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Why can't anyone at Lotus tell me when my damn car will be built?

9.5K views 103 replies 40 participants last post by  CAErven  
#1 · (Edited)
What kind of Micky Mouse crap is this? I mean really, if my dealer submitted an order to them - four months ago - there isn't any reason why someone - anyone shouldn't be able to tell me approximately when my car will be built.

I'm really getting pissed off that every time I call the dealer or Lotus USA nobody knows anything.

If nothing else, they should at least have the decency to let us know how many people are in front of us.

With all the "gift" cars dealers are mysteriously receiving, it really makes me think that Lotus is giving dealers cars to sell for what they can get out of them - deposit holders be damned.

Lotus if your reading this, I'm just one or two more "I don't know" responses away from a new Porsche.

Get your **** together for christ sakes. :wallbang:
 
#6 ·
Johnny B said:
The Elise is worth waiting for. A hand made, rolling art form that handles and responds like no other car.
I don't mind waiting if someone can give me a straight answer.

I wasted the entire season in SCCA racing this year because I was expecting my car in June - as originally promised to me by my dealer. Its almost September and I still can't get a firm date.

And pardon me, but thats bullshit.

If my suppliers worked like this in the business world, I'd have gotten new ones years ago.
 
#8 ·
Wow, number 13 and yet no solid info. From "Doomed" at #36. :p
 
#12 ·
Joe,

Information can be difficult to get but honestly your dealer is really dropping the ball. LCU was catching hell talking to buyers directly and the dealers insisted on being the middle man. The problem is they don't pick up messages, return calls or frankly have the dedication to the buyers or the brand to follow up. Is it all dealers? No, just most of them.

Also, and this is a fact, THERE ARE NO GIFT CARS!!! Just Dealerships full of crap trying to make their shady actions look better when they sell demos, trade cars or buy them at auction.
 
#14 ·
Damn right

Amen 100% Joecool. The level of presale "customer care" is dogsh!t. Lotus knows it, the dealers know it, and we know it.

There are enough excuses made here to justify the Iraqi invasion, and we are closer to WMDs than Elise delivery dates.

I share your pain, frustration, and a tad of anger, though I don't share your penchant for Porsche.

As far as I can tell, it goes like this:

Lotus UK just wants to build and sell cars. On that count, they're doing mighty fine, building them and selling them to LCU as fast as they can. Bless their British hearts, and godspeed.

Lotus USA is the first middleman. They don't give a damn about you or me, the buyers. They really don't. Anyone who believes otherwise is invited to call LCU and ask them to call me with an order number, delivery date, or just "hello, here's a guess regarding your car". Their job is to strike 'allocation' deals with the dealerships, transport cars, and represent Lotus in the US, and they seem to be doing a piss-poor job at all three. As far as pre-sales support, they're a non-entity.

Why? Because their relationship is with the Dealerships. They sell to the dealers. They need the dealers, and they will do nothing to piss off the dealers. And by that I mean dealer owners, general managers, etc. (Most of the sales puds are as uninformed as we are and will be working somewhere else in two months anyway.)

For Lotus UK or USA to tell us one bit more than the dealers deign to say -- well, that would be seen as backstabbing. The dealership wants to control the sales transaction and the flow of information. Why? Maximum profit, maximum flexibility. They're torqued to no end that we're tracking the cars, counting deliveries, telling them they can't swap for a preimum, etc. They've got a waitlist a mile long, and a trickle of deliveries.

Meanwhile, they're trying to figure out what to do about this $40k car that's going to use expensive Italian marble floor space.

If you get pissed off and drive home in a 911, they lose exactly zero dollars. If you bail out of your waitlist position, they $profit$ handsomely. If they give a test-drive, they will sell exactly zero more cars. It's no surprise that we, the enthusiasts, rank somewhere around teenage kids with their noses pressed against the glass, eyes wide with excitement over the red Ferrari's.

We really have no alternative but to wait, pay premiums, and say Thank You when they eventually return our calls.
 
#15 ·
I think feeding information from LCU through the dealers to the customers is basically the right way to do it. Interacting with customers is the dealers job. The problem is that it's not working. I see two issues:

1. LCU doesn't give dealers the information they need.

2. Some (not all) dealers don't pass the little information they have on to the customers.

I get the impression that LCU is overwhelmed with delivering cars in these quantities. As a result, certain things get neglected, and keeping the dealers updated is one of them.

Dealers not telling customers the truth... Well, call me cynical, but they're car dealers. There's a reason why their profession has a bad reputation. Fortunately there are good ones around, but there are also plenty of bad apples. As consumers, all we can do is support the good ones, and hope that evolution takes care of the rest.
 
#17 ·
tradition

After talking to my salesman after a test drive last week, I don't think Lotus knows when they'e building what. I think they're more like the restoration shop that takes your car and works on it when they work on it and it gets done when it gets done. I think they intend to go about business as they always have and know that real Lotus-philes understand that.
Another insight into 'lists' and 'numbers': My salesman told me up front that the first five cars they ordered were two demos and three cars for inventory in case one of their long term, loyal customers wanted one, so the 'numbers' on the 'list' actually started after #5. That seems fair enough to me. He also told me that if people make themselves a pain in the whatever, they don't want them as customers anyhow.
I also look at things from a little different perspective. I've wanted an Elise since '96 and wasn't at all sure they would ever be available, so after waiting eight years, a few more months is no big deal. Anything worth having is worth waiting for. Or how about, "Waiting is half the fun!" Feel better now? Probably not. How about, "The ultimate state is being on the edge of not knowing." I'm not sure what that means, but it sounded good to me!
 
#18 ·
I can't speak about Matheny (because I don't know anything about them).. but some dealers can't answer the question because there is no answer the buyer wants to hear.

For example... a certain dealer gets 10 cars per year. LCU tells them to take a certain number of "orders" from customers. All dealers take the first 10 (some mixed in with their own orders and demos). Higher allocation dealers take the next 20 also or a total of 30.

The lower allocation dealer has enough cars for an entire year's production. Customers ask why they have not been asked for order 13 for example. Dealer (or because LCU asked?) takes the next 20 orders also, just like the bigger dealers. But they are not submitted to LCU.

LCU submits various build sheets to Hethel, this includes 10 orders from the smallest allocation, to 30 orders from the largest.

Nothing has changed since that time. A customer will call LCU and ask for information about their car. But there is none. LCU has a legal contract that defines the allocations and their relationship to the dealer and can not tell you what the allocations are. SO they tell you to talk to the dealer.

And maybe even the dealer knows you have no car in build, but it's not a lie to tell you "we have no information" or "Lotus has not told us anything." Right... of course they have not.

AGAIN... not speaking specifically about Joe's order at Matheny. But this is a real scenario.
 
#19 ·
Lotus USA

Joecool,

I totally agree with you - I am #9 at Overseas Motors. I went there today after not receiving any answers on when my car will arrive.

They said they have sent several emails to Lotus USA and have not received a reply...... Come on Lotus USA answer them... The lack of response is crap..

Publish the dealer allotments....tell me when my car will be delivered....say something......

I am now considering buying a Noble as I dont know if I will get the Elise in September, December or whenever....

I placed my order back in January - have tried to change the color to Laser Blue and been denied - dont even know if the car has been built yet....

This is incredibly frustrating.... We need some customer service!!!!!!
 
#20 ·
ConeFusion said:
Dealers not telling customers the truth... Well, call me cynical, but they're car dealers. There's a reason why their profession has a bad reputation. Fortunately there are good ones around, but there are also plenty of bad apples. As consumers, all we can do is support the good ones, and hope that evolution takes care of the rest.
Ahh, but there's the rub.

How could I possibly pick an honest dealership with a healthy allocation a year ago?

They all had the same "Probably April" story, they all thought they were getting a bunch, and of course, they are all the most honest and forthright founts of information -- ask them yourself.

Proximity and total luck, that's how we pick dealerships.
 
#21 · (Edited)
Just curious, has anyone here ever ordered a car from another manufacturer that had to be built as compared to buying a car off of the lot. I have heard that the Mini Cooper system is one of the best, you can track your order on-line. But they make a lot more cars than Lotus. The big 3 make so many cars that they can usually switch with another dealer if you want a specific car.
I once had a VW dealer switch the interior of my car with that of another on their lot since I wanted leather.

Anybody ever order a Porsche, Lambo, Rolls, Aston Martin, Ferrari or other rare car that had to be specially built. How was the experience? Did the dealer keep you informed, Did Enzo pick up the phone when you called the main headquarters to check on your F40 order? Did Schumaker give driver training classes?

I think we are expecting a lot from such a small company. The guys in England are working their butts off and hired more people to make cars to keep up with the demand. Lotus USA is probably swamped with dealers calling all the time asking where are the cars. At one time they only had about 5 employees. Heres a soberring thought- Your average neighborhood Pep Boys store probably has more staff than Lotus USA does. They are working on getting a computer system to keep up with tracking.

I too think they could be giving us more information. I was told the car would be here in April, and then June, then the end of July, and now September. Now I hear Lotus doesnt want the dealers calling people until the cars are actual at the dealership, when we were told they would tell us when they were at the port. I guess they want to play it safe to cover themselves-

What if your car was built and the engine blew up during testing or fell of the truck, missed the boat, got damaged in transit, etc. One guy has been waiting for a month since the airbag light on his car doesnt work and Lotus has to have it fixed before they can even deliver it to the dealer. What if customs decides to check your car at random to make sure that it meets some requirement.They are also having trouble getting the cars delivered by the carriers to certaint locations, so their are a lot of variables, so I understand their point in not wanting to give out a specific date. It's just the closer we get, the more impatient we become.

And to think a year ago we were all worrying that we would have to wait longer since it was 2005 model and we werent sure they could be sold before June 1st.

For now I'm just waiting for the day that I can change the picture on my avatar:)
 
#22 ·
Randy Chase said:
For example... a certain dealer gets 10 cars per year. LCU tells them to take a certain number of "orders" from customers. All dealers take the first 10 (some mixed in with their own orders and demos). Higher allocation dealers take the next 20 also or a total of 30.

The lower allocation dealer has enough cars for an entire year's production. Customers ask why they have not been asked for order 13 for example. Dealer (or because LCU asked?) takes the next 20 orders also, just like the bigger dealers. But they are not submitted to LCU.

LCU submits various build sheets to Hethel, this includes 10 orders from the smallest allocation, to 30 orders from the largest.

Good god, Randy, it is even worse than I imagined.

Sorry to hear about a fellow Overseas sufferer, dodgy_01....
 
#23 ·
Yeah yeah yeah.. Lotus USA is too tiny.. It has a staff smaller than Maytag Repair. They're so overworked, so very tired, so busy keeping track of tens if not hundreds of cars.

Rubbish.

There are car dealerships in LA with more cars than that on their lot, and they seem to know where they all are at any given time. Hertz has a few cars they seem able to track.

Communicating with all 40 dealerships is just not that big a deal, no matter how you look at it.

You could have a printout on each car, keep them in nice manila folders, sort them by dealership, and file them in one drawer of a file cabinet. We're not talking about the library of congress here.

If they took 10 minutes a day to call two dealerships and chit-chat about where the next delivery is, how evil truck drivers are, and what the rest of the year looks like, well, that would update every dealer at least once a month.

I'm guessing Randy is dead-on -- they DO do exactly that, and the dealerships that Lotus tries so hard to please has more information than they ever want you to know. And they tell Lotus they don't want you to know, and Lotus says "Yes Sir".

Maybe you get a good dealership that keeps you up to date, or maybe you get one that just strings you along until your MSRP offer is the best deal they can get. Hope you chose wisely last year.
 
#24 ·
Randy Chase said:
I can't speak about Matheny (because I don't know anything about them).. but some dealers can't answer the question because there is no answer the buyer wants to hear.
All I want is the truth. If thats asking too much then maybe Lotus doesn't deserve my business.

For example... a certain dealer gets 10 cars per year. LCU tells them to take a certain number of "orders" from customers. All dealers take the first 10 (some mixed in with their own orders and demos). Higher allocation dealers take the next 20 also or a total of 30.

The lower allocation dealer has enough cars for an entire year's production. Customers ask why they have not been asked for order 13 for example. Dealer (or because LCU asked?) takes the next 20 orders also, just like the bigger dealers. But they are not submitted to LCU.

LCU submits various build sheets to Hethel, this includes 10 orders from the smallest allocation, to 30 orders from the largest.

Nothing has changed since that time. A customer will call LCU and ask for information about their car. But there is none. LCU has a legal contract that defines the allocations and their relationship to the dealer and can not tell you what the allocations are. SO they tell you to talk to the dealer.

And maybe even the dealer knows you have no car in build, but it's not a lie to tell you "we have no information" or "Lotus has not told us anything." Right... of course they have not.

AGAIN... not speaking specifically about Joe's order at Matheny. But this is a real scenario.
Is that the best Lotus can do? Is this really a professionally run operation? I am ultimately the customer, the dealer is just a middle man that I have to deal with to get the product. I and the hundreds of others with deposits, am the one Lotus should be worried about making happy.

On a side note, I don't buy into the mentality that I should be gracious that Lotus is even building me a car - someday. I have a deposit down for a product and I deserve to be treated with respect. I deserve to know when I can expect my car.

And to the other poster, yes when I ordered the Mini for my wife I got very specific information from the dealer when the car would be built and when I could pick it up. They were off by two days.
 
#25 ·
xxxotic said:
Anybody ever order a Porsche, Lambo, Rolls, Aston Martin, Ferrari or other rare car that had to be specially built. How was the experience? Did the dealer keep you informed, Did Enzo pick up the phone when you called the main headquarters to check on your F40 order? Did Schumaker give driver training classes?
Hi xxxotic,
Some of these companies have computer systems to inform the dealer exactly of the progress on your order. As for Aston, it used to be more efficient to call the factory directly for answers to questions. Things are starting to change because annual volume is increasing, but often I will get directed to someone who works in the UK to answer a question for which the dealer does not know the answer. Porsche has a very good system usually, but sometimes things get delayed unexpectedly because you cannot always know what is going on within the individual department. Cannot comment on the rest, but American Ferrari dealers are fairly scathing if you are not on their A-list.

Things are somewhat more smoothed out with these companies because they have been selling thousands of cars in the U.S. every year for much longer. While not perfect, they have the money and the time to work things out.

Supposidely, Lotus has a computer system on the way, but I'm not convinced it will help entirely. That information is probably already available to dealers, albeit less efficiently, but is not clarified to the customer because of the situation Randy described.

The situation Randy described is probably happening a lot and that's quite disappointing. I suspect the lesson's learned file will be quite large in a year. :D
 
#26 ·
In Feb. the dealers received a memo telling them how many 'first wave' cars, plus a demo, would be arriving by Sept..
In July, CEO 'English' states that this 'first'allocation will not be fully delivered until 'end of October', a one month delay
from the original 'Sept.' projection date.
I assume Matheny is somewhere in the vicinity of a mid-level dealership like Valenti Mtrs.. If so, they should have approximately 9 'customer' cars in by the end of October and another 10 (or so) by
the end of Dec.. These 'two' waves of delivery is all that anyone truly has any specific 'dealer' information about. The allocation for January going forward would, most likely, not be available until sometime in early to mid November..