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With the current supply situation, I can imagine that the flood of emails asking where things would be overwhelming.
The proper way to contact Rene Herse customer support is to comment negatively on an article or press release about the company or one of it's products. The recent Herse stem article on bikepacking.com would have been a perfect time to open your warranty claim. Please clearly state both your actual problem, as well as a hypothetical problem in order to entice a response from the company.
Something along the lines "Like many other customers, a Rene Herse tire failed and blew off the rim, and they're never in stock so I can't even buy another one (650B x 55) Umtanum Ridge TC (Endurance casing )"
Within a few hours you'll have a 500 word response packed with implications that you installed the tire wrong, tire blow offs rarely happen to Herse customers, and perhaps you should buy one of the rims stocked in the Rene Herse webstore to make sure you have the correct G-Height for the tires. Oh you'll also get a response explaining that Jan flew back and forth to Japan 40 times last year to make sure the renewable coconut oil and walnut powered cargo ship specifically contracted to deliver Herse tires was complete and will be making it's first delivery in the middle of November so the tire you are interested in will be available by Thanksgiving 2021.
Good luck, all of us on the "Just As Good" side riding Maxxis, Continental, and Schwalbe will welcome you with open arms anytime you want to come over.
Hugh n LA
From my perspective, they (Rene Herse) are kind of in the middle, between where they were and where they intend to be. Case in point is a recent purchase I just pushed through: I wanted to buy about $1000 worth of stuff from Rene Herse. I reached out to a local retailer, Mike Varley at Black Mountain Cycles, and asked him if he wanted to transact the $1000 worth of business through his register. I always try to push all my Rene Herse commerce through local shops, because Rene Herse seems dead-set on offloading support to shops. Mike told me, "you might as well buy it yourself direct from Rene Herse. I don't make enough in the transaction to make it worth the effort"
Bill Lindsay wrote:There really does appear to be some kind of inflection point where a small-scale cycling product vendor crosses over from small-scale to medium-scale. Rivendell may be the prime example for the biggest small-scale vendor. They sell ~$2M a year, have like 10 dealers, and do most of their business direct. Medium-scale is an outfit that has hundreds or thousands of vendors who don't have to do much consumer-direct support. I think of local manufacturers like White Industries and Paul Components. Then there are large scale vendors, who almost never have to interact with the end-users at all. Large scale is even more removed: Shimano, SRAM, all the big bike companies, Continental, Michelin, Maxxis, Schwalbe, etc.
Where does Rene Herse fall in there? Are they Rivendell? Are they destined/required to handhold a bunch of really high-maintenance fretters amd handwringers through their trials and trevails? Are they Paul or White Industries? High end components that sell like commodities on the internet? Or are they a tire vendor like Maxxis, Schwalbe or Continental, largely separated from their end users with a solid protective barrier of bike shops and online retailers?
From my perspective, they (Rene Herse) are kind of in the middle, between where they were and where they intend to be. Case in point is a recent purchase I just pushed through: I wanted to buy about $1000 worth of stuff from Rene Herse. I reached out to a local retailer, Mike Varley at Black Mountain Cycles, and asked him if he wanted to transact the $1000 worth of business through his register. I always try to push all my Rene Herse commerce through local shops, because Rene Herse seems dead-set on offloading support to shops. Mike told me, "you might as well buy it yourself direct from Rene Herse. I don't make enough in the transaction to make it worth the effort" From my perspective, that sucks. If a vendor (Rene Herse) wants to be a wholesaler, who leans on bike shops to provide all the support, then those shops should feel like they are making good money with every Rene Herse transaction.
If Rene Herse wants to take all the markup for themselves, and knock out the middleman, then they should provide top-notch and fully available customer support. Right now, they are neither here nor there. They are lucky to have customers like me, who are largely self-supporting. If their business model requires all their customers to either have more expertise than Bill Lindsay, AND/OR to be more willing to throw away money than Bill Lindsay, then I think that model is miscalculated.
Hugh n LA
The margin on RH tires must be sufficient and fair to shops, because shops keep the tires on the shelf (including Black Mountain Cycles, and the local Trek boutique in Berkeley). The majority of my particular order was HED 650B rim brake rims. Maybe the margins on those rims are so razor-thin that there's no room for anybody to make any money. Maybe it was just a special case, along with the additional fact that I was cleaning them out, Mike said "buy now before they're gone".
I think it's obvious after years of these sorts of complaints that the company seeks to occupy the inscrutable middle wherein access to economies of scale is achieved, status as a luxury good is solidified; but customer facing channels are largely neglected. A vanguard of volunteer enthusiasts precipitate almost all discussion of the products, where the helmsman himself does not wade into the fray. So in a sense brand protection is assured. New customers will continually outweigh disgruntled customers who leave the brand, loyal existing customers do much unpaid work in product support and marketing. Most customers never need anything and of those that do the percentage that will accept nothing and remain a customer is reasonable. Creating animus in a small slice of the market share has no effect.
This is recognizable to most people, against many corporations it is impossible to receive customer support unless one has connections within the company or a large online following. You have an issue with a Rene Herse product? How many Instagram followers do you have?One of the more perplexing twists is that Panaracer USA has a very generous warranty and support. Of the couple dozen 700cx38 Gravelking slicks (10% lighter than the Herse Extralight Barlow Pass, as fast and 1/2 the cost) I've had over the years one needed to go back due to a tread issue. I had same day email contact and shipping label provided with a replacement sent out same day. Conversely my riding partner had a SBH blow off the rim while we were riding, was told in an uncredited email response that it was "probably" a G Height issue and not something that would be considered under warranty. Further emails were ignored, he hasn't bought any more tires from them but their sales have not suffered. I suppose the warranty support for B2B sales can be different, but it is thought provoking nonetheless.
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of course there was no way to inquire.
I subsequently ordered a BQ subscription and signed up for an "account" I gave up trying to log in after a week.
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On Dec 9, 2021, at 4:18 AM, 'woode...@yahoo.com' via 650b <65...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
And there's 2 more data points.
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While I agree these threads are laughably predictable, they are relevant in the sense that Rene Herse is the primary distributor and/or manufacturer for most 650b products.
By design, there is no easy way to contact RH directly via phone or email.
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