August 11, 2003

ISSN 1550-9214         

Warranty Services:

While most of the service providers in the warranty industry focus exclusively upon the sale and administration of extended service plans, a handful of intrepid companies have outsourced product warranty claims processing for manufacturers in the consumer electronics industry, where repairs can be performed by any of tens of thousands of service centers.

After looking at warranty analysis tools and warranty claims processing software packages, it's time to take a first look at some of the warranty claims processing service networks. These networks are run by companies that insert themselves into the web of communications between consumers, service centers, parts distributors, and manufacturers.

When one thinks of a warranty service, inevitably what comes to mind are the multiple companies selling extended warranty contracts and administering extended service plans. However, there also are numerous product manufacturers that have outsourced all or part of their basic warranty operations to outside companies, primarily for reasons of network complexity, but also for reasons of cost. These are what we mean by warranty claims processing service networks: the companies that manage the processing and formatting of claims, the dispatching of field service professionals, and/or the operations of a call center/technical support center.

Oil & Water?

One might think that basic product warranties and extended warranties/service agreements are two totally separate entities that don't mix. In strictest terms, a manufacturer's product warranty is a type of guarantee, while an extended warranty is an insurance product. Guarantees are issued along with a product purchase. Extended warranties are a product purchase in and of themselves. If it's free and it's bundled with the purchase, it's a warranty. If it's sold for an additional amount of money and it's optional, it's an extended warranty. But it's not so simple.

Extended warranty companies frequently sell wrap-around policies that from day one will enhance a basic warranty, covering additional uses and components of a product not covered by the basic product warranty. For instance, a flat screen TV's basic warranty may be invalidated by commercial use as opposed to consumer use. An extended warranty might cover that. An automobile's basic bumper-to-bumper warranty almost never covers brake pads or windshield wipers. An extended warranty might. So it's not always just an extension of the duration of the free-fix promise. It's also sometimes an enhancement of the product warranty.

Product warranties and extended warranties are more like salt and fresh water. They're connected and they mix, but there's no confusing a freshwater lake with an ocean. Where the river ends and where the ocean starts might cause some arguments, but everyone would agree there's a border somewhere.

For the duration of this article, we're going to call the basic manufacturer's product warranty the OEM business, short for original equipment manufacturer. The sale of extended warranties, whether the contract is backed by the manufacturer, a retailer, or a third party, we'll call the ESP business, short for extended service plan. OEM is fresh water. ESP is salt water.


Warranty Service Companies


Both OEM & ESP

ESP Only


The above chart lists most of the third party warranty service companies known at this point to Warranty Week. There are numerous online automobile extended warranty marketing companies that are not on the list, for reasons that are more thoroughly outlined in the Feb. 24 and May 27 editions of Warranty Week. Most of the insurance companies owning or backing the ESP vendors are not listed separately unless they sell the policies to consumers directly under their own brand names.

OEMs Can Be ESPs Too

Also missing are some of the retailers and manufacturers such as Circuit City, Sears, Dell, Gateway, Thomson Multimedia, Eastman Kodak, and American Standard Companies, which sell their own brands of extended warranties -- some in partnership with one of the third-party administrator companies in the list above, some backed by an insurance company with interests in the service contract business, and others on a completely independently and self-insured basis. But that's another article for another time: on the complex relationships, partnerships, and competition within just the ESP food chain. Earlier this year, it took British regulators 89 pages to merely outline their findings regarding the relationships among OEMs, retailers, and third party administrators in the U.K. extended warranty marketplace. And they're still not done.

The goal of including the charts in this article is to illustrate a point. While there are numerous ESP companies, especially in the automotive sector, there are far fewer service companies engaged in both ESP and OEM, and only a select few of them are focused primarily upon the OEM business. Why is that? If, as the data suggests, the size of U.S. manufacturers' product warranty settlements are on the order of $21 to $23 billion per year, why are there so few service companies present in that food chain? If only 10% of that money is spent on administration, it's still a $2.1 billion opportunity for outsourcing. Given the clamor that the "application service providers" caused three or four years ago in the telecommunications and dot-com businesses, it's a wonder that so few outsourcing companies have seized the opportunity to manage warranty claims services.

One could easily conclude that most OEMs prefer to run their warranty business themselves, but after talking with five of the OEM/ESP companies on the lists above, that apparently is not the case. Especially in the consumer electronics and small appliance sectors, and especially among OEMs importing manufactured products from Japan, Korea, China, or Europe, the manufacturers and importers instead seem to prefer to work with an experienced domestically-based middleman capable of managing a vast data processing network that connects them with potentially tens of thousands of authorized service centers and millions of consumers.

No Going Back?

In fact, of the five service companies interviewed for this article, none reported ever losing an American OEM client after the manufacturer decided they'd be better off bringing warranty back in-house. They've lost OEM clients to each other, and some OEMs prefer to use more than one service provider rather than signing with one exclusively. One service provider reported losing a Canadian appliance manufacturer to an in-house effort. Another reported losing an American retailer when they took their ESP program back in-house. But no American OEM has decided to "insource" what they previously outsourced. Quite the opposite is true. They usually outsource some little piece of their aftermarket efforts, then they keep building upon that base until it not only includes warranty, but also technical support and even rebate processing.

Kenneth Kopp, director of marketing at SatisFusion Inc., bristled at the suggestion that his company was a warranty outsourcing service company. "We've been working with the manufacturers -- of consumer electronics, housewares, photographic, lawn and garden, computers, and peripherals -- for over 20 years," he said. And while warranty is a big part of the business, SatisFusion is more generally a post-sale customer relationship service company, doing everything from managing rebates to running promotional campaigns.

SatisFusion's marquee customers within the OEM warranty space include Panasonic Consumer Electronics Co. and Toshiba America Consumer Products Inc. Previously independent, the company merged with the Warranty Corporation of America late last year.


Ken Kopp
SatisFusion

Nina Doherty, director of marketing at ServiceBench Inc., said that when the inevitable "What do you do?" question comes up at a cocktail party, she always says that ServiceBench is a supply chain management applications company. Among the supply chain applications it manages is warranty. But the company also provides applications such as parts ordering, service dispatch, product registration, and service network management. "First and foremost, we're a service provider."

Name That Business

So what does one call this business? In the dot-com era, ASP was the noun and outsourcing was the verb. But the application being sold usually had more to do with electronic messaging and little to do with warranty. Besides, at this point calling yourself a warranty ASP would conjure up unpleasant images of incinerated venture financing and bankrupt Web-based companies sold by the pound for scrap. WISP, for Warranty Industry Service Provider, doesn't sound right. So for the moment, unless a reader has a better suggestion, we're stuck with OEM warranty service company.

"I don't think there's a good acronym," Doherty said. A veteran of the telecom industry, she's also uncomfortable with the term outsourcing. "When a company that we work with talks about our relationship, they always talk about it as a partnership. Outsourcing implies that they're not participants."

Most of the companies listed above as both OEM/ESP service providers seem to focus primarily on the consumer electronics and home appliance markets. Some have clients in commercial air conditioning, power tools, and even the plumbing business. But what they all seem to lack is a foothold in the automotive industry. While the ESP list is filled with sellers of auto extended warranties, there doesn't seem to be a role for OEM service providers to play between the automaker and their dealer networks.

James Tucker, president of VAC Service Corp., said he thinks the reason has a lot to do with the tightly-coupled relationship between the factory, the dealer, and the service center. "I think the difference in the automotive business is that you as an administrator are captive to that dealer," he said, "because he not only sells the product, but he also does the repairs. So you're kind of at his mercy." In contrast, in the refrigerator business, a consumer can take their defective unit to any of 4,000 repair centers, no matter which dealer sold them the product.

Tucker said his company performs claims management in both the OEM and the ESP sectors. For some clients such as online retailer Orion Sales Inc., it does both. He estimates that roughly 60% of his business is OEM, while 40% is ESP.

Not Just Warranties

"That's why we consider ourselves a full service company, and not so much a warranty company," he said. "Not only do we take the calls for the manufacturers, but in some cases we also distribute parts. In other cases we refurbish products. We also do technical assistance."

Most of VAC's operations are squarely in the consumer electronics and appliance industries, he said. But Tucker noted that the company is already "dabbling" in the automotive business, specifically in the tire sector. While the acronym VAC stands for Video Aid Corp. and the company's roots are in ESP sales through consumer electronics retailers, Tucker himself came out of the Ford Motor Co., where he developed the 12-year/12,000-mile powertrain warranty program for used cars. "I've stayed away from the auto business for years," he said, but he can no longer resist the urge.

Kopp noted that same kind of effect at his company -- where you've been largely determines where you go. "That's our roots," Kopp said of SatisFusion's focus on consumer electronics. "The leadership in our organization -- we all came from this industry. Our founder and chairman and all these folks came from Thomson, GE, RCA, Mitsubishi, and Philips. We know this stuff. And that's a big part of what we build."

SatisFusion markets a post-sale customer relationship management service optimized for the needs of the consumer electronics, housewares, and photographic industries. If SatisFusion had developed a service optimized for the automotive industry or the aircraft industry, and if all its executives had come out of Ford, Chrysler, or Boeing, the company would probably count a whole lot of those types of companies as clients, he said.


SatisFusion's Wheel of Satisfaction




Kopp agreed that the reason for the poor showing for service providers in the auto industry has to do with the fact that so few auto dealers sell multiple manufacturers' vehicles. They may sell close cousins like Jeep and Dodge side-by-side, or perhaps Honda and Acura. An adventurous dealer might even sell three or four nameplates -- perhaps an import, a domestic, and a luxury brand. But which dealers would sell 25 different brands, and would therefore need to interact with 25 different manufacturers? Because the dealers and their service operations are usually tied to specific manufacturers, the need for a middleman to arbitrate the chaos in the network is not as strong in automotive, he said.

Computers Becoming More Like CE?

Kopp predicted that the computer industry will increasingly face this network chaos problem as more and more independent service centers take on repairs for multiple brands. "A computer service center authorized for Apple, HP, Compaq, and Toshiba -- that's four different claims systems they have to file," he said. As companies such as Gateway move away from the company store concept and as Dell looks for growth in the indirect sales channel, the computer service business will begin to look less like the auto business and more like the consumer electronics industry, and the need for a middleman will increase, he said.

Then again, warranty is warranty. "The discipline of warranty claim processing, of being able to take a manufacturer's business rules -- what they pay and what they don't pay -- and reducing those to a series of electronic validations, of being able to take files in from the people fixing this stuff and bouncing them against those variables, then taking those files and turning them around to a manufacturer for payment or further review -- those disciplines do not change across any of these verticals: medical, automotive, aircraft, consumer electronics, or computer," Kopp said. There's also not much difference based upon the geography of the client, he added. The processes don't change much depending upon whether the factory is located in the U.S., Korea, Japan, China, France, or Holland.

What's different, Kopp said, is the service end of each industry. Central air conditioners and washing machines are serviced differently than laptops or watches. Who selects the repairman? Is he dispatched to the customer site or does he wait for drop-offs or mail-ins? Does each service center have an exclusive territory, or do they compete for business? Are they captive to one manufacturer, or do they service the wares of several? Are most of the repairs under $100 or are they rarely that small? Even within just the computer industry, there are very real service differences between the process controlling how business and consumer products are fixed.

James Rushton, vice president of sales and marketing at KeyPrestige Inc., said his company is able to serve clients as diverse as Friedrich, Bosch, and Pioneer because the company developed a rather generic model of its target customer: one that manufactures durable goods covered by warranty and repairable by any of numerous independent service centers. Each specific industry has its peculiar nuances, but the core KPI warranty claims processing system is the same whether the product is a television or a washing machine.


KeyPrestige's ClaimWorks Interface




"Seventy-five percent of the performed logic to process a claim is the same, whether you're servicing consumer goods or automobiles," he said. Either type of manufacturer is looking for specific bits of information, such as the owner's address, the model name or number, serial numbers, parts numbers, etc. In consumer electronics, they generate a claim number. In HVAC, they generate a service order number. While the terms used may be slightly different depending upon the industry, they're in effect just speaking different dialects -- not different languages. Either way, the screens can be customized to fit the terminology used in each specific industry.

That having been said, the industry that KPI also has been unable to crack despite its best efforts is automotive. Rushton said he also suspects that's because the dealerships already are so closely tied to the manufacturers. He's made presentations to Hyundai Motor Co., Kia Motors Corp., Harley-Davidson Inc., Deere & Co., and a few others in the automotive sector, but each elected to keep the closely-coupled relationship they have with their dealers in-house. In keeping with its service focus, KPI declined to license its ClaimWorks software to any of these manufacturers. "So we didn't see any opportunity to go anywhere with them," Rushton said.

Doherty said she suspects the reason why warranty service companies seem to specialize in one industry or another has a lot to do with credibility. It takes some time for a service company to become familiar with all the business rules in a specific industry, let alone the products and their parts. Once they develop that expertise around the business processes of a single client in a specific industry, they're more likely to pitch their skill set to a prospect in the same industry than they are to a company manufacturing something completely different. And that prospect is more likely to listen to the pitch if the service company's reference accounts are in businesses just like theirs.


Nina Doherty
ServiceBench

"None of these companies have been around so long that they have become the de facto experts on a specific industry," she said. "And when you get a foothold and you get some intelligence, as far as understanding how servicing works, it's hard to leverage that industry and take what you're able to do and develop a best practices and apply it in another industry. In some respects, it's a lazy way to sell. But it's also a smart way to sell."

Marquee customers at ServiceBench include Whirlpool Corp. for its independent service contractors and Electrolux AB for servicers of their Frigidaire brand. What they have in common, besides of course their appliance-dominated product lines, is the need to bring in an outside manager to act as a middleman between sales, parts, service, and customers.

"If they have a service network that they're interacting with, they have to have a process that handles claims," she said. If they're potentially working with thousands of authorized service centers, and each service center works with dozens of brands, that network may not be all that easy to manage. ServiceBench's strength is that it provides a customizable Web-based interface that can act as a buffer and a telecommunications manager for all of these thousands of potential interactions.

ServiceBench acts as a clearinghouse -- a middleman that receives problems and dispatches solutions. Where ServiceBench does best, Doherty said, "is with companies that have multiple entities that they need to connect with, and where it's that connection that can be so challenging. That technology is not simple," she added.

The Middleware Myth

"There was a time two years ago," Doherty recalled, "when middleware was going to solve everything, and enterprise networks were going to take over the world, and everyone would be connected seamlessly throughout their different applications, with all their business partners. But it never really seemed to work..."

Doherty said ServiceBench has never lost an OEM's warranty account when that OEM took the operation back in-house. She notes that what's more common is a situation where an OEM begins by outsourcing some aspect of their aftermarket operation, then outsources a little more. "In large companies especially, they have multiple IT projects going on. And the warranty people are not necessarily first in line," she said.

Kopp said it's not in the best interests of an electronics or appliance manufacturer to try to act like a phone company. "The manufacturer is focused on building and delivering product into the retail space," he said. "From a warranty claims point of view, if you have thousands of service centers out there, it's very likely you have many hundreds if not thousands of different formats that somebody can use to create and send a claim in. It's not in the best interest of manufacturers, nor is it in the best interests of the service community, for each manufacturer to build a system to do that."

Had things happened differently, Kopp said the consumer electronics industry could have ended up with 50 different manufacturers having 50 different claims entry protocols. An independent service center that may be authorized to repair for 25 of them would have to teach their staff 25 different formats in which to file warranty claims. The better approach would be to have a middleman service bureau to arbitrate between the 50 manufacturers and the thousands of service centers.

"By and large, these are family-owned businesses fixing this stuff," Kopp said. Asking them to become software experts or data processing experts is not the best way to go. A better solution would be for each service center to work with a handful of middlemen who in turn work with all the manufacturers.

Economies of Scale

Dan Tafel, general manager of business development at Service Net Inc., said he thinks the reason his company has been so successful with manufacturers in the consumer electronics and appliance industries has a lot to do with the economies of scale. Build a network for one client, and it can be leveraged for the next client. By word of mouth or simply as people move around from company to company, the news spreads that somebody has solved the many-to-many connection problem.

Service Net's roster of marquee customers includes Maytag Corp.; Sony Corp.; Philips Electronics N.V.; and Office Depot Inc., Tafel said. The company, which was previously known as Service Net Solutions LLC, recently bought back the 51% stake owned for the past two-and-a-half years by Kemper Insurance Companies. While having a rich parent with deep pockets helped Service Net land accounts such as Office Depot, being independent hasn't stopped it from recently signing clients such as Lennox International Inc., MTD Products, and Leslie�s Poolmart Inc.

At KeyPrestige, the marquee list of customers includes General Electric (for both home appliances and the extended warranties sold through retailers by the GE-Zurich Warranty Management joint venture); the BSH Home Appliances unit of German manufacturer Robert Bosch GmbH; Sharp Electronics Corp.; and Sanyo Fisher.

Rushton said KeyPrestige offers its menus and data entry screens in English, French, and Spanish to address the needs of manufacturers selling into the U.S., Canada, and Latin America markets. Besides the obvious language and currency differences, he added that there's a need to localize the tax computation and reporting routines built into the ClaimWorks system. For example, in the U.S. a manufacturer must generate a Form 1099 report at the end of the year for each service center it pays for warranty work. In Canada, the manufacturer also must pay national and provincial sales taxes on that amount.


Jim Rushton
KeyPrestige Inc.

The biggest challenge KeyPrestige faces, Rushton said, is to convince OEMs that the way they've been doing warranty is no longer viable. "The majority of manufacturers doing claims processing and analysis are doing it the same way they did 25 years ago," he said. "And that is: the service centers are sending in the paper white copies, they're doing a visual pre-audit, some of them enter all of the information into a computer system to validate all of the information on the claim for accuracy against their business rules, but many of them enter only partial information to feed accounts payable."

In recent years, some of the manufacturers have developed their own Web-based electronic commerce sites which serve multiple purposes, Rushton said. First, it forces the service centers to do the data entry work, which speeds the processing of claims and cuts down on re-keying mistakes. Second, the Web site serves as an order entry system for parts. Third, it serves as a publishing mechanism for service bulletins and other relevant news from the OEM.

KeyPrestige has OEM clients in five different industries, and Rushton said he thinks the manufacturers and service centers in each are at different points in that transition from paper to computer. Consumer electronics is the most advanced, with 94% of claims now arriving in an electronic format. Home appliances and plumbing are a little less advanced, while power tools and HVAC are further back. The difference is striking. Rushton said the computer-formatted claims are processed in an average of 3.5 days. Paper claims take an average of 31 days to process. Obviously, the service centers will get paid faster if they make the transition.

Warranty Claims Analysis Services

Whether the claim arrives electronically or on paper, it ends up entered into the same KPI database. From there, manufacturers are free to browse the data, looking for patterns or anomalies in the parts data or service reports. KPI also regularly feeds all the claims data into the client's own accounts payable, quality control, and engineering systems.

"And if they need something on the fly, we have an on-demand query tool," Rushton added. So if they're going into a meeting in an hour and they need to know the failure rate of a specific part, they can drag and drop the information into a report that they can then take with them. They can choose to have it output into an Excel spreadsheet, a Microsoft Access format, or even an HTML format that can be printed or posted.

Rushton said the OEM therefore loses none of the visibility they might once have had if they outsource their aftermarket operations to a service company. Tafel said that rather than losing visibility of their products' performance in the field, he thinks the outsourcing model is actually an improvement upon the previous level of data collected by most OEMs.

"To be a warranty service provider for the OEM market, you need to develop a perspective about what warranties look like from the OEM side," he said. "A critical component of that is reporting on product performance. We can actually send very detailed reports back to the OEM, by the timing of failure, what failed, the part name or the component that failed. And that information allows them to actually push back on their suppliers."

Kopp agreed that OEMs lose no visibility of their fielded products when going through a service bureau. "One of the beautiful things about our platform is that warranty data is immediately accessible," he said. "We have manufacturers now where we have audit queues set aside specifically. The manufacturers come into our system and they can modify these audit queues." They may want to sort the claims based on specific parts, specific dates, or specific models, using the warranty data as an early warning of a quality problem within one of their suppliers, or perhaps in their own factory. "We communicate very closely with these folks through that data."

4CS iWarranty

 

This Week’s Warranty Week Headlines

Midas Inc. posts net loss of $32.7 million in second quarter after setting aside $33.3 million to cover future warranty costs.
Reuters via Forbes, Aug. 11, 2003
Warrantech Corp. revenues for the quarter ended June 30 up 19% to $40.1 million; net income down 70% to $215,295. Automotive extended warranties 71% of sales; consumer products 25%; but the big story is a 60% surge in international revenue.
Press Release, Aug. 11, 2003
VAC Service Corp. appoints Michelle Pironti, Jay Ferrill, and Leila Allam to managerial positions in call center operations.
Press Release, Aug. 8, 2003
Ford is facing a backlash from dealers and mechanics upset over planned cuts in warranty repair reimbursements. In a cost-cutting push, Ford has told dealers it is reviewing the amount of time it should take mechanics to complete specific repair jobs covered under warranty.
The Detroit News, Aug. 3, 2003
The failure of the National Warranty Insurance Risk Retention Group is not good news for the Cayman Islands. The adverse publicity is increasing exponentially each day as more and more media outlets pick up and carry the story, ranging from trade and business journals to overseas newspapers as far afield as Alaska. Complaints are also being made to state regulatory bodies, as well as state and US congressmen, who may well be vigourous in their attempts to investigate and find a remedy for their constituents.
Cayman Net News, August 2003
 

More Warranty Headlines below



SAS Institute

 

Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

Gateway launches budget PC with only a 90-day warranty. It's only $399, is not customer-configurable, and is not manufactured by Gateway.
CNET News.com, July 31, 2003
Warrantech Corp. to offer extended warranties through New York's Sam Ash Music Corp. -- its first foray into musical instruments.
Press Release, July 30, 2003
Active Web Services completes full deployment of ActiveWeb Warranty, NTHSA TREAD Act reporting and ActiveWebParts at RV maker KZ Inc. in ninety days.
Press Release, July 30, 2003
ArvinMeritor takes Dana to court in Virginia, alleges that the target of its hostile takeover bid made comments that were "misleading, fraudulent, deceptive or manipulative."
Reuters via Forbes, July 29, 2003
NHTSA releases final rule on the confidentiality of TREAD Act Early Warning Reports, will routinely treat submitted warranty data as confidential unless petitioned to do otherwise. Consumer advocates Public Citizen advocated the opposite treatment of warranty data, but its argument was resoundingly rejected by NHTSA.
Federal Register, July 28, 2003 (Vol. 68, No. 144, Pages 44209-44232)
 

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Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

UK Competition Commission revises its proposed remedies for extended warranty sales by consumer electronics retailers; now favours improved disclosures to the consumer at the point of sale and possibly a delay of 1 to 45 days between sale of product and sale of service contract. Final rule expected by 30 Sept.
Press Release, 23 July, 2003
J.D. Power and Associates 2003 Customer Service Index Study finds higher automobile quality means less warranty work. Infiniti passes Saturn for #1 ranking, followed by Acura, Lexus, Lincoln, Cadillac, Saab, Buick, Porsche and BMW. Suzuki is most improved, but is still third from bottom of the list.
Press Release, July 23, 2003
Dana Corp. rejects ArvinMeritor's unsolicited offer of $15 a share in cash; Board of Directors calls it "financially inadequate."
Press Release, July 22, 2003
ArvinMeritor responds to the rejection, says differences can still be resolved and dangles increased bid as reward for Dana's cooperation.
Press Release, July 22, 2003
PeopleSoft gains backing for J.D. Edwards acquisition from 88% of shareholders, falls just short of 90% needed to avoid month's delay awaiting formal vote; merger virtually assured since only 51% needed to win vote. Companies continue to fend off hostile bid from Oracle.
CNET News.com, July 18, 2003
 

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Entigo, founding sponsor of Warranty Week

 

Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

General Motors reports second quarter earnings down sharply, $1.58 per share vs. $2.43 billion last year, company made its numbers partially through a change of estimate reduction in warranty reserve funds that added 36 cents per share to earnings.
Reuters via Forbes, July 17, 2003
Dell and Hewlett-Packard prepare PC bundles for back-to-school bargain shoppers: Dell’s $699 Dimension 2400 has flat screen and two-year warranty, while HP’s $497 Presario S4000V has printer, floppy drive, and one-year warranty.
CNET News.com, July 11, 2003
Active Web Services and SPSS Inc. partner to create software solutions that enable customers to more actively manage warranty and claims processes, particularly in the automotive industry.
Press Release, July 11, 2003
Warranty administrator VAC Service Corp. appoints Roberta Russell, Thomas Hebrock, and Bob Morin to vice presidential positions.
Press Release, July 9, 2003
ArvinMeritor Inc. bids $2.2 billion to buy Dana Corp., offers $15 cash per share in hostile takeover attempt. ArvinMeritor also files suit over earlier rejection of $14 offer, signals willingness to increase bid if Dana drops poison pill defense and cooperates.
Press Release, July 8, 2003
 

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Entigo, founding sponsor of Warranty Week

 

Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

Dana board responds to ArvinMeritor announcement, says it will evaluate the offer and will advise shareholders within ten days to accept or reject the offer.
Press Release, July 8, 2003
If it's broke, fix it. Managing warranties for complex products is increasingly complicated, but software vendors such as SAP, Entigo, and ServiceBench are selling solutions.
InformationWeek, July 7, 2003
At annual meeting, Circuit City Stores announces promotion of Marc Sieger to vice president in charge of electronics retail chain's warranty administration.
This Week in Consumer Electronics, July 7, 2003
"Car guy" Dave Barry, pining for the golden age of muscle car songs (e.g. "409", "Little GTO" and "Maybelline"), sings unconvincingly about his Hyundai Elantra GT's anti-corrosion warranty.
Washington Post, July 6, 2003
Original owners of Service Net Solutions LLC repurchase 51% of the company's stock held by Kemper Insurance Companies. Service Net Inc. president Kevin Callahan notes the former owners have collateralized all future claims on Kemper-backed service contracts.
Press Release, July 4, 2003
NEW Customer Service Companies Inc. reports that the launch of the Sharper Image Corporation's online and in-store product replacement and service protection program has significantly exceeded expectations in its first year of operations.
Press Release, July 3, 2003
Hewlett-Packard limits warranty service authorization only to outlets actually selling HP computers; move cuts list of authorized service providers from 1,000 to 40; all Best Buy, Circuit City, Costco, CompUSA, and Fry's Electronics outlets still on the list.
CNET News.com, July 2, 2003
Tech columnist David Berlind gets the run-around from Nextel after two of his family's handsets fail outside of warranty period.
ZDNet, July 2, 2003
KB Home removes binding arbitration clause from new home contracts, allowing buyers to sue the builder over warranty disputes.
WOAI San Antonio via MSNBC, July 1, 2003
The insolvency of the National Warranty Insurance Risk Retention Group is rapidly becoming a public relations nightmare, not only for the car dealers involved, but also for the Cayman Islands. NWIG was supposed to be regulated and supervised by the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority. There may be an ongoing legal claim against the Bank of England as the primary supervisory authority in respect of alleged inaction by the regulators.
Cayman Net News, July 2003
Environmental Protection Agency settles lawsuit with Engine Manufacturers Association, Cummins Inc., International Truck and Engine Corp.; parties will create a manufacturer-run, in-use emissions testing program for heavy-duty diesel engines using portable equipment. EPA says detailed regulations expected by June 2004.
Notice of Settlement, June 2003
Entigo Corp. appoints David Pelton as vice president of product management and marketing.
Press Release, June 30, 2003
UK's Office of Fair Trading opens inquiry into car manufacturers' product warranties and extended warranties, seeking information on whether restrictions on where vehicles can be serviced is limiting competition.
BBC News, 30 June, 2003
Dealers of DeltaGroup's Smart Choice service plans caught in warranty war. Insurer National Warranty Insurance Company's problems force tough choices.
Automotive News, June 30, 2003
Warrantech Corp. reports fiscal 2003 revenue up 24% to $150.3 million -- 72% U.S. automotive extended warranties, 25% U.S. consumer products, and 3% international. Net income was $2.86 million or 19 cents per share.
Press Release, June 25, 2003
IBM launches ThinkCentre A30 desktops; low-priced units aimed at small businesses carry one-year warranty and include floppy drives and modems excluded from low-end Dell and HP units.
CNET News.com, June 24, 2003
NHTSA issues new performance standards for passenger car and light truck tires, but they're not effective until June 2007.
Press Release, June 23, 2003
Circuit City Stores Inc. reports quarterly loss for period ending May 31, says extended warranty sales dropped to 3.7% of total sales from 4.2% the year before.
This Week in Consumer Electronics, June 23, 2003
Used auto extended service plan issuer Warranty Administration Services alters contract terms in response to complaints lodged by UK's Office of Fair Trading.
BBC News, 23 June, 2003
NHTSA postpones TREAD Act early warning report deadlines, also plans to revise reporting templates.
NHTSA Online Notice, June 18, 2003
Oracle raises PeopleSoft hostile takeover bid to $19.50 cash per share; State of Connecticut files suit to block the deal.
MSNBC, June 18, 2003
Happy Birthday! Ford Motor Company turned 100 years old June 16, 2003; parade of Model T cars arrived in a soggy Detroit; shareholder meeting held at Ford Conference and Event Center in Dearborn.
Ford Motor Co. 100th Anniversary Web site home page
Detroit Free Press provides local coverage of Ford's five-day 100th anniversary party; company tells shareholders warranty costs dropped 10% in past year.
Detroit Free Press, Special Section
Gloves off in PeopleSoft fight: J.D. Edwards sues Oracle for interfering with its merger and PeopleSoft rejects Oracle's hostile takeover bid.
CNET News.com, June 13, 2003
Caterpillar's C15 heavy duty diesel engine certified by EPA; production to begin in third quarter for inclusion in on-highway trucks, fire engines and other emergency vehicles.
Press Release, June 12, 2003
 

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