once you leave the workshop he hands off you car to a monkey.
Precisely. It seems I lack the automotive jedi mind trick to be able to tell exactly which monkey in the workshop is going to work on my car/ bust it/ attempt to bullshit me afterwards about it.
I'd be pretty pissed if someone came into my work and asked to see my qualifications, haha.
Asking to see people's qualifications before they can do a simple WOF on your car is a good way to get told to $&#$% off - don't say you weren't told.
...?
would you not want to know that your accountants chartered/ has some from of accounting qualification?
would you not want to know that your doctor has some form of degree before examining you?
would you hire a lawyer to represent you without qualifications?
and so forth? so why is it acceptable for mechanics to have that attitude? why don't mechanics act professionally?
what do you expect your (probably ignorant) customers to look at to know your superior mechanical skill versus the other mechanics down the road? the meaningless MTA logo outside?
Perhaps its just from coming from a different industry..but seriously, there's no way I'm going to refer a large piece of work/ ongoing work to anyone who cannot get the basics right... like a wof test/ electrical diagnosis / basic customer service.
I wonder if this represents a real opportunity for mechanics with the skills AND the ability to effectively advertise/ communicate
why they command a higher price....
stop bitching and do it yourself then.
Want it done right, gotta do it yourself. Agreed.
btw - the question remains... for those that are NOT mechanics - how do you tell a decent one?
- I went to Brendan Motors on Taranaki Street for wofs in the end, based on discussions of a forum member on here working there. Excellent service, no mucking about, no porkies to drive up the price.
- Servicing/ electrical I did myself in the end, just took longer than I wanted it to.