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Trilobite


Joined: Nov 7, 2007
Points: 121

The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Original Message   Mar 23, 2008 10:12 pm

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First upright from Miele

29 February 2008

This summer, Miele will launch its first range of upright vacuum cleaners – the S7.

 It will consist of about six models, all of which feature ultra large dust bags and

 “a unique swivel body, which makes it easy to manoeuvre in even the trickiest

 of room layouts”. According to the company,  the decision was made following

 numerous requests from customers that wanted to buy Miele  but would only use

 an upright model.

Text: courtesy ERTweekly.com

Picture: courtesy Miele.co.uk, 2009

Edited 21st March 2009; reason: loss of original image.

This message was modified Mar 20, 2009 by Trilobite
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RAD1


Joined: Dec 6, 2008
Points: 17

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #336   Mar 18, 2009 6:34 pm
Couple things of note:
i.e. - airflow indicator (or dustbag change indicator)...This indicator is manually adjustable depending on what type of debris is being picked up. Ask you dealer and they should be able to adjust. It is very easy to do and should only require a screwdriver to adjust.

As for Miele customer and repair service...they have been nothing but extremely helpful and cooperative with me. I recently had to replace a wand on an almost 2 year old miele and they replaced it under warranty. Name other manufacturers that would do this. I find that totally refreshing in this day and age. I believe Miele is taking the stance that Melanie's initial S7 problem is the local dealer's fault, but if Miele has to step in and make it right, I am sure they will.
Trebor


Joined: Jan 16, 2009
Points: 321

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #337   Mar 18, 2009 7:35 pm
Thank you Hardsell for your kind words.

What corporations simply refuse to grasp is that the window of opportunity to really sastisfy a customer is a small one. To have exchanged out Catlady's S7 at the get go would have totally satsified her, and left her singing the praises of Miele products and service. It is not more or less right to do it now, it just doesn't have the same impact as it would have. The optimum would have been for the shop to have called Miele service. Then they would have learned the correct hose would have to have been ordered AND the correct way to access the hose mount without damaging the machine. The faster the customer is satisifed the less it takes and the more praise the customer offers. The longer it takes, the more it takes, and the sour taste in the mouth never quite goes away. It would have been so simple and so easy to just swap out the vac and give Catlady an extra pack of bags.  Problem done, over, customer ecstatic. Nothing but good press. Now, she feels that is simply her just due for what she has had to endure. While you can point to the nickles and dimes saved on warranty and customer service, Excel has yet to place a column in their program for lost customer loyalty. People WANT TO BELIEVE that companies care about their needs, and not just about taking their money. Most people will give a company an opportunity to make something right, but they just want it done without weeping and gnashing of teeth.

"The customers and customer service people will bankrupt us!" is the cry. Not so. The clock is always ticking on the meter of monies taken in and given out. Every unresolved customer issue is outgoing cashflow PERIOD. Each moment the customer is inconvenienced gives them more time to feel aggrieved, and more time to talk to neighbors, family, friends, co-workers about how they are getting screwed and how the company doesn't give a darn about them and their problems. Everytime a customer calls in about an unresolved issue it robs the company of revenue generating minutes, from the person who answers the phone, to the person who tried to help them the last time and escalated the issue to a manager who isn't here that day, to the next manager who comes into the situation cold and needs to be brought up to speed, and so causes another delay in the resolution because this manager needs to get permission to solve the customer's problem. So instead of proactively managing the store, and preventing fires (figuratively speaking) before they occur, the entire focus of management is on putting out fires. I used to wonder why managers always seem to the south end of a northbound horse. I don't anymore.  People who are sincere and truly want to help can't stomach the corporate equine excrement. I have seen it all and lived it all from commission sales (both door-to-door and in-store), commission sales management, customer care in an inbound call center, retail hourly sales and hourly based customer service. All I can say is, "Life is not fair. No good deed goes unpunished. And, There is no lifeguard at the gene pool."  The inmates are running the asylum!

Trebor

mole


.

Location: earth
Joined: Sep 30, 2007
Points: 783

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #338   Mar 18, 2009 8:52 pm
And still as of today Miele, is still in DENIAL about thier  average machines where the parts and  service are on par with the local sears service center. Oh no we never heard of the wand and hose handle breakage, the electronic boards blowing up, the bags where the couploings come apart,the the hose ends where they go into the canisters becoming loose after 8 or 10 months time, the famous to the industry pros cordrell headaches, yeah emmer bessrer My @SS. I can have you talk to national miele parts distributors about the my ellie myth.

B.T.W with all of presuure lately put on them my Miele No wonder they tell them daily to stick it where the sun dont shine.

I  bet miele will try and shut me down again, Quess what i dont care.


regards

MOLE
CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #339   Mar 19, 2009 7:29 am
Trebor wrote:
Carmine,

Customer service has become lip service when it come to really

doing anything that will take a few pennies from the stockholders'

coffers. I'm speaking in general terms here, because Miele does not

have stockholders, Trebor


Correct.  Family owned for over 80 years.  IMMER BESSER.

Carmine D.

CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #340   Mar 19, 2009 7:31 am
catlady wrote:
That's a tough question to answer. .....I've gotten over my initial shock and anger at the cost of the bags.  However, the issues are definately turning me off from buying from Miele again.  I did so much research and tested so many models.  Perhaps the only other model I would really want is the Riccar Radiance.  I read so many reviews on those, but my Vac Shop does not carry them so I did not test one. 


You sound conflicted over your MIELE purchase.  And just may have replaced your initial anger over the bags with a new issue[s].  Why the Riccar Radiance, if I may ask?

Carmine D.

CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #341   Mar 19, 2009 7:35 am
RAD1 wrote:
Couple things of note:
i.e. - airflow indicator (or dustbag change indicator)...This indicator is manually adjustable depending on what type of debris is being picked up. Ask you dealer and they should be able to adjust. It is very easy to do and should only require a screwdriver to adjust.


One more.  Not that I dispute the posts here as they are, but before we condemn and punish we should also have the vacuum store owner/operator's side of the story.  There usually is another side which is needed in order to come to a just conclusion of the facts and circumstances.

Carmine D.

CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #342   Mar 19, 2009 7:36 am
Venson wrote:
Thank you DIB. I try.

Venson


You try hard and do a yeoman's job as a result!

Carmine D.

Trebor


Joined: Jan 16, 2009
Points: 321

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #343   Mar 19, 2009 8:39 am
Dear Carmine: Sometimes your focus, (or lack thereof) puzzles me. My point in acknowledging Miele's privately held status is that Catlady (and who knows how many others) are no better off for it. The end result of Immer Besser for them is nil.

I repeat my earlier statements:

 Every unresolved customer issue is outgoing cashflow PERIOD. Each moment the customer is inconvenienced gives them more time to feel aggrieved, and more time to talk to neighbors, family, friends, co-workers about how they are getting screwed and how the company doesn't give a darn about them and their problems. Everytime a customer calls in about an unresolved issue it robs the company of revenue generating minutes, from the person who answers the phone, to the person who tried to help them the last time and escalated the issue to a manager who isn't here that day, to the next manager who comes into the situation cold and needs to be brought up to speed, and so causes another delay in the resolution because this manager needs to get permission to solve the customer's problem. So instead of proactively managing the store, and preventing fires (figuratively speaking) before they occur, the entire focus of management is on putting out fires. Sure, inventory is money, but it takes a back seat to time. You can't sell inventory without time to do it. There are two ways to improve cash flow, increase revenue and reduce expenses, but here is only ONE way to get more time, reallocate it. Get old business (which is costing time) finished, and move onto current business. Any freshman in Business 101 can see that there are no winners here. The best that can be done is replace the vacuum, give the customer a package of bags and a sincere "mea culpa" apology and move forward!

Immmer Besser as a corporate philosophy should have meant that Catlady would have had but one post on this forum if the shop had called Miele, two if they had damaged the casing. Anyone can make a stupid mistake, anyone. Why the retailer of a premium product would not rectify it immediately is the question. One answer: MONEY. The shop is highly unlikely to be compensated for his error. He only wants to be charged for the part he damaged. Simply replacing the vacuum would not do anything except impress a customer who made a very expensive purchase, and cost him the wholsale purchase price of a vacuum, which he would have made back on two S7 sales. Explain, please, how this reflects and upholds Miele's Immer Besser philosophy? I do not fault Melanie for questioning the wisdom of her purchase. It's normal. She's actually wondering if she made the right choice, which is not blaming the shop owner, but in a sense blaming herself for not driving to another shop and doing one more round of comparisons. She did her diligent comparison shopping. After awhile, more shopping just seems more confusing. And, after being impressed with a shop owner's knowledge, and believing statements like (NOT saying he said this, but things like this are said everyday, "I could have them in the shop if I wanted them. I might if Miele had not come out with these...") And everything was jake UNTIL the swivel and hose issues. There are two components to a philosophy of Immer Besser 1) reducing manufacturing faults to an absolute minimum, and 2) correcting them swiftly and lavishly. It doesn't take much to seem lavish if it is done happily and without hesitation.

Trebor

I wish everyone at Miele would stand back, put on their consumer point of view glasses, and ask themselves just how they would feel about making another Miele purchase if they were in Melanie's shoes? And that is not to say Miele makes bad product. The issues Mole refers to could apply to Miele canisters which were made in China, maybe? I think the focus is on making everything in Germany again. There are cleaning services who use Miele canisters, putting the equivalent of 25 years wear on them in just one year. After 75 years worth of wear, and only wear parts being replaced (hoses, brush rolls, belts, bags, filters, and cords, but NOT the winders themselves) the units are still going strong. The longer this issue goes unresolved, the less sense it makes. Just replace the vacuum, give her a pack of bags and send her on her way. Done, finished, over! Customer satisfied! On to the next order of business!

CarmineD


Joined: Dec 31, 2007
Points: 5894

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #344   Mar 19, 2009 8:52 am
Trebor wrote:
Dear Carmine: Sometimes your focus, (or lack thereof) puzzles me. My point in acknowledging Miele's privately held status is that Catlady (and who knows how many others) are no better off for it. The end result of Immer Besser for them is nil.



Really?  My gracious apologies kind Sir for my seemingly lack of focus.  Right now, we here on this Forum are spectators in the unfolding of the events not participants.

Carmine D.

catlady


Joined: May 28, 2008
Points: 77

Re: The New Miele Upright Cleaner
Reply #345   Mar 19, 2009 9:45 am
I did a lot of research and read a lot of reviews and the Riccar Radiance was the only other vacuum that I felt could really fit my needs and provide years of use.  I wanted to test it out, but I was unable to find a local dealer of the Riccar.  My Vac Shop does carry the Simplicity which I believe is a Riccar vacuum.  I tested that, but it wasn't quite what I was looking for.

Regarding my Miele and the issues I've had, I think I'm frustrated because I use my vacuum so much and I'm a bit inconvenienced right now with the tools not staying on and the hose not stretching as far which causes the vacuum to tip if I pull it too far.  I guess any vacuum will tip if you pull the hose farther than what it can handle, but the last hose easily did my entire stair case (8 steps) with no problems.  This one will only go about half way.  There is a definite difference to me and my husband. 

If I was someone that only vacuumed once a week, this probably wouldn't be so frustrating to me.  I'm become impatient, but I know its not Miele's fault they did not have the hose I needed in and it did arrive at my Vac Shop faster than what I was initially told.  My Vac Shop guy told me that he's replaced 3 of these hoses so far and no one else has complained or is having the same problems I am having.  I feel like I'm being a major pain now and I don't want to be that way.  Miele has been very nice to me, but I did expect a more proactive approach assisting me. 

On my initial call I spoke with Jim and he asked me to call back the next day with my serial #.  No problem.  I called back  the next day and spoke with Sally, the British lady.  She told me she would talk to Jim and that Jim would call me back.  I didn't get a call back so I called back later the next day and asked for Jim.  Jim wasn't aware that I talked to Sally and I had to go over everything with him again.  To be honest, none of that actually bothered me.  Customer Service nowadays is typically much worse than this so I had no reason to complain.  Plus Jim and Sally are really nice and I was certain that once they had all of my information they would take care of me.  I’ve mainly dealt with Jim since then.  He is the one that got the new replacement hose on order (not his fault it was on backorder).  I know I became more frustrated when I asked him how they would handle the damage to the vacuum and he said to deal with one issue at a time and to start with making sure the hose replacement would work.  I was hoping that he would also send the replacement part that was damaged.  That way I could have everything fixed at one time and not have to keep returning to the Vac Shop.  I think that’s where my feeling of not being taken seriously started.  I don’t have a lot of spare time and I definitely can’t go without a vacuum for more than a couple of days.  Then the hose never arrived at the Vac Shop and when I called back I was told it was on backorder and it could be 2 weeks before my Vac Shop received the hose.  My Vac Shop told me they weren’t aware of my issues (I don’t believe that.  Jim told me he talked to them.) and they did not have the hose in.  So I called Miele and was transferred to parts only to find out the hose was on backorder and it could be 2 weeks before the hose would arrive at the Vac Shop.  I called Jim the next day and he told me the hose would be in next week (he was right).  That was the same conversation in which I expressed my frustration and told him about the indicator not working.  He told me that I should not go by that indicator and should always check the bag itself because the indicator was really only there in case I got a clog in my hose.  I just remember thinking, “OK, I don’t really care about the indicator, but I spent a lot of money on this vacuum, shouldn’t they care more if something, however minor, doesn’t work right?”.

I know I’m repeating myself, but I just wanted to put things order a little more to show why I have grown frustrated from my initial call.  Heck, the fact that the prototype hose ripped in the first place surprised me.  I honestly thought it would be indestructible.  However, my Vac Shop did fix that right away for me.  Hopefully they will do the same this time around, fix the damage and I can be on my way.

RAD1 – I will see if my Vac Shop can adjust that indicator and if they can’t its fine.  That’s not really a deal breaker for me.

Venson  - I don’t mind that you called Miele.  If you spoke with Jim, he is familiar with the situation.

Carmine – I think about how much I paid for the vacuum and how much I have to put out for bags and part of me expects perfection from this machine.  I won’t deny that I can be hard on my vacuums with almost daily use.  That’s why I purchased the Miele.  The product seemed well built and their reputation seemed solid.  I’ve had hose problems in the past with cheap vacuums.  My Dirt Devil Reactor hose ripped not too long after I bought it.  I was vacuuming the cat tree and then my suction was gone and all I got was whistling noises.  It is possible that I stretched that hose beyond its capabilities, but that hose was thin.  The Vac Shop fixed the hose for me and had to keep fixing that vacuum until they finally just got me a replacement after the motor died before the warranty expired.  Then I had a lot of problems with that Reactor as well before it died.  That’s why I wanted a vacuum that could stand up to my use.  Besides the Miele, every vacuum I have ever owned came from Wal Mart on sale.  I was tired of putting out a couple hundred every couple of years.  If I never received that stimulus last year I would probably still be stuck using cheap vacuums that would break in under a year.  I certainly don’t have $600.00 lying around.  That’s more than ˝ my pay a month.  Am I being too hard on everyone involved right now?  It’s very possible.  I’m a little more calm now that the hose is finally in at my Vac Shop and I am hoping to resolve all of these issues come Saturday. 

Hands down, the Miele outperforms every vacuum I have ever owned and I’m hoping that Saturday all of my frustrations will be put to rest.  I still believe that I will be satisfied in the end, but I don’t want to keep waiting to resolve this.

If after everything is fixed up, another thing goes wrong with the Miele in a short period of time, no I will not purchase from them again.  If I get a few good years out the vacuum after this, I probably would.

 

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