deilenberger
Registered Member
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2024
- Messages
- 137
- Reaction score
- 86
- Points
- 28
- Genesis Model Year
- 2024
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis GV70
I have some experience in effectively encouraging automobile (and motorcycle) manufacturers to "do the right thing" and to make changes to their products.
Posting complaints on a forum may relieve tension and make you feel better - but it's a pretty ineffective way to convince the manufacturer to take action. You can assume the manufacturer has some person who is tasked with monitoring forum posts and taking notes and numbers on complaints heard on the forums, but it's hard to say how much any manufacturer values this information when making decisions on serving the customer better or making a change to a product.
What usually may work (no promises) is directly contacting people within the organization with your suggestion or complaint. If it's a complaint and it seems to be a common one (examples: Why doesn't the GV70/GV80 link the key to the driver memory? Or - my XYZ would automatically lock the door when I walked away from it.. why doesn't my GV##? Or "Lesser Hyundai vehicles and Genesis cars in Europe have wireless CarPlay or AndroidAuto - why not us?)
Those are all things that I've seen any number of times in threads in different sections of this forum, but what I haven't seen is anyone reaching out to Genesis to ask these questions. Asking here probably isn't going to make it happen (unless the thread What do you want Genesis to do? is being monitored by Hyundai/Genesis).
So how do you make your complaints, wishes, desires known to someone who can do something about it? There are a lot of ways that may work, and sometimes using several in concert with other people works even better.
- Complaints
The issue is complaints are posted here and Genesis America probably won't see them. So how do you make them see them? There is a direct approach, and an indirect approach, I'll outline a few:
Direct approach - going directly to Genesis and making your concerns known:
Genesis Customer Service || Genesis USA - who would have thought - Genesis has an entire page with multiple means presented to contact them. It offers a concierge service, messaging, and a phone number to call.
The one I'd suggest first is to try "Messaging" and keep a record of your discussion (many messaging systems will let you download a complete transcript of any message sessions you have. If this does - download it and save it. I just tried it - and you DO have to submit your user/name information, and the VIN# of your vehicle, eventually you get to a form allowing you to fill in your suggestion/complaint. I just entered two items - the walkway key issue (not locking the car) and the lack of key linking to the seat memory and profile memory. To be effective - it's good if other people also message them with the same issues as a concern. There was an option for what car system I was messaging about - I selected the one for communications - there didn't seem to be one for vehicle computer functions.
There is also the option to call them given on that page - I haven't tried it but perhaps I will tomorrow. It will be interesting if it just goes to a chat-bot or a person. I suspect a person since there are hours given when it's active. The phone contact info is: (844)-340-9741 Mon-Fri 5:00 am - 5:00 pm PST, Sat 6:30 am - 3:00 pm PST, Sun Closed
Now we get into the bit more adventuresome contact means - contacting people within the company.
First part of this game plan is knowing who to contact. First Google (or DuckDuckGo) "genesis usa officers" - DuckDuckGo gave me a bunch of links that I'll start exploring, looking for contact info on people in customer relations, product planning, sales - these are the people who can perhaps do something you want done if it's reasonable, possible and presented clearly.
My first try: RocketReach - Find email, phone, social media for 450M+ professionals - gave me a partial listing of officers at Genesis America. It didn't give full email addresses, but a free account will reveal those. You need to have a throwaway Google account to use with this tool. Make up one that you're never going to bother visiting - you just need it to unlock this tool. I did that - and the "Get Contact Info" asked me to log in with a Google account, so I did - then it presented the same group of officers of Genesis with their email addresses. Seeing the email addresses tells me that Genesis, as do many corporations, use the following pattern in assigning email addresses: firstname.lastname@genesis.com - the old "firstname dot lastname" @ company.com email address. This is useful info to know, it lets you contact individual in Genesis where you know their name.
My next result gave me names that might be useful: Genesis Motor North America Names Claudia Marquez As Chief Operating Officer
It tells me "FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif., Sept. 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Effective October 1, 2021, Genesis Motor North America has appointed Claudia Marquez as Chief Operating Officer, reporting to José Muñoz, Global COO of Hyundai Motor Company and President & CEO of Hyundai Motor North America. Claudia will lead the strategy and execution of all sales, after-sales, marketing, and growth strategies for Genesis." - giving me the name (and hence email address) of the COO of Genesis Motor NA - Claudia Marquez - and I bet her email address is claudia.marquez@genesis.com - useful to know. Her boss is José Muñoz at Hyundai - perhaps you can think of what his email address might be..
So we have a way to email people in Genesis directly. That is quite useful IF you keep your email businesslike and polite. Going on a rant about some issue that's bugging you will put the email in the bit bucket before the executive even sees it (executives in big corporations have lacky's that pre-sort and filter any incoming communications. A COO never gets to find out she may have won Publisher's Clearinghouse..). Keep it businesslike. Keep it direct and to the point. Keep it short (something I have to work at) and keep it polite. Doing this - I have always received a reply - sometimes from the executive, sometimes from their lacky presorter. They aren't actually ignored.
OK - so now you have several tools to contact people who might make a difference. Next post I'll tell you how to encourage them to make a difference.
Posting complaints on a forum may relieve tension and make you feel better - but it's a pretty ineffective way to convince the manufacturer to take action. You can assume the manufacturer has some person who is tasked with monitoring forum posts and taking notes and numbers on complaints heard on the forums, but it's hard to say how much any manufacturer values this information when making decisions on serving the customer better or making a change to a product.
What usually may work (no promises) is directly contacting people within the organization with your suggestion or complaint. If it's a complaint and it seems to be a common one (examples: Why doesn't the GV70/GV80 link the key to the driver memory? Or - my XYZ would automatically lock the door when I walked away from it.. why doesn't my GV##? Or "Lesser Hyundai vehicles and Genesis cars in Europe have wireless CarPlay or AndroidAuto - why not us?)
Those are all things that I've seen any number of times in threads in different sections of this forum, but what I haven't seen is anyone reaching out to Genesis to ask these questions. Asking here probably isn't going to make it happen (unless the thread What do you want Genesis to do? is being monitored by Hyundai/Genesis).
So how do you make your complaints, wishes, desires known to someone who can do something about it? There are a lot of ways that may work, and sometimes using several in concert with other people works even better.
- Complaints
The issue is complaints are posted here and Genesis America probably won't see them. So how do you make them see them? There is a direct approach, and an indirect approach, I'll outline a few:
Direct approach - going directly to Genesis and making your concerns known:
Genesis Customer Service || Genesis USA - who would have thought - Genesis has an entire page with multiple means presented to contact them. It offers a concierge service, messaging, and a phone number to call.
The one I'd suggest first is to try "Messaging" and keep a record of your discussion (many messaging systems will let you download a complete transcript of any message sessions you have. If this does - download it and save it. I just tried it - and you DO have to submit your user/name information, and the VIN# of your vehicle, eventually you get to a form allowing you to fill in your suggestion/complaint. I just entered two items - the walkway key issue (not locking the car) and the lack of key linking to the seat memory and profile memory. To be effective - it's good if other people also message them with the same issues as a concern. There was an option for what car system I was messaging about - I selected the one for communications - there didn't seem to be one for vehicle computer functions.
There is also the option to call them given on that page - I haven't tried it but perhaps I will tomorrow. It will be interesting if it just goes to a chat-bot or a person. I suspect a person since there are hours given when it's active. The phone contact info is: (844)-340-9741 Mon-Fri 5:00 am - 5:00 pm PST, Sat 6:30 am - 3:00 pm PST, Sun Closed
Now we get into the bit more adventuresome contact means - contacting people within the company.
First part of this game plan is knowing who to contact. First Google (or DuckDuckGo) "genesis usa officers" - DuckDuckGo gave me a bunch of links that I'll start exploring, looking for contact info on people in customer relations, product planning, sales - these are the people who can perhaps do something you want done if it's reasonable, possible and presented clearly.
My first try: RocketReach - Find email, phone, social media for 450M+ professionals - gave me a partial listing of officers at Genesis America. It didn't give full email addresses, but a free account will reveal those. You need to have a throwaway Google account to use with this tool. Make up one that you're never going to bother visiting - you just need it to unlock this tool. I did that - and the "Get Contact Info" asked me to log in with a Google account, so I did - then it presented the same group of officers of Genesis with their email addresses. Seeing the email addresses tells me that Genesis, as do many corporations, use the following pattern in assigning email addresses: firstname.lastname@genesis.com - the old "firstname dot lastname" @ company.com email address. This is useful info to know, it lets you contact individual in Genesis where you know their name.
My next result gave me names that might be useful: Genesis Motor North America Names Claudia Marquez As Chief Operating Officer
It tells me "FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif., Sept. 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Effective October 1, 2021, Genesis Motor North America has appointed Claudia Marquez as Chief Operating Officer, reporting to José Muñoz, Global COO of Hyundai Motor Company and President & CEO of Hyundai Motor North America. Claudia will lead the strategy and execution of all sales, after-sales, marketing, and growth strategies for Genesis." - giving me the name (and hence email address) of the COO of Genesis Motor NA - Claudia Marquez - and I bet her email address is claudia.marquez@genesis.com - useful to know. Her boss is José Muñoz at Hyundai - perhaps you can think of what his email address might be..
So we have a way to email people in Genesis directly. That is quite useful IF you keep your email businesslike and polite. Going on a rant about some issue that's bugging you will put the email in the bit bucket before the executive even sees it (executives in big corporations have lacky's that pre-sort and filter any incoming communications. A COO never gets to find out she may have won Publisher's Clearinghouse..). Keep it businesslike. Keep it direct and to the point. Keep it short (something I have to work at) and keep it polite. Doing this - I have always received a reply - sometimes from the executive, sometimes from their lacky presorter. They aren't actually ignored.
OK - so now you have several tools to contact people who might make a difference. Next post I'll tell you how to encourage them to make a difference.
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