January 21, 2010
sponsored by Tavant
ISSN 1550-9214         

Vehicle Service Contract Industry:

Consumers seem to prefer the term extended warranty. But industry professionals prefer the term service contract, even when they work for companies with the word warranty in their name. The problem is, there are at least three dozen other terms used to describe the product. Or is it a service? A service product?

As we continue our tour of the extended warranty industry, we've come across a problem regarding the terminology we're using to describe the automotive portion of the business. We thought we knew what to call it, but vehicle service contract turns out to be less popular than we suspected.

Towards the end of last year, we completed a tour of the home warranty section of the industry, acknowledging that the contracts being sold under that title don't actually cover the home. Instead, they cover just the major mechanical systems within the home, such as the boiler, furnace, and air conditioning, and many of the appliances located in the kitchen and laundry room.

The phrase "home warranty" is therefore a bit of a misnomer. Then again, as the great comedian George Carlin once asked, why do Americans drive on the parkway and park in the driveway? But seriously, why try to change the meaning of words and phrases that everyone understands?

As we begin the automotive section of the tour, however, we're finding some organized opposition to the continued use of the term "extended warranty." In last week's newsletter, we recounted how Helen MacMurray, a partner in the law firm of MacMurray, Petersen & Shuster LLP and the legal counsel of the Vehicle Protection Association, had urged the group to take the word warranty out of its name (it was initially called the Automotive Warranty Services Association), and how several VPA members had also removed the word warranty from their product offerings and even their company names.

Banning the Word Warranty?

They weren't merely trying to be less confusing. The VPA's new Standards of Conduct actually bans the use of the terms "warranty" or "extended warranty" to describe the service contracts its members sell. To be specific, the document states that:

Members shall not use in their company name, advertisements, sales solicitations or any other description of their products, words such as "warranty," "dealer," "dealership," "manufacturer" (including actual manufacturer's name; e.g. "Ford") or any other words that falsely imply that the company is somehow associated with the manufacturer of the motor vehicle.

We've always considered product warranties and extended warranties to be different sides of the same coin. One is a free guarantee issued by the manufacturer or seller of a product, which promises to repair any defects that appear within a specified period. The other is a policy sold separately by the manufacturer, retailer, or a third party, which extends the duration of that guarantee for additional years, and/or covers additional perils. Sometimes it also runs concurrently with the product warranty, but promises more convenient service and/or faster turnaround times, or provides some other elevated level of service such as next-day product replacements.

We've always considered extended warranties and service contracts to be nearly interchangeable terms. But what we've discovered upon further inspection is that outside of this thing of ours -- outside of this little cosa nostra of warranty professionals who know the language and speak it fluently -- those terms are not so easily convertible.

It's a simple question: "What's this industry called?"

But it's not such a simple answer.

Industry insiders seem to prefer the term "vehicle service contract" to describe what they sell, at least when they're talking with each other. But in public, at least within the billions of pages archived and organized by the Google search engine, the language they use seems to be quite different.

Tour of Warranty Search Terms

As the table below illustrates, the most popular terms found within the Google universe are "service agreement," "extended warranty," and "service contract," while the most popular automotive-specific terms are "vehicle protection plan," "extended vehicle coverage," and "extended auto warranty."

The term "vehicle service contract" was not among the most popular. In fact, "vehicle service contract" came in 21st on the overall list, and 13th among just the auto-specific terms. It was outranked by "extended car warranty," "car extended warranty," "vehicle extended warranty," and "auto extended warranty," among others. That's a bit unexpected, to say the least.


Extended Warranty Search Terms on Google
Number of Pages Found
January 21, 2010


Search Term Google Pages
service agreement 4,160,000
extended warranty 3,650,000
service contract 3,020,000
maintenance agreement 597,000
after-market warranty 491,000
extended service plan 394,000
vehicle protection plans 326,000
extended vehicle coverage 244,000
extended auto warranty 166,000
vehicle service agreement 164,000
extended vehicle service contract 106,000
car service contract 96,500
vehicle maintenance contract 94,800
extended car warranty 69,200
extended service contract 68,900
vehicle extended warranty 66,200
aftermarket warranty 61,600
car extended warranty 58,600
auto extended warranty 34,700
automobile service contract 24,800
vehicle service contract 23,600
mechanical breakdown insurance 18,600
extended service coverage 15,100
extended vehicle warranty 12,800
auto service contract 6,450
extended automobile warranty 4,420
automotive extended warranty 4,020
motor vehicle service agreement 100
automotive service contract 97
powertrain extended warranty 91
vehicle service protection 70
mechanical breakdown protection plan 54
service contracts for vehicles 39
auto extended service contract 21
automotive service plan 3

Source: Google


Just to be sure that we weren't missing anything, we also ran seven search terms having to do with automotive product warranties. And again, the term most popular within the industry -- product warranty -- was much less popular in the public realm. In fact, product warranty came in dead last.


Product Warranty Search Terms on Google
Number of Pages Found
January 21, 2010


Search Term Google Pages
manufacturer's warranty 2,480,000
factory warranty 1,950,000
bumper-to-bumper warranty 1,870,000
powertrain warranty 1,330,000
car warranty 1,280,000
auto warranty 1,170,000
product warranty 1,040,000

Source: Google


Granted, some of the web pages identified by Google use multiple terms. And some of the counts, such as those tracking "vehicle service agreement" versus just plain "service agreement," are inevitably going to overlap. We didn't try all the possible plurals that also changed their spellings (e.g. warranty vs. warranties). Also, we did not fully investigate all the possible word orders, although we did notice that "extended auto warranty" outscored "auto extended warranty," and that "vehicle extended warranty" outscored "extended vehicle warranty."

Multiple Matches Per Page?

In addition, given the way Google ranks pages, we have to concede that when designing a document, it would be best for a merchant to use as many of the terms as possible, to increase their odds of getting the benefit of a keyword match. Ironically, that probably means that this newsletter will rank very highly on the Google list whenever anybody goes looking for information about the industry -- whatever it's called.

Still, there are some peculiar observations that can be drawn from the data, besides the poor showing of "vehicle service contract." For instance, the hyphenated term "after-market warranty" apparently scored much higher than the compound-worded "aftermarket warranty." On Google, little things like that can mean a lot.

Overall, terms that included the word "vehicle" outscored those that used "auto," "automobile," or "automotive" by a factor of almost four-to-one. But the generic terms that didn't include any words to make them vehicle- auto- or car-specific garnered almost 90% of the total mentions (disregarding the overlap). We expected the automotive "market share" to be higher.

We're really not sure what all this means, or if it really means anything. But it reinforces the idea that there is no single universally supported label for the vehicle service contract industry. However, splice the word auto or vehicle into a term such as service agreement, extended warranty, or service contract, and you probably have something that most people would at least recognize.

The Tour Resumes

So let's take a quick little hyperlink tour of this industry -- whatever it's called -- through the lens of a web browser. Let's see what some of the major players call themselves, their products, and the industry they're in.

Among the industry associations and trade groups, there seems to be a definite consensus around the term "vehicle service contract." The Vehicle Protection Association states that it represents firms in the "automotive service contract" industry, but another page on its web site also touts the benefits of purchasing a "vehicle service contract." Ironically, the only use of the word "warranty" was on a page explaining The difference between a manufacturer�s warranty and a vehicle service contract

The Vehicle Service Contract Administrators Conference and the Service Contract Industry Council are both solidly behind the term "vehicle service contract." After all, they have the words "service contract" in their names. The SCIC, we should note, sometimes switches to the term "service contracts for vehicles," which Google found on only 39 web pages worldwide.

Vehicle Service Contract Supporters

Assurant Solutions, a member of the SCIC, has a business unit called Automotive and Recreational Vehicle Services. The company seems to be rather consistent in its use of a single descriptive term for the product it sells: a "vehicle service contract."

"Working from our standard portfolio or developing customized solutions, we partner with business-to-consumer companies to offer a suite of vehicle service contracts (VSC) for new and preowned automobiles, recreational vehicles, watercraft, motorcycles and all terrain vehicles," states the company's own description of itself.

Jimmy Atkinson, Assurant Solutions' senior vice president of vehicle service contracts, said he fully supports the use of the term "service contracts." Then again, he has those words in his job title, doesn't he?

"Technically what we sell aren't warranties," Atkinson said in an email to Warranty Week, "although it is common for people to refer to them as extended warranties. At Assurant, we use 'vehicle service contract' to describe our business even though some of it is MBI [mechanical breakdown insurance]. We think it catches all the products with motors and wheels or rudders, including autos, RVs, motorcycles, other powersports and marine."

Extended Warranty Veterans

The Warranty Group, though it's changed its name and has had multiple owners over the years, can trace its roots back to 1964, when Pat Ryan & Associates began selling credit insurance through car dealerships. Resource Automotive Inc., part of the Warranty Group, seems to use several terms interchangeably in its marketing materials, including "extended service contracts," "automotive service plans," and "automotive extended warranties." Only the first of those seems to get any love from Google, though more generic terms such as "service contract" and "extended warranty" did score very highly.

Rob Mancuso, senior vice president, corporate communications, at the Warranty Group, said the people he asked within the company preferred the term "service contract," preceded by either the word "vehicle" or "auto." They did not like any of the terms that included the word "warranty," he said.

Mancuso, who himself has been on either the dealer or the underwriter side of the service contract business since 1974, said that describing something as an extension of the manufacturer's warranty just seems to invite trouble.

"The word warranty only applies to the underlying manufacturer's product warranty, which came with the product," he said. "That's what Legal would say to us. If I went in and said, 'We're extending the warranty,' they'd say, 'No, you're not!.' Warranty comes from the manufacturer. It ends, and we're asking, 'Would you like a service contract?' They're two distinctly different elements."

Then again, Mancuso added, consumers will keep on calling them extended warranties, just like they call any facial tissue a Kleenex® or any copy a Xerox®. Nobody calls them electrophotographic copying machines, and nobody will, no matter what the lawyers say.

"We can try to change the world, and the terminology will remain," Mancuso concluded. "But for journalistic and copy-creation purposes, I think we should all stick with service contracts."

A Little Bit of Everything

AMT Warranty Corp., a part of AmTrust Financial Services Inc., describes itself as "administrators of extended service plans (ESP) and warranties." Among the types of service plans listed on a products page are "vehicle service contracts." And on the parent company's European web site, there is an entry on the list of specialty risk products and services entitled "motor vehicle warranty insurance."

Numerous administrators and underwriters seem to use multiple terms rather interchangeably. On a page subtitled, "Driving automotive warranty opportunities," Warrantech Automotive states that it is "a world class provider of vehicle service contracts." But on another page aimed at irate consumers who are looking for someone to blame for all the unwanted phone solicitations they're getting, the company states: "Warrantech makes no outbound sales calls regarding auto extended warranties or auto service contracts." And at the bottom of a press release, when describing itself, the company says, "Warrantech Corporation administers and markets service contracts and after-market warranties on automobiles, automotive components, recreational vehicles, appliances, consumer electronics, homes, computer and computer peripherals for retailers, distributors and manufacturers."

On a page labeled "vehicle service contract information," US Fidelis touts its "affordable vehicle service protection," which is available from "top vehicle service contract providers." On another web site created to "dispel myths" about its business practices, US Fidelis uses the term "extended service contract" and states that it " supports efforts to strengthen vehicle service contract industry standards."

Allstate Dealer Services sells its CarMor brand of "vehicle service agreements." Toyota Financial Services also sells vehicle service agreements. CNA National Warranty Corp. typically uses the term "vehicle service contract," though it's sometimes abbreviated as just plain "service contract."

The Penn Warranty Corp. uses the term "service contracts." Guardian Warranty Corp. uses the term "vehicle protection plan" on its web pages aimed at consumers, but on a page aimed at auto dealers it switches to "service contract" or "mechanical breakdown protection plan."

EasyCare states that it has four extended warranty plans: TotalCare, StatedCare, PrimaryCare, and PowerCare. TotalCare is additionally described as an "extended auto warranty" that provides "extended service coverage."

Adapting the Message to the Listener

Sometimes, what matters less than who's speaking is who's listening. Warranty industry professionals know the terms and what they mean. But most consumers don't. So the trick is to use multiple terms, in a context in which one helps to define the other, so that both groups of listeners know what we're talking about.

Interstate National Dealer Services Inc. has a slogan on its web site, "We warranty the big things in life." Interstate describes itself as "a leading provider of service contract and extended warranty programs," using both terms in sequence to enhance reader comprehension. By the way, we checked, and Google found 97,200 pages that use both terms.

Bill Gilman, Interstate's vice president of direct marketing, said he thinks there's one set of terms that should be used when the listener is an insider working within the industry, and another set of terms that should be used when the listener is a current or prospective customer.

"Within the industry, and my understanding of what they're truly supposed to be referred to as, is a vehicle service contract," he said. "But to the lay person, if you said that to them, they probably wouldn't know what you were talking about. So the term 'extended warranty' usually is preferable." But if he had to choose one, it would be service contract, he said.

Insurance vs. Service Contracts

Then again, there are programs sold in certain states that are called "mechanical breakdown insurance." This, Gilman suggests, is a term that is preferred by insurance companies, banks, and credit unions, and/or it's a term required by state insurance regulators. In other words, it's not so much a function of who's listening as it is who's speaking and where.

"It's just a different way that they file the program with a state's Department of Insurance," he said.

In other words, if it's a regulated financial company doing the selling, they might call it mechanical breakdown insurance. But if it's an auto dealer or a direct marketing company doing the selling, they should call it a vehicle service contract. And if it's being pitched to a consumer, it may help to explain that a vehicle service contract is an extended warranty for a car.

Tavant

 

This Week’s Warranty Week Headlines

General Re settles with U.S. SEC over AIG accounting fraud.
Associated Press, January 21, 2010
National Protection Service trainee arrested after becoming disruptive, assaulting police.
Asbury Park Press, January 21, 2010
Universal Consumer Products lengthens warranties on decking and railing from 20 to 25 years.
Press Release, January 21, 2010
Business manager at Mazda dealership accused of pocketing extended warranty premiums.
Watertown (CT) Town Times, January 21, 2010
Federal Communications Commission plans stricter rules for prerecorded telemarketing calls.
Denver Post, January 21, 2010
 

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Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

4CS to provide CODA Automotive with ServiceON service lifecycle management solution.
Press Release, January 20, 2010
Warrantech Consumer Product Services gives 10 companies its Best of the Best awards.
Press Release, January 20, 2010
Overtime lawsuit filed against Dealer Warranty Services is certified as a class action.
Press Release, January 19, 2010
F&I Administration Solutions signs Alpha Warranty Services for SCS Auto administration solution.
Press Release, January 19, 2010
Oclaro offers lifetime warranties on Clarity Fluorescence biomedical filters.
Press Release, January 19, 2010
 

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Warranty Chain Management Conference

 

Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

Warranty Holdings moving headquarters from Uniondale NY to Atlanta.
GlobeSt.com, January 18, 2010
Customer can't get refund from Lenovo for extended warranty on her stolen laptop.
InfoWorld, January 18, 2010
Canadian judge defines the difference between an extended warranty and insurance.
Financial Post, January 16, 2010
Rhode Island car owners file complaints after Eagle Warranty collapses.
Providence Journal, January 16, 2010
Auto One Warranty takes three months to process a vehicle service contract refund.
WTVD-TV Raleigh, January 15, 2010
 

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PCMI - Your technology partner

 

Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

HP resellers unhappy over company's habit of contacting customers about Care Pack renewals.
CRN UK, January 15, 2010
Accenture opens Global Innovation Center in Detroit; will offer warranty consulting services.
Press Release, January 15, 2010
Mepco Finance buys the Wentzville headquarters of US Fidelis at a foreclosure auction.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 15, 2010
Francis Gaffney of America's Choice Protection Plans fined $330,866 in PA.
Allentown Morning Call, January 15, 2010
Enermax lengthens warranty on its power supply units from three years to five.
Press Release, January 15, 2010
 

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Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

Kia launches £3.5m campaign to back warranty extension
Marketing Magazine, January 14, 2010
Kia launches European TV ad campaign to promote its seven-year warranties.
Marketing Week, January 14, 2010
Vodafone Hutchinson Australia amends mobile handset warranties after ACCC investigation.
Smart Company, January 14, 2010
Australian regulator contends mobile phone warranties should extend to the life of contracts.
Computerworld Australia, January 14, 2010
Australian regulators force Vodafone Hutchison to amend its mobile phone replacement policies.
Press Release, January 13, 2010
 

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Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

Mondial Assistance says 40% of its Mercedes customers pay monthly for service contracts.
Press Release, January 13, 2010
KPMG says Empire Direct in administration restructuring can't pay extended warranty claims.
Daily Mail, January 13, 2010
Petland's puppy warranty, issued by PAWS, has $1,000 maximum payout even for pneumonia.
Tucson Citizen, January 13, 2010
Airbus works to stamp out superjumbo bugs haunting A380 flights.
Bloomberg News, January 12, 2010
Renault South Africa introduces five-year/150,000-kilometer warranty.
Motoring, January 12, 2010
 

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Entigo, Founding Sponsor

 

Warranty Headlines (cont’d)

Home Warranty of America launches a new online claims reporting system for its customers.
Press Release, January 12, 2010
Mitsubishi Electric appoints PartServe Channel Support as its service partner for South Africa.
IT News Africa, January 11, 2010
Xwarranties.com web site opens, selling Warrantech's RepairMaster extended warranty plans.
Press Release, January 11, 2010
Direct marketers blamed for poisoning consumers' attitudes about vehicle service contracts.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 10, 2010
Northrop Grumman to repair amphibious transport dock's faulty diesel engines under warranty.
Navy Times, January 10, 2010
Virginia Surety Co. partners with Individual Assurance Co. for home and appliance warranties.
Press Release, January 8, 2010
Assurant Solutions names ANEW Business Solutions as recipient of its Vendor of the Year award.
Press Release, January 8, 2010
Launch of Nexus One mobile phone is a test of Google's approach to customer service.
CNET News.com, January 8, 2010
NEW Customer Service Cos. launches survey on why consumers purchase extended service plans.
Press Release, January 7, 2010
Warrantech Consumer Product Services enhances its WCPSOnline claims processing system.
Press Release, January 7, 2010
Ford lengthens warranties in China to 3 years/100,000 kilometers from 2 years/40,000 kilometers.
Reuters, January 7, 2010
Celestica acquires Scottish after-market service company Invec Solutions.
Press Release, January 7, 2010
Investigators say La Fond Auto Sales sold fraudulent auto warranties even after warning.
Grand Rapids Press, January 8, 2010
Washington state issues cease-and-desist order against Auto Repair Warranty Inc.
Press Release, January 7, 2010
Owners of SafeRide Warranty arrested for defrauding consumers in alleged credit card scam.
Associated Press, January 7, 2010
NEW Customer Service Cos. enhances mobile connectivity for servicers with ServiceBench Mobile.
Press Release, January 6, 2010
NEW Customer Service Cos. increases first-call resolution rate to nearly 1 in 4.
Press Release, January 6, 2010
Home warranty companies get low grades from Angie’s List members for fifth year in a row.
Press Release, January 6, 2010
AeroThrust files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection but warranty work will continue.
South Florida Business Journal, January 6, 2010
Rino Mechanical lengthens warranties on its precision mechanical parts to three years.
Press Release, January 6, 2010
NEW Customer Service Cos. introduces plug and play web tools for its online retailers.
Press Release, January 5, 2010
Wincor Nixdorf lengthens warranty on its Beetle point of sale systems to seven years.
Press Release, January 5, 2010
Auto warranty broker AA Auto Protection adds blog to its web site.
Press Release, January 5, 2010
Every Kia sold in Europe to get a seven-year warranty.
What Car? January 4, 2010
Rugged computer manufacturer Getac lengthens warranties to five years.
Press Release, January 4, 2010
Nokia Care Centers in the Philippines sell extended warranties with handsets.
Manila Bulletin, January 4, 2010
United Hyundai closes doors; other dealers assume its warranty and service contract duties.
KLAS-TV Las Vegas, January 4, 2010
Shell accused of abandoning solar power buyers in the developing world.
The Guardian (UK), January 3, 2010
 

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