Good deed & A BAD Dealer
#1
Good deed & A BAD Dealer
As some know, I'm doing some work away from home, Indiana. Anyhow, I went out for lunch today here in McDonough, Ga. Started riding up 75 and a couple passed me from Fla. on a blue/silver Ultra--- no lights... I got his attention and told him we were 2 exits from a HD dealership. OK, so we thought. Arriving at the dealership, we went in to ask for a mechanic to take a look at it just to be sure. They very bluntly told us they DID NOT have time to look at it and if we would leave it they would try to look at it maybe tonight or tomorrow. They were very blunt about it and walked away. Not offering advice or even trying to sell him a fuse. What a real letdown. We proceeded out to my bike and found the correct fuses and changed it. With that, they were ready to continue on their way to Pigeon Forge,Tn for 2 weeks of leaf watching. I just wanted to pass on this blight of a Stealership that everyone should know about. I have never been in a dealership that acted that way about any kind of service, especially when they know you are from out of town, on a trip. That's HD of Clayton County. Dan
Last edited by dgriffith; 10-14-2008 at 03:05 PM.
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Well, that dealer earned the nickname "Stealership". You ought to write an editorial letter to their local paper. There is a business in my town that has had a bad attitude towards tourists. People have done just that, write the paper, they published the letter. A little public humiliation can do wonders sometimes for future travelers. Sorry to hear the trouble they had.
#7
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#8
bad business
I hate to hear about any bad business. We, wife and I, are multiple business owner's, glutton's for punishment I guess, have many employees, I can from experience say its not usually the business fault, rather the employee at fault and has slipped through the cracks or had improper training, the latter being the case ....business supervisors / owners fault. I would ask anyone that has a bad experience with a business, at that time ask to speak to the supervisor. Then ask the supervisor, away from the general public, your question or let them know about your complaint, including the experience with the employee.
Our employees know the importance that we place on customer service, We spend thousands of dollars a year promoting our business ventures, and it starts with the employees learning before they are hired that we have a no complaint rule about rude employees. If one of our employees can not OR elects to not deal with a customer, to simply state politely..."another associate will be right with them", and its the employees responsibility to notify a supervisor IMMEDIATELY. It is the business owners responsibility to train the employees and its the business supervisors and owners to police the employees. I agree customer service is a easy sign to hang on the door, backing it up requires daily attention.
Our employees know the importance that we place on customer service, We spend thousands of dollars a year promoting our business ventures, and it starts with the employees learning before they are hired that we have a no complaint rule about rude employees. If one of our employees can not OR elects to not deal with a customer, to simply state politely..."another associate will be right with them", and its the employees responsibility to notify a supervisor IMMEDIATELY. It is the business owners responsibility to train the employees and its the business supervisors and owners to police the employees. I agree customer service is a easy sign to hang on the door, backing it up requires daily attention.
#9
Too bad the travellers couldn't get helped quickly, and fortunate it was a simple fuse fix to their problem that you could help them with.
Without knowing more about what was going on in the service department (techs out; new bikes to be delivered to waiting cutomers; etc.) I wouldn't throw the dealership under the bus, yet.
I live in metro Atlanta on the north side so I have no personal experience with HD of Clayton County. And I haven't heard anything negative about them.
Without knowing more about what was going on in the service department (techs out; new bikes to be delivered to waiting cutomers; etc.) I wouldn't throw the dealership under the bus, yet.
I live in metro Atlanta on the north side so I have no personal experience with HD of Clayton County. And I haven't heard anything negative about them.
#10
I was in that dealership about a month ago. I went in to look at some ride gear. What I found was a lot of of old, new clothes. I found leather coats with a 3 year old date code on them, rain gear, more than that. Maybe it's just a clearing house for outdated clothing line with bikes for a display. They have 07,06 and 1 05 bikes that are new. Sort of makes you wonder.