Saturday, June 15th 2024
ASUS Enhances Customer Support Following Gamers Nexus Investigation
ASUS has had issues with customer support, as reported following last month's investigation by Gamers Nexus. However, they are now promising several fixes. If you've been wrongly denied a warranty repair or charged for unnecessary service, ASUS wants you to email them at "executivecare@asus.com" using a predefined template (see below). It also promises to respond within a week and apologizes for past negative experiences, citing customer feedback as an opportunity for improvement. These cases will be handled directly by ASUS staff.
Getting into a bit more details, after criticism, ASUS executives met with Gamers Nexus staff face to face and agreed to a list of promises.To recap several of ASUS' firm changes (as provided by Gamers Nexus):
Sources:
ASUS, Gamers Nexus
Getting into a bit more details, after criticism, ASUS executives met with Gamers Nexus staff face to face and agreed to a list of promises.To recap several of ASUS' firm changes (as provided by Gamers Nexus):
- ASUS now has a new inbox called "executivecare@asus.com" that they have created specifically to re-process prior RMAs that customers feel were unfairly classified, were misclassified, or charged for a service that should be free
- ASUS has provided a template to copy and paste into your email to this address. We are showing it on the screen. You can visit gamersnexus.net to find a copy of this to copy and paste. We do not place third-party ads on our site. The link is below for the template.
- ASUS has published a timeline for improvements: June 14th, today, is the publication of this email and template. ASUS has promised us an email this month with other changes.
- ASUS has committed to refunds of service charges for unnecessary repairs which customers felt compelled to accept in order to have a warranted repair covered, such as unrelated or misclassified CID
- ASUS has committed to refunding shipping charges in scenarios where a warranted repair was part of the RMA. For clarity, if a customer has both an out-of-warranty repair and an in-warranty repair in the same claim, shipping will be covered by ASUS
- ASUS has committed to refunding labor and taxes related to these aforementioned qualifying disputes
- ASUS has created a Task Force team to retroactively go back through a long history of customer surveys that were negative to try and fix the issues
- ASUS has removed the power from the repair centers to claim CID. Now, CID claims must go through ASUS' team. This will remove some of the financial incentive to fail devices. There still is one, but now it won't be motivated as much by speed
- ASUS is creating a new support center in the US. This will enable customers to choose between a repair of their board or a faster swap with a refurbished board. This solves an issue where refurbs were the only option in some scenarios previously
- After over a year of refusing to acknowledge the microSD card reader failures on the ROG Ally, ASUS will be posting a formal statement next week about the defect, resulting from this series
- ASUS will publish a more transparent repair report template in September of 2024
- ASUS is changing the Advance RMA language to reduce emphasis on physical damage
- Your Name (as listed in your RMA):
- RMA Number:
- Serial Number:
- RMA application country:
- Please describe your previous RMA dispute:
- Supporting Documents (e.g., charged invoice, quotation notification, photos):
- Additional Feedback (optional):
118 Comments on ASUS Enhances Customer Support Following Gamers Nexus Investigation
What happened in this video must NEVER happen again, EVER
There is no excuse and if I had to deal with this, I would never purchase an ASUS product ever again.
Corporations are like an antisocial kid. They will try to steal your things and money, wholeheartedly apologize with tears dropping from their eyes when they get caught, proceed to continue stealing when the heat dies off.
I'm not talking figuratively, Google recently admitted they will steal your phone or parts of it if you send it for repair with any unauthorized parts inside. Asus does the same, and something tells me other companies follow the path of giants.
I hardly can support what GN done in their YouTube channel.
Just check they viewer numbers, they deliberately making insulting and scandal-mongering videos and those got the most views.
Who cares about reviewing a VGA or mobo? Burning down ASUS mobo's, lying Linus and such low-level hate videos got much more attention (and view = cash).
The average Joe's click it and share it, that make even more views and uproar, even more money for GN...
The GN apologizes to ASUS when they make a not really accurate video how the AM5 CPU's burn down in ASUS boards?
Yea, actually the first such reported case happened in AsRock board and after that turned out the main problem is the 1.4V upper limit of the VSOC - set by AMD and lowered in AGESA microcode later.
I'm not a big fan before of ASUS (originally I plan to buy an AsRock mobo, have had MSI VGA, etc.), but after some dig up and many debate in different forums about "the ASUS is suck and they mobos burning down, don't buy it" rant I take a deep breath and buy an ASUS ROG B650E-E.
I have zero negative experience myself and have had positive experience about the ASUS support, so I choose them many times in the past year...
Its like watching a flock of sheep head over the cliff, one at a time.
Call me a fanboy, I am ready.
Here in Asia it is so even if ASUS have change, it still dependent on the vendor/SI level of customer service.
I rather they provide a direct channel to ASUS when customer have a complaint or feedback.
Usually these complaints/feedback are managed by the vendor/SI which does not bother about them.
Cuz when they are contracted by the main company they just act accordingly to the SOP.
Example feedback about product improvement the vendor/SI will either route within their team
or just KIV onside.
ASUS side will not know about them since vendor/SI SOP does not include escalating to them.
I had to get this off my chest as this is the reason why I stop supporting ASUS products like notebook, router etc.
Level of customer service especially by the vendor is horrible.
I personally don't see the point in paying the premium Asus charges compared to the competition when I can't rely on the product having a warranty or getting any helpful CS.
Does it feel good to bash something you don't know anything about?
To me you are one of those sheep jumping off the cliff. I don't bash companies that I don't use.
All I use are Asus boards, no problems, years, decades of 24/7 service, no need for RMA.
On even the most individual basis, holding Asus to account in some public way might improve your RMA experience in the future if anything goes wrong. You're sitting there like "lmao look at these sheep rofl calling Asus out and potentially saving people from awful RMAs possibly even me someday hee hee"
Very strange outlook.
And yes, I am a (former) Asus customer who gave up because of their just... awful driver support.
I just don't understand why Steve is being so serious about this. Like arguing about a sentence for 10 minutes? And why others are thinking this is so serious.
Relax a bit.
Their boards are fine when they work, but when something breaks I'd rather buy from any other brand than pay the Asus tax and not get any decent support.
People have so few real-life problems that they need to find something to be upset about. It would be nice if they'd put their energy into something that actually mattered.
You are straight up spreading misinformation. Bold assumption to equate product ownership with knowledge. Incorrect, but bold.
The logic that one needs to own something to have an opinion on it was always faulty. Ah yes, the fallacy that anecdotal evidence trumps everything including other people's anecdotal evidence. A true head in the sand point of view. GN was flooded with emails regarding RMA issues with ASUS. Doesn't sound like a few to me.
I should have corrected that.
Edit:
Did grab my GPU from Amazon, crazy good deal back then.. now not so much.