‘but we are a lot cheaper’.
You can’t expect us to do anything more than what we do for you.
Sorry, wrong answer.
When the faulty crap is taken into account they are no cheaper, plus you get the stress of unsatisfied customers.
Their loss of sales to me in those few weeks, just one customer, was way more than anything that it would have cost them to do the right thing.
But I have no doubt that some cost cutting middle manager got his bonus for lowering warranty claims.
Most surf ski paddlers have two things in common.
They just want to paddle, and importantly, they don’t paddle alone.
So when you think that you only ever hear about the complaints; that’s just bullshit.
Because for every complaint, there have been a great many uneventful, enjoyable paddles that accumulate to make the guys that are paddling along side you in their new shinny boat, the greatest advertising the manufacturer could ever get.
Now with the modern internet, that paddling group extends worldwide.
All things good and bad are shared, just like living in a small town.
And this is good, for word of mouth will rule once more.
All warranty/ backup has its roots in the manufacturer.
They are ultimately responsible for everything regarding this.
If the national importer/ distributor is a bastard at honouring warranty, then it is usually because of the way they are treated by the manufacturer.
If the importer/distributor really is the bad guy, then again, it falls on the manufacturer to loose the troublesome part of their distribution chain to keep their good name.
No if’s, but’s or maybe’s.
The manufacturer is responsible for all, unless of course they are simply manufacturing for a contract and somebody else slaps a name on the thing.
As a customer all I want to do is paddle.
I don’t want to wait 6 weeks while my defective bit is shipped back to a manufacturer, repaired or relaced and then shipped back out.
That’s crap.
I’ll say it again, ‘I just want to paddle!’.
I’m writing this, because as I am writing this, I can’t paddle.
My paddle has broken.
Nothing bad, just the adjustable collar to lock the paddle has come unstuck.
This wouldn’t be so bad if the National distributor would carry stock of anything other than the best selling bits, as I have been waiting for a while now to get another paddle so that if this sort of thing happened I would have a spare.
But it is broken, I don’t have my spare yet, so now I can’t paddle.
So what do I do?
Well I for one am not going to wait weeks for a resolution, I had a quick go at fixing it myself with adhesives I have, got a little scared when just a tinny bit of adhesive got into the join and the paddle was looking like it would be stuck fast in the one position.
(Because of the way the collar is made, it needs the two paddle halves together to support and align the collar as it sets.)
I spent half an hour getting the thing apart, cleaned up all the adhesive and the next day, took it down to the store where I purchased it and sorted out a gluing mechanism there and it is now curing waiting for me to go collect.
Now, I shouldn’t have even had to consider doing this.
But guess what, I just wanted to paddle!
I know that the Australian wholesaler doesn’t have another in stock, as I am still waiting patiently for my paid for but not received second paddle.
I don’t wish to wait forever to ship it to them to get fixed.
I don’t want to wait for unanswered emails.
I don’t want to talk to them on the phone, have everything sorted only to have to ring up days after to find that nothing has been done as they have done to me in the past.
I just want to paddle.
The retailer should never be placed in a position like this either.
This is exactly how warranty messes begin.
Manufacturers need to understand this.
When I fork out a big chunk of money to get the best, this sort of crap shouldn’t happen.
At the moment, I’ve paid twice, and I still can’t paddle.
The retailer involved in this has been nothing but helpful and honest.
All he wants to do is get me back on the water.
The crap comes from above.
No manufacturer can blame anybody else but themselves when warranty messes come about.
If you just have in place good policies, it simply cannot happen.
Not only will they save themselves grief, but the next time the customer goes for a paddle and everybody asks how did it go with the warranty, he is all smiles.
‘Word of mouth’, can’t beat it.
In the climbing world, many manufacturers do post on boards such as this.
They do it well and they do it promptly.
They know that they are dealing with the entire community.
They are honest, because they know that they will be called out 2 seconds after they post.
But mostly because they are usually climbers themselves and are also part of the community.
Surf ski is a very similar sort of thing.
Worldwide, this is still a small community and no manufacturer will last if they do not take control of the back up of their product.
Word of mouth will kill them.
For me, I will now sit down and consider if I should cancel the order for the second paddle and get some other type.
But the funny thing is, if the local repair is successful, the wholesaler and the manufacturer will not even hear of my woes apart from on these forums.
If somebody asks me what I think about the paddle, I will simply tell them exactly what I have had to do.
Now if we were a bunch of six about to head out for a paddle after work on a weekday, there’s 5 other people that know and trust me, that are now wondering about the manufacturing quality and the backup service.
Word of mouth, and quality backup, can’t beat it……….
Follow the path of the independent thinker. Expose your ideas to the dangers of controversy. Speak your mind and fear less the label of 'crackpot' than the stigma of conformity. And on issues that are important to you, stand up and be counted at any cost.--- Thomas J. Watson