KeithS

Established Member
Joined
Dec 21, 2020
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Location
London
Driving
MG3 Hybrid+
In forty years of buying and owning new cars, I've given up on my MG3 HYBRID! Having owned it for just 18 months and 9,100 miles I part exchanged it yesterday for a BYD Dolphin Surf - this is there super mini full EV, and is a little shorter and narrower than the MG3 Hybrid, but with actually more cabin space.
I’ve attached a couple of pictures when I collected it from BYD Mayfair in Barclay St central London.
The reason for my swift change was entirely down to the absolutely atrocious, abysmal, and quite literally ‘can’t be bothered and couldn’t care less’ attitude of MG UK customer service (to call it ‘service’ is a joke in itself)!!!
I posted before how the ‘engine emissions fault’ warning and light had started to make an unwelcome appearance, but this time it was accompanied by a red ‘traction battery light’ which illuminated for a few seconds before the usual engine fault light then came on.
This over the last few weeks resulted in an AA visit, and a couple of visits to my dealer.
Finally a couple of weeks ago they were able to get the fault codes, which showed an imbalance within the traction battery pack.
It this stage no warning lights were on, but they wanted to get the car in sooner rather than later, as they had no idea about this issue.
This is where the real problems began! I had a booking for a ‘whilst you wait’ unrelated issue, so they now wanted to use that visit to start an investigation of the engine/battery problem. However this I feared was going to become an open ended problem, and crucially as the dealer didn’t have any courtesy card until January, potentially I could be left without transport. So I rang MG UK to see what the position would be, for them to provide a car.
Rather than understanding and having the self respect in their product which had once again let me down, I was given what could be best described as a robotic response, leaving it about as clear as mud, whether they would provide a car!
When I explained the nature of the problem, and asked if that meant I would be provided with transport, she wouldn’t comment.
There are some companies where the customer is almost an inconvenience, and from this episode and others I’ve had with them, it was becoming clear that they would quite happily leave the customer ‘hanging’.
The warranty of seven years appears to be nothing more than a marketing tool to get the customer hooked. Once the car is sold you seem pretty much on your own.
Whilst I was prepared to put up with the odd behaviour of the car:-
Soaring engine revs when going up hill, from an engine when revving was far from refined.
OEM tyres that were generally only available in Australia, and are now obsolete.
Dodgy collision warning slamming on the brakes when driving past parked cars.
Climate control that would revert to ‘low’ if you got in the car and didn’t start it straight away.
And finally a plethora of creaks, squeaks, and groans from the cabin, which I knew the dealer and MG would do nothing about. On this point, I maybe wrong, but I heard/read that MG don’t include those in the warranty, and so it would probably be a waste of time asking for them to be cured.
My every interaction was one of - there is nothing we are prepared to do, and yes we don’t care!
All this pointed to the fact that come a bigger issue, I could be left high and dry from a brand that seemingly don’t give a damn about their customers, and any shortcomings with their products.
So as I said at the start of this enormous post, after just 18 months I’ve given up, taken the loss, and jumped ship.
BTW I’ve heard from someone senior within the MG Group, that the short comings of MG UK are well known, and becoming a major issue.
I do wonder if my so called escalated complaint I raised with CS will ever merit a call back or any response!! What a joke!!!!
 

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Getting customer service right isn't hard, provided MG back their dealerships. Unfortunately it seems that MG doesn't and that makes it truly awkward for the dealers. I had similar problems with JLR failing to back warranty claims on Jaguars. We love our MG4 but I also adore my E-class Mercedes and the difference between the ownership experiences are palpable. For example, the underbody trim on my wife's 1-year old MG4 more or less just fell off, but MG put me through tons of hoops and making me take photos of the damage etc etc. In the end MG would only fix one part of the trim and I had to pay for the other part. The dealer would do nothing until MG had decided which bits they would pay for. When my 6-year old Mercedes' lower front suspension joints failed, (a known weakness on the car), the dealer effected the repair and when I went to collect the car there was no charge, citing that the joints should never have failed in the first place.

It may also be a lack of familiarity - we had two of the original Nissan Leafs and if even the slightest thing went wrong with the battery or electrics the car was transported by flatbed truck 60-miles away to the Birmingham dealer who did have some expertise in the car. I suspect with more and more Chinese brands coming to the UK things will improve.
 
Getting customer service right isn't hard, provided MG back their dealerships. Unfortunately it seems that MG doesn't and that makes it truly awkward for the dealers. I had similar problems with JLR failing to back warranty claims on Jaguars. We love our MG4 but I also adore my E-class Mercedes and the difference between the ownership experiences are palpable. For example, the underbody trim on my wife's 1-year old MG4 more or less just fell off, but MG put me through tons of hoops and making me take photos of the damage etc etc. In the end MG would only fix one part of the trim and I had to pay for the other part. The dealer would do nothing until MG had decided which bits they would pay for. When my 6-year old Mercedes' lower front suspension joints failed, (a known weakness on the car), the dealer effected the repair and when I went to collect the car there was no charge, citing that the joints should never have failed in the first place.

It may also be a lack of familiarity - we had two of the original Nissan Leafs and if even the slightest thing went wrong with the battery or electrics the car was transported by flatbed truck 60-miles away to the Birmingham dealer who did have some expertise in the car. I suspect with more and more Chinese brands coming to the UK things will improve.
Interesting comparison...
I was using Richmond Guildford (far from local, but better standard of service) for my MG.
I also use them for my other car - a Genesis. Electrified G80.
Genesis are very keen to provide top notch standards of customer service which is always reflected with my interactions with both Genesis GB, and their dealer network.
Unfortunately the same dealer at the same location have their hands tied by MG UK, who really don't want to provide anything but the absolute bare minimum that they have to provide for their warranty.
Anything outside of that, they simply don't want to know!
What I can't work out, is how customers spending 50 or 60k on their more expensive models are going to think coming presumably out of premium brands, and being presented with this 'I don't care attitude'.
BTW, whilst too soon to put this to the test, I posed the question to the BYD salesman- what if my car had to go off the road, he said if there wasn't a courtesy car he would loan my a demonstrator vehicle. Also my car previous to the MG was a 2018 DS3, and when I arrived at the dealer for a service, with a prearranged loan car which hadn't been returned, the service manager sourced a new top of the range Peugeot for me to use.
All things MG need to learn from...
 
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