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PostPosted: Tue Jan 01, 2008 3:19 pm 
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Cocobolo
Cocobolo

Joined: Wed Dec 13, 2006 9:41 am
Posts: 118
Location: United States
OK this question is for the repair gurus. I do more repair work than I do
building. Most of my repairs thus far though have been from word of mouth
and a few on used items from a local dealer. How does one go about
becoming a factory authorized warranty center and which companies are
pretty good to work with (i.e. they pay you in a timely fashion...I've heard
some horror stories). Lance if this post isn't kosher feel free to do with it
what you wish.


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 01, 2008 3:21 pm 
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Cocobolo
Cocobolo

Joined: Wed Dec 13, 2006 9:41 am
Posts: 118
Location: United States
EDIT

If you have specifics on companies please pm me rather than post it publicly

Thanks K


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 01, 2008 5:14 pm 
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Koa
Koa

Joined: Wed Aug 24, 2005 11:13 am
Posts: 1398
Location: United States
I always had a great relationship with Martin when I was repairing out of Westwood Music. Their payment schedule was fair...given that it was warranty work...and practically every job also had non-warranty work that I could charge the clients for directly.   Also, there's a lot of credence given to you if you qualify as a Martin repair station, and they are very good about referring normal work to you. I highly recommend it.   Of course you have to be able to work fast and clean...


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PostPosted: Tue Jan 01, 2008 5:56 pm 
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Brazilian Rosewood
Brazilian Rosewood

Joined: Sat Dec 03, 2005 10:04 am
Posts: 2060
I had less than ideal relationships doing warranty.

I've done warranty work for Martin, Gibson, Fender, Taylor, PRS, Collings, Ovation, Deering, Alvarez, Yamaha, Washburn, Guild, others, and all their subsidiaries - not many I haven't performed work for.

I'm now very proud and happy that I am an official warranty repair center for No-one!

As an official recognized warranty repair center, you are generally paying for an official endorsement. My rates are set at $80/hr. Considering (with no attempt at modesty ) that there are two or perhaps three other shops within a hundred mile radius that can provide the level of service I do, and I'm not charging more than a decent auto shop or plumber in my area, I think that's quite reasonable. Gibson and Fender pay a little bit over half of that rate. Martin pays set fees per job, which can end up ranging from fair, to downright insulting when labor hours are calculated. In the end though it can balance out. I charge $160 for a bridge reglue, and Martin would pay $30 at the time I was doing it. But then there would be set up, adjust action, intonation, perhaps a few loose fret ends, pickguard work, plus some non-warranty repairs in parallel that would balance it out. Still not making retail prices, but it would become more palatable.

There are positives to offering warranty work. First is the advertising and endorsement. You don't generally make much or even any profit on warranty work, but it brings people in the door, who then may buy other products and services. Second, it's just a good customer service feature. In general though, you'll break even at best.

Not all companies are that bad. Taylor is excellent, and they generally would pay me the same amount that I would bill the customer, and in good time. Surprisingly enough, Ovation and Yamaha aren't that bad. Smaller companies that deal warranty work on a more case-by-case basis like Collings or Santa Cruz can be quite good as well. Cheaper instruments like Saga stuff will generally just be returned and replaced. For the big companies that you'd see most of the work from like Martin/Gibson/Fender can pay average, and usually within a decent time from billing. It's still a bit of a pain in my opinion though.

Now you don't necessarily have to do good or even decent work to be a warranty center though. If you are connected with a dealer, can show some kind of CV or certificate, along with your insurance policies, many companies will sign you on if service is lacking in your area. I have one store near me that absolutely butchers anything that comes through their doors, yet they are a warranty center for many. I've even had several instances where customers have come to me and paid full price to undo and redo work that had been done there under warranty. I am always sure to inform customers when I feel their work may qualify for warranty service, and will refer them to the nearest shop that I personally feel is qualified to do the work well, but most end up choosing to trust their instruments with me even if it means having to pay.

If you have a client base and don't need the warranty endorsement to bring them it, I wouldn't bother with it. If you need to do some warranty to maintain a relationship with a music store (another thing I'm glad not to be doing anymore), then it may be worth looking in to. Taylor is good. Gibson/Fender/Martin, so-so. It's all a pain when compared to simply billing the customer, and you will always make less per job than normal. Still, it can bring people in the door, and it's a good customer service, but I'm glad not to be dealing with it anymore.

Best thing to do is just call whatever number you can find online for each company. They'll be able to redirect you to the right department. That department will send you some paperwork, which you can fill out to give you the privilege of filling out more paperwork, which will allow you to wait some weeks or months for a check that may or may not cover your costs. Just call each company, they'll get you the info you need, and you can probably weigh the options and make your decisions from there.

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Eschew obfuscation, espouse elucidation.


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PostPosted: Wed Jan 02, 2008 3:00 am 
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Brazilian Rosewood
Brazilian Rosewood
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Joined: Thu Mar 01, 2007 3:15 pm
Posts: 2302
Location: Florida

GREAT answer David!


I personally dont do warranty work, and I dont want to. I do repairs, but so far the only things I have taken in is guitars that are in the extreme upper end and the ones nobody else will touch. Luckily the local repaqir shops are so busy doing warranty work that they dont want to take the necessary time to do "custom" work. This is where I come into play. The customers I work for are willing to pay reasonable prices and they are extremely happy to have someone that will repair their guitars without having to ship them anywhere.


I have not advertised that I do repairs. somehow the word of mouth advertising seems to spread like wildfire when someone finds a shop that does quality repair work. Repair work is nice to have on occasion and it fills in some of the time I spend waiting for my glue to dry on my builds. It also gives me the opportunity to see some other luthier's work and inspect what they do to achieve their "sound". I always learn something from the repairs.


 


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Ken H


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