you would when the doors closed and you were out of work because of your slack arse attitude towards the bigger picture
"Look, Madame, where we live, look how we live ... look at the life we have...The Republic has forgotten us."
and when my son had his Street Triple in for it's 20,000k service at Motorrad he had to get them to come and pick it up when it seriously overheated - they hadn't bled the cooling system and they had broken a tab on the airbox and superglued it back on, obviously hoping he'd never notice. In their defence they immediately accepted his comments, fixed the cooling problem and offered him a new airbox and $200 shop credit. But it should never have happened.
I'd be interested to know what other people's experiences are. I think the problem with bike shops is that they feel as though we should be honoured to be allowed to deal with them.
Don't blame me, I voted Green.
You're fucken joking! You obviously work there/know them/have a gun pointing at your head as you type. Which one is it please? Your opinion is completely at odds with this and other threads re:Casbolts. Happy for you to sit on the bikes? Oh yeah and which bikes were those? This is my favourite bit "they were always polite and never treated me like I was some sort of potential theif who was never going to buy a new bike every couple of years once I graduated." Methinks you doth protest too much...........Casbolt Junior!
Same can be said about your sense of humor unfortunately.
After reading through this thread, not jumping to defend the name and reputation of Casbolts, I just want to say that I have had pleasant experience dealing with the guys at Casbolts over the past 18 months. I admit their sense of humor is a bit on the dry side but overall they are helpful and genuinely don't mind you go and pick their brain in regards to the bikes and all...
YMMV.
I have had a very similar experience in Wellington. Not going to name the Dealer as I'm over it.
My observations are that most Dealers/ Sales staff seem to make the same mistake(s), some of which are:
- Look beyond the current sale, most of us will actually trade up and buy more than just the bike
- Value the customer no matter what they do, how they dress, what their knowledge/ experience is or what their personality is like, or how much they spend today
- Understand that you are not the only source of Bikes, Parts, Services. sale etc are so much closers thanks to the net
I could go on. Sadly some of these items are not restricted to just bikes.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks