cooldudecaptain wrote:
So because 'you' chose to drive 75 miles and take off work...............to meet the truck........ instead of waiting for a confirming phone call your boat had arrived at the dealer........you should be compensated ? ? ?
Actions have consequences..............grow up and grow a pair. Enough already.
ba
Yes actions and lack of actions have consequenses. Also for customers.
I would say that telling a customer that his/hers boat is on the truck is a clear confirm.
I have also suffered from poor communication within the chain of supply of Hobie.
There are several links in that chain before the boat (AI 2012 in my case) reaches my dealer in Sweden.
Due to a short season and a short vaccation the only possible planned long tour was at risk to be cancelled by a delayed delivery.
Just 2 days before I got the AI and there have been lots of communication and less of clear information within the chain of supply.
I can't blame my dealer, actually I can't blame anyone because I have not the slightest clue and no insight where it went wrong.
Because of a HEAVY leaking front hatch I still had to abort the long tour after only 3 days.
Then I had a problem to determine extacly what was causing the leaking front hatch and the right way to fix it.
And also where the rensponsibility and costs should be for fixing it.
Not before my dealer (visiting Hobie HQ in US for other reasons) took one of the Hobie staff out in their yard looking at an AI-hull and actually found the same faults I have reported to my dealer (there is a thread with pics in this forum), I got the message that it was a Hobie fault and I dared to actually trying to fix the hull. Then I knew that if I didn't succeed I would get a new hull.
I managed to fix the leaking front hatch myself and spent some money and time to do it.
Asking for some compensation I understood that costs would strike my dealer.
My dealer did everything right and actually helped me so I didn't raised the question again.
Lessons learned:
1. Next new boat will be ordered long before use.
2. Old boat will not be sold before new boat is delivered and tested out.
3. Along the chain of supply to Sweden communication will be poor.
4. There are absolutely nothing to benefit the end customer with a long chain of supply. Every middle hand have to earn money, no one will have costs (following responsibility), more can make mistakes.
At the end:
I am VERY happy with my Hobie Adventure Island 2012. An absolutely astonishing and wonderful product!best regards
thomas