superfly_snook
Well-Known Member
With legacy brands and independent shops you call on Monday and they give you a time usually in the next couple days to bring it in or even better they say “just come in” and I think this is because they have a steady flow of vehicles coming in and work getting done so it’s pretty predictable.
Rivian is trying to schedule everything through an app and quickly built up massive lead times at their service centers. It’s hard to say without data but it feels to me like 90% of their service is for niggly things that are related to manufacturing issues (misaligned doors, panels coming loose, leaky windows etc.). I doubt any shop could accurately schedule someone’s service visit four months out, which is basically what Rivian is doing.
Seems like they could get more to an equilibrium if they can eliminate all the little niggles that may be due to manufacturing processes that need improving. If that significantly cuts their service volume they could start to dig out of the hole they have got in. I don’t think they should start building a ton more service centers until they can fix the manufacturing because they won’t know truly what they need until they can deliver cars free of defects.
Short term why not enable a partner? If a lot of their issues are alignment they could partner with a collision company - Caliber for instance - and send all those cases there. Same for windows or whatever cause is driving their top few case categories and that could be outsourced by sharing some know-how and documentation.
Rivian is trying to schedule everything through an app and quickly built up massive lead times at their service centers. It’s hard to say without data but it feels to me like 90% of their service is for niggly things that are related to manufacturing issues (misaligned doors, panels coming loose, leaky windows etc.). I doubt any shop could accurately schedule someone’s service visit four months out, which is basically what Rivian is doing.
Seems like they could get more to an equilibrium if they can eliminate all the little niggles that may be due to manufacturing processes that need improving. If that significantly cuts their service volume they could start to dig out of the hole they have got in. I don’t think they should start building a ton more service centers until they can fix the manufacturing because they won’t know truly what they need until they can deliver cars free of defects.
Short term why not enable a partner? If a lot of their issues are alignment they could partner with a collision company - Caliber for instance - and send all those cases there. Same for windows or whatever cause is driving their top few case categories and that could be outsourced by sharing some know-how and documentation.
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