Right to Aftermarket Service

The Department of Consumers must bring in an act or rule where producer of a particular equipment (tv, automobile, fridge) can't deny aftermarket service on it for atleast X no. of years.

Chinese brands came to India, sold a bunch of tvs, now no aftermarket service. Same with even Korean companies who can't provide service on certain model no.s wash off their hands and even go to extent of not taking consumers phone call.

So any brand that is selling equipment should be required to define average life of equipment and guarantee service and parts for that many years.

like everyone's thoughts. more  

View all 9 comments Below 9 comments
Excellent to support Make In India. It will also help the consumers. more  
very valid point more  
Yes. This is too bad and it shows that Government has no control over the market. more  
The suggestion about the proposed law is excellent in many respect covering and interests of consumers and the producers in the country. The traders of products from China , Korea and similar other sources should be made accountable for after sales service and availability of the spares to the buyers of the products. The life for which spares and should be available need to be linked to price and reasonable working life of the concerned items. The failure to provide service or the spares needs to be punished so that dumping of spurious products could be discouraged. Unless we do not have level playing field in terms of products specification linked to price and availability of spares and after sales service, it may not be possible to safeguard the intersests of consumers as well as the industry in the country. Excellent view to support Make In India more  
Most of the FMCG (fast moving Consumer Goods) are electrical, electronic based. The life-span of such items are around 5 years only... Spare parts changing and repairing for such items may be difficult... To take a latest example, the life of mobile phone handsets with latest versions (4G, etc.) can be around 2 years only... repairing and/or changing spare parts may be costlier than purchasing (changing) a new one.. For a normal INDIAN CONSUMER (user) it may be difficult to spend Rs. 5,000/= and more every two years for mobile phone hand-sets... Technology upgradation also contributes to render such items useless (worthless for second-hand sale/ purchase), which is a major marketing gimmick.. In short time-tested items (products) are not available for purchase, so CUSTOMERS BEWARE - think many times before jumping, learn to restrict wants & demands; lest hard earned money would get unwisely spent, in addition to buying worries & tension FREE OF COST. Umpteen number of laws, rules & regulations can be passed, but compiling to them and/ or enforcing them shall also become a cause of worry & tension for all stake-holders... more  
Yes Sir, I fully agree with your point, as far as mobile handset. Finding a good repair shop, even authorised service centers of certain reputed mobile manufacturers, are not reliable,from my experience. No point in wasting one's money in such repairs of handsets.

Almost similar experience I had with one of famous front load washing machine manufacturers of Indian make. They send only 'screw driver' mechanic to attend the repairs and they make the things worse. more  
Post a Comment

Related Posts

    • Jio fiber adamant approach towards Address correction matter

      This feed is not related to any product or services, but towards stupid approach of Jio Fiber towards the customer in not correcting the Address fetched incorrectly by their system and accordingly ...

      By Sunil Shah
      /
    • INDIA HAS SUFFICIENT LAWS WITH TEETH for CONSUMER PROTECTION. SHOULD MAKE USE OF THEM :

      1. Consumer Protection Act, 2019 This Act safeguards consumers against unfair trade practices, including excessive pricing. 2. Other Relevant Laws: *Competition Act, 2002: Pro...

      By Jayakumar Daniel
      /
    • PROFITEERING VS. PROFIT MAKING - DELHI TO VARANASI AIRFARE FOR KUMBH MELA :

      PROFITEERING VS. PROFIT MAKING - Profit making and profiteering are fundamentally different concepts. While profit making is the natural result of a business operating efficiently and successfully...

      By Jayakumar Daniel
      /
    • Oyo ban on unmarried couples

      Retrograde step. Indecent too . Who is Oyo to verify marriage certificates ? And on what authority ? Isn't it discrimination based on social status ? If this trend picks up ...

      By Mathai Kuriakose
      /
    • Oyo usage by unmarried couples

      I know atleast 3 girls in Delhi and UP who have been going to Oyo with their boyfriends for romance from college and tuitions. Glad they are stopping this practice but i think its easier...

      By Parvati Sharma
      /
    • Lets have no GST january say some

      No GST january. Fully avoidable: Cars, mobile, laptop,washing machine,hotel, vacation, restaurants, zomato, amazon. Avoid if possible: petrol, recharges, ola, uber, credit ca...

      By Sudesh Rai
      /
    • GST of 35%

      The proposed increase of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) on 150 items, including quality footwear, shoes, clothing, and more, to 35% requires a reevaluation of consumption patterns. If this policy...

      By Mohit Jain
      /
    • It's me Sutirtha from West Bengal. I want to share my frustrating experience with Reliance Life Insurance, where I was repeatedly misled by their representatives: 1. In August 2024, I bought P...

      By Sutirtha Ghosal
      /
    • Beware of Star Health and Care insurance

      Star and Care stand out in people having horrible claims experience and claim rejection I have seen both these insurers reject claims for illogical reasons. They seem to delay claim...

      By Naina Mittal
      /
    • Inland letter from LIC without any information

      A couple of days back, I received 2 letters from LIC. It started this "Dear Policyholder...". It was an intimation of maturity or survival benefit for the policy. Nowhere was the policy number me...

      By Padmanabhan G
      /
    • Airtel ups their post paid

      Pathetic customer service. My postpaid mobile bill jumped from ₹352 to ₹411. Changed to a new plan of ₹449 without any communication to me or my authorization..called their customer service number....

      By Padmanabhan G
      /
Share
Enter your email and mobile number and we will send you the instructions

Note - The email can sometime gets delivered to the spam folder, so the instruction will be send to your mobile as well

All My Circles
Invite to
(Maximum 500 email ids allowed.)