CarterNMA
09-08-2015, 06:51 PM
Does anybody here have any insight on the way car dealerships have changed the way their service departments operate over the last five years? And I use the term "service" loosely...
So my check-engine light came on last Wednesday and I called the Kia dealership to see what they could do/what they recommended. I wanted to bring it in on Thursday but they said they couldn't look at it until Tuesday. Well, I guess with the long weekend approaching, they are getting hammered so I said I'd come in then. Show up this morning and they were like, "Do you have an appointment." No. It's a check-engine light. "Well, you need an appointment. We are now booking two weeks out" It's a check-engine light. Can't somebody at some point today run out and check it? "No." It's under warranty still. "You still need an appointment." :(
I leave and call another Kia dealership. They can't look at the light today either. Best I can get is Friday morning.
So on my way to work, cuz, what choice do I have now...I begin wondering is it Kia, the dealership chain or just the industry? I decide I'll call a Volvo dealership, you know, a carmaker with generally higher clientele who expect more. Nope, they too would require an appointment.
What the hell have I missed? When I had Volkswagens in the late 90s, early 2000s and a Mazda in the mid- to late 2000s they could see me immediately or the next morning if the light come on in the evening. Is this the industry standard now?
And insight would be much appreciated.
Thanks!
So my check-engine light came on last Wednesday and I called the Kia dealership to see what they could do/what they recommended. I wanted to bring it in on Thursday but they said they couldn't look at it until Tuesday. Well, I guess with the long weekend approaching, they are getting hammered so I said I'd come in then. Show up this morning and they were like, "Do you have an appointment." No. It's a check-engine light. "Well, you need an appointment. We are now booking two weeks out" It's a check-engine light. Can't somebody at some point today run out and check it? "No." It's under warranty still. "You still need an appointment." :(
I leave and call another Kia dealership. They can't look at the light today either. Best I can get is Friday morning.
So on my way to work, cuz, what choice do I have now...I begin wondering is it Kia, the dealership chain or just the industry? I decide I'll call a Volvo dealership, you know, a carmaker with generally higher clientele who expect more. Nope, they too would require an appointment.
What the hell have I missed? When I had Volkswagens in the late 90s, early 2000s and a Mazda in the mid- to late 2000s they could see me immediately or the next morning if the light come on in the evening. Is this the industry standard now?
And insight would be much appreciated.
Thanks!