
The ServiceBench Extended Warranty Solution automates the process of selling and managing extended service agreements. (Click on the image for an enlarged view.)
Automating a paper-intensive process is always a good idea. Substantial time savings can be achieved as well as the opportunity to gain more accurate and useful information. Such is the case for Goodman Global Inc. in implementing the new ServiceBench Extended Warranty Solution, which is expected to significantly aid the company, its distributors, and dealers.
The Extended Warranty Solution is a Web-based system designed to help manufacturers establish, market, and manage extended service agreement programs for the products they sell. According to Michael Dering, CEO of ServiceBench, it is a hosted system, available on-demand, which users log onto via an Internet browser. “Everything is done behind our firewalls,” he said.
Dering noted that ServiceBench’s Extended Warranty Solution is ideal for manufacturers, such as HVAC, with distributors and dealers who don’t have a formalized extended warranty program. He explained that extended service agreements can be extremely profitable for a company. Citing a study by the Aberdeen Group, he said the report indicated that “companies that have a good extended warranty program can contribute up to 35 percent or more to corporate profits of the organization.”
Also, with a processing system such as ServiceBench with a good analytics engine, Dering said, companies can get a lot of information on products outside of the warranty period that they can feed back into product development, or into making fixes, that they wouldn’t otherwise have.
In many cases, with manufacturers, such extended warranty processes are paper-based. ServiceBench automates the process “to make it beneficial for the dealer, distributor, and manufacturer,” he said.
GOODMAN APPLICATION
Rachel Cater, manager of extended services for Goodman, described
the company’s previous paper system as a “very laborious process.” It utilized
a four-part consumer application form with one part for the consumer, one for
dealer, one for the distributor, and one for Goodman.
Once Goodman received its copy of the form, said Cater, “We had
to key in all the elements of the extended service contract in order to assure
that the proper coverage was set up for the consumer.” The entire process, she
said, would take “anywhere from four to eight weeks to get that information
keyed into our system.”
Cater remarked, “With today’s technical capabilities, it just
seemed like an antiquated process.”
Besides being slow moving, with the old paper system dealers
didn’t have visibility of contract entitlement throughout the process. The
online ServiceBench solution will provide a more streamlined and up-to-date
system that will enable dealers to service customers faster and also give
dealers better visibility over the extended warranty. They will be able to pull
up information at any time, 24/7.
Cater said that Goodman went live with the new system internally
in June. It will be rolled out to distributors and dealers in September. The
manufacturer will bring all distributors on board initially. Then the company
will do a phased roll out to dealers.
ServiceBench is “basically a real-time system,” said Cater, which
is expected to reduce Goodman’s extended warranty process down to just a few
days. The automated system will enable Goodman to immediately reduce staff by
25 percent, Cater added, and eventually by 50 percent.
Goodman’s extended warranty program has grown tremendously, Cater
said, and switching to an automated system will make it much easier to handle.
“We can get more aggressive in our marketing,” she said, and go after more
customers.
For more information, visit www.servicebench.com.
Publication date: 07/30/2007