StevenSiegel Report post Posted February 14, 2011 (edited) Hi, This is Steven Siegel. The MOST important thing to me has been honesty and ethics in business which should translate into good customer service and good value for money spent. I would like to hear from ANYONE who has had a customer service issue with our company at ANY time in the last 100 years (I'll even take responsibility for my grandfather... He took care of me). Email me (do not call) with a BRIEF description of the issue and customer number/phone number so I can research the account TO siegel.leather@gmail.com 1) If the issue was resolved satisfactorily, I will send you a free gift, either some Sedgwick Leather Care or a skin of Leather or some Hardware (tell me which you prefer) OR 2) If the issue was NOT satisfactorily resolved, I will work out a solution which should make ANYONE very pleased with the resolution. To me, this is NOT about MONEY/BUSINESS, it is about taking care of the people who put their trust in us when they ordered and were disappointed for whatever reason. Best Regards, Steven Siegel, CEO Siegel of California, Inc Edited February 14, 2011 by StevenSiegel Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
King's X Report post Posted February 14, 2011 From a previous customer and a recent conversation, I just want to say that I believe you will succeed in improving your customer service. I wish you the very best for 2011~ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
StevenSiegel Report post Posted February 14, 2011 From a previous customer and a recent conversation, I just want to say that I believe you will succeed in improving your customer service. I wish you the very best for 2011~ Please email me as requested above. I would like to send something along to you. We had a great conversation and you gave me some good advice. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
drman63 Report post Posted February 14, 2011 Steven I got my leather today and it was grade A. Thanks for 6 hides of quality leather and for answering my email so quickly sunday night. I will definitely buy from you guys again. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
outcast Report post Posted February 14, 2011 Hi, This is Steven Siegel. The MOST important thing to me has been honesty and ethics in business which should translate into good customer service and good value for money spent. I would like to hear from ANYONE who has had a customer service issue with our company at ANY time in the last 100 years (I'll even take responsibility for my grandfather... He took care of me). Email me (do not call) with a BRIEF description of the issue and customer number/phone number so I can research the account TO siegel.leather@gmail.com 1) If the issue was resolved satisfactorily, I will send you a free gift, either some Sedgwick Leather Care or a skin of Leather or some Hardware (tell me which you prefer) OR 2) If the issue was NOT satisfactorily resolved, I will work out a solution which should make ANYONE very pleased with the resolution. To me, this is NOT about MONEY/BUSINESS, it is about taking care of the people who put their trust in us when they ordered and were disappointed for whatever reason. Best Regards, Steven Siegel, CEO Siegel of California, Inc You can't find better customer service than that. I'm impressed, and I believe that Siegel Leather does have much to offer us at Leatherworker.net. as any other supplier would. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
King's X Report post Posted February 14, 2011 Please email me as requested above. I would like to send something along to you. We had a great conversation and you gave me some good advice. Please there is no need to send anything. At the next show that we meet, a handshake will do! Really, best of luck in your endeavor! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
terrymac Report post Posted February 14, 2011 Steven, I don,t know you nor have I had any dealings with your company, but I want to commend you for taking "ownership" of your problems, and resolving them to the best of your ability. I was in business for a long time, and regardless what my employees or representatives did , the buck stopped with me. It was then up to me to make sure it didn't happen again, even if it meant removing people, or doing whatever was necessary. It appears that is your direction, and I really don't know what else you can do to make amends for the past. The true test comes in assuring it doesn't happen in the future. Good luck! Terry Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pinkchaps Report post Posted February 15, 2011 Mr. Siegel, I personally feel like if you don't have time to talk to me on the phone I don't have time to do business with you. Email you??? Seriously? You're asking people who have had customer service issues with you to email? Wow. I too have had customer service issues with you in the PAST. The last time I called to place an order you transferred the call to a sweet girl who could barely speak english....no thanks. I personally prefer someone with good communication skills. I have spent ALOT of money with you in the past but, I have made my best effort to change that....besides, I know you're much to busy with " Walt Disney Corp., The Kentucky Derby, and NYPD" to do business or talk to us "hobbyists". You do have nice leather but, alot of people have the combination of nice leather and good customer service. Thanks! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rickybobby Report post Posted February 15, 2011 To me, this is NOT about MONEY/BUSINESS, it is about taking care of the people who put their trust in us when they ordered and were disappointed for whatever reason. Best Regards, Steven Siegel, CEO Siegel of California, Inc Steve, You have had a challenging year, many changes and losses for you. Many people like to get on the computer and "flame" others, it is very easy to do. I see this as a genuine attempt at turning a problem with your business around. Your company has not been around for 100 years because of poor service. You understand it all falls on you and you are here to make it good for those customers that will participate. For those that will spend the time typing an entire thread here on LW.net to trash talk but will not send you an email, it is their loss and their prerogative. While you were traveling back east and abroad I think some things slipped past your employees. That you will need to deal with and, send them down the road if they cannot represent the company how you need them to. Stick with your game plan and look ahead and the business will follow. Rick Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bkingery Report post Posted February 15, 2011 Mr. Siegel, I personally feel like if you don't have time to talk to me on the phone I don't have time to do business with you. Email you??? Seriously? You're asking people who have had customer service issues with you to email? Wow. I too have had customer service issues with you in the PAST. The last time I called to place an order you transferred the call to a sweet girl who could barely speak english....no thanks. I personally prefer someone with good communication skills. I have spent ALOT of money with you in the past but, I have made my best effort to change that....besides, I know you're much to busy with " Walt Disney Corp., The Kentucky Derby, and NYPD" to do business or talk to us "hobbyists". You do have nice leather but, alot of people have the combination of nice leather and good customer service. Thanks! WTH????, what does the man have to do, stake himself to a cross in public and let people throw flaming knives at him. The man does have a BUSINESS to attend to. Why is everyone so quick to Not give him a chance to make ammends. How about putting yourself in his shoes for just a day, he has been nothing but bashed and trashed on this site for the last three months and I think he deserves a break. He has admitted he has had problems with customer service this past year. So how about we give the man a chance and see what happens. Bryan Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tg lucas Report post Posted February 15, 2011 (edited) WTH????, what does the man have to do, stake himself to a cross in public and let people throw flaming knives at him. The man does have a BUSINESS to attend to. Why is everyone so quick to Not give him a chance to make ammends. How about putting yourself in his shoes for just a day, he has been nothing but bashed and trashed on this site for the last three months and I think he deserves a break. He has admitted he has had problems with customer service this past year. So how about we give the man a chance and see what happens. Bryan You are right the man does have a business to attend to, which is exactly why he is in a public relations nightmare, he was not attending to it. All customers, big or small deserve the same attention, care and service. All customers do not start out as a "thousand dollar an order" customer nor do they all end up that way, but fail to meet their expectations and each one can end up costing you that much. I have been following the posts of Seigel's plight of customer service failures, as well as his others and even visited his website a few times to confirm issues. There seems to be a commonality in each of his apologies, posts and on his website of flippant dismissal of poor customer service and veiled smugness and superiority when he is called to the carpet on these issues. His family's company has been in business for many years and claims their combined expertise as his own which very well may be legitimate. However, when he refers to the members of this community as "hobbyists" it alludes to a position of contempt and that some of the customers that buy from him should be grateful that he should even include them in his "empire". Whether or not if this is how he truly feels or not, that is indeed the perception that he has put forth and "perception is reality". As to making amends, one of the first thing I tell any client "If you are wrong, make it right, right now", nothing soothes a burning fire like a lot of cool water quickly but if you wait too long there is nothing left to save. In the one case of an ongoing issue from November to February, I want you to imagine that you are a "hobbyist" with that long awaited big break order that could launch you into the realization of your dreams and career of leather working. But the company that you chose to supply you has not only shipped you the wrong product, doesn't pick up or send the right product and further more doesn't refund your money until months later prohibiting you from buying supplies from another company and delivering your customer's order to them ("hobbyists are often on a very low margin and tight budget). Possibly the customer gets tired of waiting, cancels the order and your dreams, future business and reputation takes a major hit from your viewpoint. It is going to leave a very bitter taste in your mouth for a long time. If you are truly trying to make amends and not just trying to spin the PR back somewhat to your favor, do not place restrictions on clients you may have disappointed in resolving these matters. Fixing a problem is not convenient for anyone involved but if you are the one that failed to deliver what was promised, you should not even consider your own convenience in the matter at all, just work hard, bend over backwards and fix it now. Anything less is another glimpse of what your clients will perceive as dishonest contrition and insincere effort. As to a mob mentality, research has shown time and time again, that only one, two at best out of ten complains when they feel they have been disappointed by a company. I feel what you are witnessing is those other eight or nine that still have that very bitter taste in their mouths and are finally spewing it back in the direction it belongs. News travels fast these days and bad news travels even faster, it also may be that part of what you are seeing as "kicking the man while he is down" is the many that felt disappointed or betrayed by this company talking to others non publicly and those people responding in defense of their confidant being too shy or timid to speak out for themselves. Mr. Seigel has asked for this response because of his poorly chosen words and actions. I illustrate this by asking you to imagine hanging a "kick me" sign on your back and then stay in your house, you will probably receive a few kicks depending how you have been acting lately but go outside and down the streets, you will receive many more kicks... from people who do not even know you simply because you asked for it. Give them any reason at all, you act or speak like a jerk for instance and many more will be obliged to kick you. Leatherworkers of all kinds still have a guild mentality to them and are an extended family of sorts, if it is perceived that you have mistreated or run down one, then you invite the disdain and correction of the entire family, even cousin Ernie that is normally antisocial and hard to get along with or Uncle Joe that thinks everyone in his family is an idiot, you have given the entire family a reason to turn their negative attention on you and really examine what is actually going on and they will unite against you if there is the slightest reason to do so. The reasoning is if you do it to my brother, then you will do it to me. Finally, Mr Siegel I am responding directly to you. I know you read my posts because some of my "phrasing" has found it's way to your website whether it was conscience or not. That is a good thing because it demonstrates an ability to learn and adapt good advice when you hear it. I have some more for you to absorb if you are willing to try and repair an aspect of your marketplace concerning this board. 1. Accept your mistakes and your company's mistakes as your sole responsibility, your name is on the door the buck stops with you. Everyone makes mistakes and you will not be diminished as a person or a company leader for accepting responsibility but will actually restore your position as such. Refrain yourself from making or writing statements out of anger, frustration or fatigue. Your family's company did not survive this long on a basis of rash actions and there is no need for that behavior to continue. Remember little fires spread into big fires and many of the members of this forum are members of many more forums and you are the only one with a bucket of water. 2. Assign a customer service representative with exceptional communication skills or better yet a VP to handle any and all complaints. Do not bounce problems around from staff member to staff member in a game of "hot potato". That rep should report to you on a daily basis and any concern that she is not able to correct, should be addressed by you personally within 24 hours, no exception. Make up a form that includes all contact information including a nighttime phone number and use it for all complaints, follow up without delay on all issues. Getting a phone call at nine o'clock at night from the owner of company will go a long way to making your clients feel better about a problem they may be upset over and that they know you are working on. 3. Giving away thousands of dollars of product does not mean a thing to an individual customer whose order was handled poorly. Do not talk about it as a redeeming factor unless it was given to the individual whose order was an issue. If the customer service issue was handled properly and giving away product was part of your "fix", then that client will rave about your customer service and that is worth millions of PR dollars and you can always write it off as advertising expense as 100% deductible. Just in case you didn't know, just put a stamp or sticker on it and it becomes a sign or a business card or brochure and it's a write off. 4. Never, ever try to influence the reputation or perception of your company or products by anything other than upfront, transparent actions of honorable means. It will be perceived as deceptive and manipulative and is always going to be a blight on your company's image regardless of the shortcut it seems to be at the time. 5. Learn your clientele, big and small, if they do not fit your business model then redirect them to a supplier that can service them properly... do it gracefully. They will remember it as being aware of their needs and not concerned as much as your own. Never isolate a segment of your customers as you did by implying that "hobbyists" are less than desirable as clients, intentional or not. Many of us who make a living by our art and those that only supplement their income are very serious and passionate about what they do any attempt to minimize their endeavorers will result in their contempt and your isolation. "You know you can lead a horse to water but you can't make them drink...but you can drown them"...if you get my meaning. So if you choose to do these suggestions I can promise you that not only will you feel better but your company will experience a renewal and restoration not only with this board but all your clients. Your staff will see and know that you are serious about customer service and will follow your example, those that do not...well they do not deserve to be a part of the legacy that your family built. The members of this board are a very centered, good natured group and would be more than happy to accept you in their world and hearts provided you want to be there! Edited February 15, 2011 by tg lucas Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ferg Report post Posted February 15, 2011 You are right the man does have a business to attend to, which is exactly why he is in a public relations nightmare, he was not attending to it. All customers, big or small deserve the same attention, care and service. All customers do not start out as a "thousand dollar an order" customer nor do they all end up that way, but fail to meet their expectations and each one can end up costing you that much. I have been following the posts of Seigel's plight of customer service failures, as well as his others and even visited his website a few times to confirm issues. There seems to be a commonality in each of his apologies, posts and on his website of flippant dismissal of poor customer service and veiled smugness and superiority when he is called to the carpet on these issues. His family's company has been in business for many years and claims their combined expertise as his own which very well may be legitimate. However, when he refers to the members of this community as "hobbyists" it alludes to a position of contempt and that some of the customers that buy from him should be grateful that he should even include them in his "empire". Whether or not if this is how he truly feels or not, that is indeed the perception that he has put forth and "perception is reality". As to making amends, one of the first thing I tell any client "If you are wrong, make it right, right now", nothing soothes a burning fire like a lot of cool water quickly but if you wait too long there is nothing left to save. In the one case of an ongoing issue from November to February, I want you to imagine that you are a "hobbyist" with that long awaited big break order that could launch you into the realization of your dreams and career of leather working. But the company that you chose to supply you has not only shipped you the wrong product, doesn't pick up or send the right product and further more doesn't refund your money until months later prohibiting you from buying supplies from another company and delivering your customer's order to them ("hobbyists are often on a very low margin and tight budget). Possibly the customer gets tired of waiting, cancels the order and your dreams, future business and reputation takes a major hit from your viewpoint. It is going to leave a very bitter taste in your mouth for a long time. If you are truly trying to make amends and not just trying to spin the PR back somewhat to your favor, do not place restrictions on clients you may have disappointed in resolving these matters. Fixing a problem is not convenient for anyone involved but if you are the one that failed to deliver what was promised, you should not even consider your own convenience in the matter at all, just work hard, bend over backwards and fix it now. Anything less is another glimpse of what your clients will perceive as dishonest contrition and insincere effort. As to a mob mentality, research has shown time and time again, that only one, two at best out of ten complains when they feel they have been disappointed by a company. I feel what you are witnessing is those other eight or nine that still have that very bitter taste in their mouths and are finally spewing it back in the direction it belongs. News travels fast these days and bad news travels even faster, it also may be that part of what you are seeing as "kicking the man while he is down" is the many that felt disappointed or betrayed by this company talking to others non publicly and those people responding in defense of their confidant being too shy or timid to speak out for themselves. Mr. Seigel has asked for this response because of his poorly chosen words and actions. I illustrate this by asking you to imagine hanging a "kick me" sign on your back and then stay in your house, you will probably receive a few kicks depending how you have been acting lately but go outside and down the streets, you will receive many more kicks... from people who do not even know you simply because you asked for it. Give them any reason at all, you act or speak like a jerk for instance and many more will be obliged to kick you. Leatherworkers of all kinds still have a guild mentality to them and are an extended family of sorts, if it is perceived that you have mistreated or run down one, then you invite the disdain and correction of the entire family, even cousin Ernie that is normally antisocial and hard to get along with or Uncle Joe that thinks everyone in his family is an idiot, you have given the entire family a reason to turn their negative attention on you and really examine what is actually going on and they will unite against you if there is the slightest reason to do so. The reasoning is if you do it to my brother, then you will do it to me. Finally, Mr Siegel I am responding directly to you. I know you read my posts because some of my "phrasing" has found it's way to your website whether it was conscience or not. That is a good thing because it demonstrates an ability to learn and adapt good advice when you hear it. I have some more for you to absorb if you are willing to try and repair an aspect of your marketplace concerning this board. 1. Accept your mistakes and your company's mistakes as your sole responsibility, your name is on the door the buck stops with you. Everyone makes mistakes and you will not be diminished as a person or a company leader for accepting responsibility but will actually restore your position as such. Refrain yourself from making or writing statements out of anger, frustration or fatigue. Your family's company did not survive this long on a basis of rash actions and there is no need for that behavior to continue. Remember little fires spread into big fires and many of the members of this forum are members of many more forums and you are the only one with a bucket of water. 2. Assign a customer service representative with exceptional communication skills or better yet a VP to handle any and all complaints. Do not bounce problems around from staff member to staff member in a game of "hot potato". That rep should report to you on a daily basis and any concern that she is not able to correct, should be addressed by you personally within 24 hours, no exception. Make up a form that includes all contact information including a nighttime phone number and use it for all complaints, follow up without delay on all issues. Getting a phone call at nine o'clock at night from the owner of company will go a long way to making your clients feel better about a problem they may be upset over and that they know you are working on. 3. Giving away thousands of dollars of product does not mean a thing to an individual customer whose order was handled poorly. Do not talk about it as a redeeming factor unless it was given to the individual whose order was an issue. If the customer service issue was handled properly and giving away product was part of your "fix", then that client will rave about your customer service and that is worth millions of PR dollars and you can always write it off as advertising expense as 100% deductible. Just in case you didn't know, just put a stamp or sticker on it and it becomes a sign or a business card or brochure and it's a write off. 4. Never, ever try to influence the reputation or perception of your company or products by anything other than upfront, transparent actions of honorable means. It will be perceived as deceptive and manipulative and is always going to be a blight on your company's image regardless of the shortcut it seems to be at the time. 5. Learn your clientele, big and small, if they do not fit your business model then redirect them to a supplier that can service them properly... do it gracefully. They will remember it as being aware of their needs and not concerned as much as your own. Never isolate a segment of your customers as you did by implying that "hobbyists" are less than desirable as clients, intentional or not. Many of us who make a living by our art and those that only supplement their income are very serious and passionate about what they do any attempt to minimize their endeavorers will result in their contempt and your isolation. "You know you can lead a horse to water but you can't make them drink...but you can drown them"...if you get my meaning. So if you choose to do these suggestions I can promise you that not only will you feel better but your company will experience a renewal and restoration not only with this board but all your clients. Your staff will see and know that you are serious about customer service and will follow your example, those that do not...well they do not deserve to be a part of the legacy that your family built. The members of this board are a very centered, good natured group and would be more than happy to accept you in their world and hearts provided you want to be there! Well said and much better than I could convey. Thanks ferg Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wildrose Report post Posted February 15, 2011 That was very well written! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
reddevil76 Report post Posted February 15, 2011 I am one of those who participated in both Ferg's thread and Bar C leather's thread. And yes, I have never bought from Siegel before. In Ferg's thread, there was a comment regarding posters who participated without having been a customer of Siegel. That same comment likened us to rabid dogs. Not very charming. In Bar C Leather's thread, similar comment, but the description is mob mentality. I beg to differ here. I believe most of us who participated, but were never a customer, simply expressed outrage at the situation described, no personal attacks. In my own separate thread in another section, when I tried to explain why I was stuck with a bunch of camouflage leather that I have no application for, alot of people expressed outrage at the way my friend played me out. Do they have to know my friend personally to express themselves? NO. Most of us do this hobby in similar budgets and situations, and they felt what I felt and simply expressed themselves. A few years ago, a young girl from an immigrant family here in Singapore was murdered by a family friend. There was huge public outrage and sympathy. None of the millions who donated money and lobbied for a heavy sentence for the murderer were related to the young girl. Conversely, the murderer did nothing to the families of these millions. But I can't imagine someone entering the crowds and telling them to shut up and go home and that they are acting like rabid dogs simply because the victim is not their family. It is an extreme example I know. Bad service does not equal murder. But I am trying to illustrate my point. And remember, your opinion of me having an opinion is also an opinion. Geddit? In any case, from my bad experience posting in Ferg's thread, I thought I'd hold my peace till Johanna posted the comment on advertising. It was then that I expressed my personal opinion that the forum should enjoy equal support from members and sponsors to keep it from bias. I was motivated to do my part, however little, and I did it. This is the last I will speak of this since there seems to be some objections on other's having an opinion. But the last opinion I would like to offer is this: If Mr Siegel is sincere in making amends, I DO HAVE TO AGREE that the email is the best possible way. Note that he has opened the offer to the last 100 years. If he makes such an offer, then he must have been prepared to have people take him up on his offer. Now, even if he focus all his attention on hobbyists and not the big guys, he still needs to attend to daily business, take his meals, go to the washroom, and what have you. Suppose you are that customer who decides to give him one last chance, and you call just conveniently when he is out for lunch, and you go "Bah! Nothing has changed". What happens? If I am expecting a flood of calls, and I wish to single handedly resolve all of them, and make sure I do not miss any, and make sure I understand them correctly, and make sure I have details for tracing back records, the written word is still the best and this means email. However, I might go easy on free gift offers as the intention might not always be interpreted correctly. Over and out. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
roo4u Report post Posted February 15, 2011 very interesting reading on some of these threads....i too had experienced the siegel customer service first hand. however, i do not believe in holding a grudge. everyone goes through rough times of one kind or another, im going to give siegel leather the benefit of the doubt here and hope for the sake of their employees they can get their s**t together. at some point in the future if they happen to offer something i want i will most likely give them another try. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TwinOaks Report post Posted February 16, 2011 One of the aspects of business that I've learned is that " When you do right by a customer, they may tell a friend; if you do poorly by a customer they will tell ten." At the time of this post there are 14783 members on this forum (#14784 is pending approval), and even if only half are active....that's still over seven thousand people that read these posts.....not counting the non-member visitors of which there are currently just over a hundred visitors (real time). It is my sincere hope that Siegel Leather can reestablish their name and credibility to those who have had issues, and continue the service that has made them one of the top suppliers. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
pinkchaps Report post Posted February 16, 2011 WTH????, what does the man have to do, stake himself to a cross in public and let people throw flaming knives at him. The man does have a BUSINESS to attend to. Why is everyone so quick to Not give him a chance to make ammends. How about putting yourself in his shoes for just a day, he has been nothing but bashed and trashed on this site for the last three months and I think he deserves a break. He has admitted he has had problems with customer service this past year. So how about we give the man a chance and see what happens. Bryan As far as being "bashed and trashed" -in my opinion you reap what you sew. I have given him numerous, numerous chances to make ammends. In fact I have an e-mail that i wrote in January 2008 complaining about his customer service. He wrote me back and in part of the email he told me, and i quote this-copy and paste actually " The only "salesman" in the company is myself. I concentrate on accounts which have the capabilities of spending, minimum over 1M/year." I think its safe to say he has probably lost most of these customers also or he wouldn't have the time to get on a forum to defend himself. As far as Mr. Siegel having a business to run...I too, have a business to run and really do not have the time to deal with his bad customer service, receiving bad leather, and just the overall run around of dealing with with him. While we are on the topic of running a business I highly doubt I would have many customers if I told them to email me if they had a problem because I was much to busy to talk to them. Talk is cheap.... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CustomDoug Report post Posted February 16, 2011 Not sure if email is the way to go..... I wrote mr.Siegel back in November about obtaining some garment horsehide (after he'd asked me here to email him about it directly). He answered my email by asking how much I would be needing. I replied something to the effect of "not a whole lot at first, but potentially larger quantities would come" - I still haven't gotten a reply to that. I don't hold it against him though, I knew it was a shot in the dark as HH is hard to come by and maybe not enough profit in it for him to bother with. An email to that effect would have taken two minutes and would have been nice, but oh well. I would have never brought that up if it weren't for these suggestions to email Siegel. I sure ain't trying to be part of any mob mentality, just stating fact here. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
StevenSiegel Report post Posted February 16, 2011 Not sure if email is the way to go..... I wrote mr.Siegel back in November about obtaining some garment horsehide (after he'd asked me here to email him about it directly). He answered my email by asking how much I would be needing. I replied something to the effect of "not a whole lot at first, but potentially larger quantities would come" - I still haven't gotten a reply to that. I don't hold it against him though, I knew it was a shot in the dark as HH is hard to come by and maybe not enough profit in it for him to bother with. An email to that effect would have taken two minutes and would have been nice, but oh well. I would have never brought that up if it weren't for these suggestions to email Siegel. I sure ain't trying to be part of any mob mentality, just stating fact here. After this, I will not be checking this board at all. 1) I specialize in leathers and it is very EASY to come by garment horsehide. As it is not a stock item, we would only purchase it for a customer if the quantity purchased was economically viable.. Perhaps this was not clear to you in my response. I tried to be polite by answering you. I am sorry that you have decided to have taken your private question & my response to a public forum to ADD TO THE HATRED THAT HAS BEEN DIRECTED TOWARDS ME. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Spence Report post Posted February 16, 2011 He just doesn't get it. Too bad. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
JJLeatherworks Report post Posted February 16, 2011 Sorry Steven, you asked for it and you got it. If all you wanted was flowers and butterflies, then thats what you should have asked for. I am not one of your customers, and I'm not sure I can afford to be one. I am one of the small businesses that don't buy in large quantities, but would like to be able to as my business grows. I get your Friday special newsletters and have never had the impression that I have enough money to buy from you. If you don't want the business of the hobbyists and small businesses, then why not state it up front? "to establish an account with us, please submit your financials Minimum of XXX.$$ and request to establish an account, no exceptions", that would clearly tell us to go elsewhere. As to the quality of your leather, I cannot tell, having never seen it. The photos of your leather are of poor quality, is this reflective of your company? When you sent the side of "dead in the field leather" to a fellow in the U.K., his photo was much better than yours. If you took a little time, and invested in a better camera, the photos would be of more professional quality and would project a better image of your company, after all, you are a million dollar company! When I had a multi-million dollar electronic test equipment company (no joke, lost it all in the dot.com collapse), if my photography wasn't up to par, I hired professional photographers to do it for me. Never be so arrogant that you cannot see your failures. I hope you can take the complaints and suggestions to heart and benefit from it. It takes more than inheriting a company to run it affectively. After this, I will not be checking this board at all. 1) I specialize in leathers and it is very EASY to come by garment horsehide. As it is not a stock item, we would only purchase it for a customer if the quantity purchased was economically viable.. Perhaps this was not clear to you in my response. I tried to be polite by answering you. I am sorry that you have decided to have taken your private question & my response to a public forum to ADD TO THE HATRED THAT HAS BEEN DIRECTED TOWARDS ME. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Art Report post Posted February 16, 2011 Steven, I don't see a lot of hatred on these boards. I do however see a lot of frustration with your customer service. You keep stepping on your crank every time you post. When you said garment horsehide is was easy to source, you should have given the name of several suppliers. Vendors should kiss the behind of every customer, past, present, and maybe future, because helping these folks will help your business and ultimately rebuild your reputation. Now, to the folks on the board. When you buy something that is on sale, expect that it will NOT be the higher quality of the stuff that is not. Vendors have sold the primo stuff, and the stuff that is on sale is "the rest"; sometimes great quality, sometimes not. I used to buy shoulders from Siegel, some on sale way below what I usually paid. I could get a holster or more out of them, sometimes not. I used the rest for liners for D&S, worked great. I used to tell the order takers to put what I told them on the pick list and invoice. If I wanted clear, blemish free leather, I told them to put it on there, and they did. I always got what I asked for, but I didn't do that on sale stock. But Steven, lighten up (and shut up), the folks on this board are not causing your problems, they are venting. Listen (read) and do NOT respond. If you take action by reason of their words, you will learn a lot and will have accomplished more. Art After this, I will not be checking this board at all. 1) I specialize in leathers and it is very EASY to come by garment horsehide. As it is not a stock item, we would only purchase it for a customer if the quantity purchased was economically viable.. Perhaps this was not clear to you in my response. I tried to be polite by answering you. I am sorry that you have decided to have taken your private question & my response to a public forum to ADD TO THE HATRED THAT HAS BEEN DIRECTED TOWARDS ME. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
rawhide1 Report post Posted February 16, 2011 Mr. Siegel I see alot of advice being given and I don't recall ya asking for it. The only advice I can give is I wouldn't sell a damn thing to some of these whining crybabies. I don't care how much money they have or don't have. I don't have a dog in this fight but I'm damned tired of everyone jumping on this fella. If ya don't want to buy from him then don't. If he wants to sell to only big company's who cares. So to whoever this pisses off I don't care. Start your nasty replies. I think the suppliers ought to start posting bad dealing they have had with people( by name) and then we'll really see the crap hit the fan. Mike Southern Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Johanna Report post Posted February 16, 2011 Okay everyone, please simmer down. This discussion is done. Closing this thread. Johanna Share this post Link to post Share on other sites