First of all gagreen, thanks for posting this. I appreciate it when people take the time to consider how to treat each other. I kind of think it should have been as simple as 'treat people like your parents used to force you to' or 'treat people like you want to be treated' and leave it at that.
chad, I can't say that I fully agree or disagree with everything you have said. Your opinion is valid but the tone of your posts indicate you feel your opinion is more valid. I don't agree with the tone, even if I find the words exactly right. This I think is the reason some guys are saying things you disagree with.
Personally, I worked in a retail store, but in the service dept. I hated the store part of it but when I had to be in the store, I tried for my personality to be as much of a non factor when dealing with people. I hate people and most of all I hate uneducated sloppy smelly loud people. I don't mean guys that have obviously been working type sloppy, but just slobs. So I tried to take that factor out of it. I don't get the impression that everyone in this thread has dealt with a driver that tries to take their own viewpoint and personal prejudices out if it. That I dislike, that's not how you represent a company.
The problem some people have is they want to buy the tools. They don't want to pay full list price when they know the tools can be had for less. So they seek out a truck and either find frustration that they can't get in the door, or can't get the lower price they know someone else can get. I understand the frustration from both ends. No truck brand is going to be hurt over 5% of an overall order, and if you are in the business of giving deals to big spenders, give a small deal to a small spender and see if they become a big spender. But really why prevent the guy from even coming on to look? A retail store would not be allowed to refuse people coming in without a sign and following specific laws (no shirt no shoes type deal).
It's logical to me, do you think your driver would go from doing really well to be really struggling over 5%? Maybe someone who was already struggling would struggle more. I get that. But it's just a general suggestion. Retail stores have sales to get people in the door after all. Anyway, the numbers don't even matter. Just the principal. Same as B&M retail is dealing with the reality of online sales, tool trucks have to deal with the reality there are other avenues and have to remain attractive to new as well as existing customers. Don't want to wait until it's too late for that, you can ask Sears, CompUSA, JC Penny, and AOL how it feels to have a temporarily strong customer base that isn't increasing.
Finally, this is the specific issue that I have. I have been to plenty of race events, plenty of hangars, plenty of small & big shops. The image of the truck driver that they try to portray specifically at the events is 'hey everything is great when you have our brand wrenches. it gives you free time and you're happy, just look at the truck driver here'. Every single race where there has been a presence of any tool brand, that's the image they want you to see. Our tools give you free time and you don't have to work so hard. So that doesn't jive with a driver that's in a hurry to get rid of you or doesn't have time to talk about the tools on your truck. I'm not saying you should feel obligated to talk about the weather and all, but at least to have answers when someone asks you questions about the tools. That doesn't always happen and that's a big part of the frustration. I can see where a lot of these guys are coming from.
It's not necessarily all the fault of the driver, that's what I'm saying. You have to represent the company though, tell the company to pick an image that's closer to your reality, or help you get your reality closer to their image to sell more tools and make fewer frustrated people out of potential repeat customers.
Personally, I find the SO website's service to be great. One tool got shipped missing a piece, they overnighted or 2 day'd it. Forget which, it was only a phillips bit, it was quick enough for me anyway. The vendors that sell Williams have also been very good to deal with.