Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/05/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I agree that most service issues take money and human resources, but some don't. A simple email instead of sending me a letter 2 months later would save Leica time and money. Actually getting that "Sorry" goes further than hearing nothing. A little communication from the current staff would go a long, long way. As it stands they all appear to hate their jobs and their customers. Something Leica needs no money to fix. Dave "Frank Filippone" <red735i@earthlink.net> writes: > Do I have direct knowledge of Leica? No. > > However I pay attention to their track record, the complaints of > their customers, the fact that several of the LUG members seem to > have the contacts to reach inside Leica and get what they want ( and > therefore the uppers do know that there is some level of complaints > that can not be addressed through normal channels), and the business > man inside me says... they know, but have no fiscal way or no idea > of how to fix it. It costs money to fix customer service > problems..... loaners cost money, repair techs cost money, training > techs is probably the most expensive problem, especially in the new > M8 and DMR world. They don't have spare change, no less real money > to fix these things. On top of that, everyone in the SLR world > wants a new Digital R10 with AF, same lens mount, using the same old > lenses, etc. etc. etc. Where would you spend your dollars? R+D for > the future, or in spare M8 bodies to lend out to customers that have > already paid their drachmas? > > The M8 is a problem in the service area. We have pretty good > documentation of that. However, Leica has never been good... I had > an M6 in for a CLA and they put on someone else's body shell... it > had a honking big dent in it that precluded the use of film on the > camera. Did I get a loaner? No. Apology? No. I got my camera > repaired in a few weeks. Others, Brian and SD among them, have had > problems with customer service... lenses go missing for months into > the Leica repair department.... Some of them brand new and under US > Passport Warranty. > > No, it is not acceptable, but if you want the worlds' best glass, > you learn to tolerate it......as best you can.