Price, Tax, and Gratitude
Price, Tax, and Gratitude
The Braille Monitor
_June 1997
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[PHOTO/CAPTION: Cynthia Handel]
Price, Tax, and Gratitude:
Doing Business with Telesensory
Every time one of my children uses my
microwave, I receive an earful of teasing about its decrepit condition and my
obvious and immediate need for a new one. I hang on loyally to my poor old microwave
because it has given good service for a dozen years and because I dread trying
to find one today that I can actually operate. I feel real hostility when I
am forced to think about what appliance designers have done to blind people
by installing flat touch pads and burgeoning menu options.
So, although I have never used an Optacon, I can understand in small part the
anger and frustration of those who have depended for years on this portable,
flexible method of reading print. Telesensory has decided to stop making, and
in the foreseeable future to stop repairing, Optacons because too few people
are buying them. Marketing decisions must be made based on sales figures, and
consumers must live with those decisions or see producers go out of business
altogether.
But Optacon users have not lain down and taken Telesensory's decision passively.
Understandably they feel betrayed and abandoned. No other piece of technology
provides the kind of print access the Optacon does, and those who need that
particular ability face very real inconvenience and inefficiency.
So what happens when disgruntled users respond angrily to a notice that in six
months their Optacon maintenance contracts will no longer be honored? As it
happens, we have an answer to that question. Cindy and Gerry Handel, leaders
of the NFB of Pennsylvania, are both longtime Optacon users. What follows is
a transmittal letter from Cindy to Ted Young, President of the NFB of Pennsylvania,
and the letters she received from Telesensory and her response. Telesensory
Systems, Inc., has changed its name several times during the past twenty years.
People are still apt to use any of them when referring to the company. Here
are the letters:
March 15, 1997
Willow Street, Pennsylvania
Mr. Ted Young, President
NFB of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Dear Ted,
I know that Telesensory is not one of your favorite companies. So I thought
you might be interested in the information I've enclosed. Jerry and I received
the enclosed letter from TSI this week. They are no longer going to offer service
agreements for our Optacons. However, they will still repair them, at cost to
us, which I'm sure will not be inexpensive. We have always been captive when
it came to their prices and services. Now it's just getting worse. The most
frustrating part is that we seem to have no power to do anything about it. The
only option, which is coming much sooner than we thought, will be to use some
other type of reading device. While they are good, they don't offer the same
flexibility that we have with Optacons for some uses. Additionally, replacing
this equipment will be costly for our own personal use at home. Then I'll have
to figure out what to do about work.
Hope you will read the information and offer any suggestions you might have
about how I can further deal with them. There is probably nothing more to be
done because there never is. Just thought you should know.
Sincerely,
Cynthia E. Handel
__________
March 10, 1997
Mountain View, California
Gerald & Cynthia Handel
Willow Street, Pennsylvania
Dear Mr. & Mrs. Handel,
Thank you for your past purchases and continuing support of Telesensory.
Due to increasing cost and limited availability of service parts, we regret
to inform you that we cannot offer an extension to service agreement contracts
for some of our products that are out of production.
Therefore, when the current service agreement contract expires on your Optacon
I, Model number RID-02 on September 30, 1997, any repair or service that you
have Telesensory perform on this unit after that date will be billed to you.
Please be assured that we will continue servicing these units as long as replacement
parts are available for them.
If you have any questions in regard to the above, please do not hesitate to
contact me at the following: phone (415) 960-0920, extension 3327, Fax (415)
960-0277, Internet: [email protected]
Sincerely,
Jill E. Vickers
Lead, Order Administration
Blindness Products Division
Telesensory
That was the letter the Handels received from Telesensory, and its notification
of increased repair costs and inevitable cessation of all Optacon repairs led
to frustration and anger. After all, the Handels had hoped to keep their units
going through maintenance contracts for a good while longer. This is what Cynthia
wrote:
March 15, 1997
Willow Street, Pennsylvania
Ms. Jill E. Vickers
Lead, Order Administration
Blindness Products Division
Telesensory Systems, Inc.
Mountain View, California
Dear Ms. Vickers:
My husband Jerry and I are both Optacon users. I have had mine since February,
1974, and Jerry has used his since March, 1977. So you can see that we are not
new to our relationship with Telesensory Systems. Over the years, however, the
business relationship has always been provider oriented. We, as consumers, had
no choice and very little say about how the services were provided and fees
levied. If we were to continue to use our Optacons, we had to agree to the terms
set by TSI.
During the mid-1970's, Telesensory Systems offered regional service centers.
Optacon users could send their Optacons to a repair person, often within their
own state. The turn-around time was short, and convenience was a priority. Then,
apparently, this became too costly. So all services were moved to your headquarters
in California. Indeed you paid to have the machine sent back to us, but we had
to pay to ship the product to you for inspection or service. Having it insured
for its value and shipped second day air, which you recommended, became costly--recently
as much as $50.
Then we must consider the cost of service. I, unfortunately, had the bad experience
of having to have an array replaced while my Optacon was not covered under a
service agreement. This cost me approximately $1,700--nearly half the cost of
the piece of equipment. Since then, in approximately 1981, Jerry and I have
spent the money, apparently wisely, to purchase service agreements for our Optacons.
We have probably paid you somewhere in the area of $8,700 over the past fifteen
years for service on two Optacons.
I don't have a problem with paying for a service agreement and wish that you
still offered them. We received your letter this week indicating that, because
of the "difficulty in obtaining parts," you are no longer going to
offer a service agreement on our Optacons. You did not say that you cannot repair
our Optacons, but just that you will charge us for the service. I do have a
problem with this position.
I work for the Better Business Bureau. We are constantly advising consumers
to be wise shoppers and
compare prices and services--look for the best buy. If they are charged what
they believe is too much for a product or service, in most cases they have only
themselves to blame because they had the opportunity to compare ahead of time.
We do not have that option. Telesensory Systems is the only company, and has
always been the only company, in the country, and for that matter in the world,
who sells and services Optacons. When we've needed service, we have had no idea
whether all the parts and adjustments which have been performed were really
necessary. We have to take your word for it. We cannot get a second opinion
or tell you that we don't like the outrageous fees you choose to charge for
your precious service.
When I was told that my array needed to be replaced, I was shocked. I had been
using the Optacon and didn't notice a problem with it. I simply sent it for
a check-up and got hit with that bill. How are we now to know, when we have
to pay for service because you have eliminated your service policy, that we
will really be getting the quality service we need and that we will be charged
fairly? Are you going to publish a parts price list and labor schedule for us
to examine before we ask for service? I think not.
So, finally, you have made the decision about what we will do for the privilege
of using our Optacons. Admittedly, ours are older models. Perhaps the new models
made in collaboration with Cannon, would cost less to repair, but then that's
understandable because, although the retail price didn't come down much, they
probably cost less to make. The quality certainly isn't there. But then you
didn't want to hear that, either, when Optacon users told you about it.
So in your letter you said that we should feel free to contact you with any
suggestions. My biggest question is, whatever happened to the supply-and-demand
concept of service provision? Yes, the service will be provided on these machines
for some limited period of time, but at what cost to the consumers? As I understand
it, the Optacon was the first product TSI produced. Now that you believe it
is less convenient for you to provide products and services to Optacon users,
you're just going to drop it and move on to something else, until you tire of
that one. Think of this: although Braille can now be produced with computers
and many people use other means to read because they've been told that Braille
is slow, Perkins Braillers are still being produced. They are sold and serviced
through many companies across the country. While prices may not vary drastically,
we still have choice. Perhaps Telesensory should take a lesson from that and
consider serving their consumers rather than dictating to us.
I am sending copies of this letter, along with your letter to us, to a few people
who may be interested in what is happening with TSI and your services. They
are listed below. I would appreciate hearing from you if it is not simply a
public-relations-driven form letter. I've read them and am not interested.
Incidentally, I did read your letter to me with my Optacon.
Sincerely,
Cynthia E. Handel
cc: Marc Maurer, President
National Federation of the Blind
Ted Young, President
National Federation of the Blind of Pennsylvania
Barbara Pierce, Editor
Braille Monitor
There you have Cynthia Handel's letter. Understandably it was not well received
at Telesensory--it is never pleasant to be on the receiving end of anger and
criticism. It cannot have helped that accusations similar to those implicit
in Cynthia's letter have been made against Telesensory by many over the years.
In any case something seems to have snapped in Telesensory's corporate psyche.
The Handel letter apparently made its way to the desk of Larry Israel (Chairman,
President, and CEO of Telesensory). He undertook to write a response defending
the company's decision to stop production of the Optacon, praising the ability
of his employees, and criticizing Mrs. Handel for hurting their feelings. While
not particularly professional or understanding of the strain the corporate decision
had placed on those dependent on the disappearing Optacon technology, Mr. Israel's
response is chiefly astonishing for its condescending lecture on the Handels'
ingratitude for all the years of faithful service the Optacon technology and
Telesensory employees have given them. While generally accepted conventions
of civility require that our dealings with one another be courteous, the concept
that those buying products and services from producers have an obligation to
feel and express gratitude for the privilege of enjoying what they have bought
is at the very least novel. Here is Larry Israel's letter:
[PHOTO/CAPTION: Larry Israel, Chairman, President, and CEO of Telesensory Systems,
Inc.]
March 25, 1997
Mountain View, California
Cynthia E. Handel
Willow Street, Pennsylvania
Dear Ms. Handel,
Thank you for your letter of March 15 to Jill Vickers. Because of the importance
of the subject you've raised, I felt it important that I respond to you on behalf
of Telesensory and its employees.
For more than twenty-five years our company has worked diligently to provide
useful products and services to its blind customers around the world. For the
most part I think we have succeeded, although I can acknowledge that we make
mistakes, as does any company (or any human being, for that matter). If we had
not served our customers well, for the most part, we might well have disappeared
by now.
For twenty-two years, you and your husband received substantially uninterrupted
use of your devices, and they are still going strong. How many times did you
write to thank the people supporting you for all these years? Have you ever
heard of a consumer product operating and supported by the manufacturer for
that long a period of time? (You should ask your colleagues at the BBB for examples
of such companies.) Others have expressed their appreciation to people like
Teresa Lee at Telesensory for more than twenty years, and who personally and
lovingly assembled the last one to be built. If you have any thanks or appreciation
for the contributions Telesensory has made to your quality of life, your letter
is strangely silent about that.
Your letter is unfair to the 200 plus employees of Telesensory, many of whom
have dedicated ten to twenty years of their lives to serve you, the customer.
Telesensory is not one evil person. It is a group of hard-working people who
do the best they can.
I am offended by your letter, as are others of our employees who have seen it,
because it indicates a flawed attitude about our company and our employees which
is wholly unwarranted, to the extent it is based on the facts and circumstances
you offer. Your letter also seems to suggest that you believe Telesensory should
meet your needs without regard to whether it is profitable to do so.
We are a for-profit company and are not at all ashamed or embarrassed about
that. Without profits companies do not survive nor prosper, and grow and develop
new products to benefit their customers, nor offer their employees a fair living,
nor reward their shareholders for their investments which made it all possible,
unless someone subsidizes them (whether it be government or by charitable donations).
Your contention that our business has
always been provider-oriented, and that you (as consumers) have had little to
say about it, is flatly untrue, except in the very limited sense which is true
with respect to any unique product. The fact is that many, many blind people
are unwilling to purchase Optacons today, whether because they do not highly
value its functions, do not want to undertake the extensive training required,
or think that it is too high-priced. Those people have made consumer choices
and have strongly influenced what we do. The number of people who wish to buy
Optacons is very small and continues to diminish each year. That represents
the voices of consumers delivering a message to Telesensory, and the message
is: "Do not produce Optacons any more."
Yes, I understand that you and your husband, among many others, have expressed
an opposite opinion. But you are in a distinct minority, and there are simply
not enough interested customers to justify continuing product development or
production of Optacons, regrettable as that might be. The consumer has spoken!
Regarding service agreements versus charging for that service on a case-by-case
basis: if we offer you a service agreement, we have a legal and a moral obligation
to maintain a reasonable supply of parts to meet our service obligations. If
we cannot be assured of a reasonable supply of parts, it would be duplicitous
and deceitful of us to offer service agreements, and we might well be subject
to legal action from consumers.
Please refer to Ms. Vickers's letter to our customers, in which she states:
"Please be assured that we will continue servicing these units as long
as replacement parts are available for them." On a chargeable service basis,
which is the current situation, you may request service, and we may unfortunately
be unable to provide it due to unavailability of parts. After the product has
been out of production for ten years, I find nothing about such a policy to
be reprehensible, immoral, or poor business practice.
There is a reality here related to what is humanly possible for us to do, which
cannot be overcome by wishful thinking.
I also deeply resent the implication that we have in any way cheated you because
you cannot get a second opinion regarding the costs of service. You never were
presented with a bill you had to pay. Your approval was always solicited, after
our technicians advised you of what, in their professional opinion, was necessary
to permit the product to function properly. Since we are the only manufacturer
of the Optacon, there is no rational way in which we could make it possible
for you to get a second opinion, but that is hardly a sound basis on which to
impugn our integrity as a company or the integrity of our individual employees.
You say that your biggest question is, "Whatever happened to the supply-and-demand
concept of service provision?" The answer is that it is still alive and
well, and we do our best to respond to the demand for service and will do so
as long as that is reasonably possible for us. In fact, we go well beyond that,
because we accept a certain level of moral obligation to continue to provide
service for this very important product. If we were to make our decisions based
solely on economic considerations, we would have given up servicing older Optacons
many years ago, since it is not profitable for us and does not yield significant
revenue.
In most of our product lines we do have very strong competition, and our customers
do make choices about what products they will buy. We are very sensitive to
what our customers feel and believe and try to pay much attention to that. That
is the primary reason why I have written this quite lengthy letter to you, because
I believe that I have as much obligation to honor and respect the contributions
of our employees (and prevent their integrity from being unfairly impugned)
as I have an obligation to give very careful consideration to the interests
and needs of our customers, such as yourself.
While we clearly disagree on some important issues, I do respect your opinion.
If you have other thoughts on this matter which you would like to share, I would
welcome hearing further from you.
Please feel free to forward copies of this letter to Mr. Maurer, Mr. Young,
and Ms. Pierce, if you wish to do so.
Sincerely,
Larry Israel, Chairman/President/CEO
Telesensory Systems, Inc.
cc: Soloveychik
Meyer
Vickers
That was Mr. Israel's letter, and it speaks for itself. We close this exchange
of letters with Cynthia Handel's cover letter to the Braille Monitor
when she forwarded the correspondence. Here it is:
March 30, 1997
Willow Street, Pennsylvania
Mrs. Barbara Pierce, Editor
Braille Monitor
Baltimore, Maryland
Dear Mrs. Pierce,
I've enclosed a copy of the letter I received on Saturday, March 29, 1997, from
Larry Israel, President of Telesensory Systems, Inc. This is in response to
my letter of March 15, 1997, to Jill Vickers. Mr. Israel has taken my letter
very personally and has obviously read a lot into it that wasn't there. For
example, he believes that I have had the same Optacon, working well, for the
past twenty-two years. In fact, I have had it replaced once, and the array,
which is a major part of the equipment, replaced on the first Optacon I had.
He also appears to think that, if I believe that his staff has gone out of their
way to perform a service, they deserve thanks and praise for doing their jobs
in addition to payment. However, I have never been in that position with TSI.
Although they generally do an adequate job repairing Optacons, you wouldn't
know what they actually did, since their handwritten service slips are difficult
to read and written in code so that an average person who does not work for
TSI does not know what the abbreviations mean. Finally, despite what Mr. Israel
believes, I have never had a real choice about whether or not to pay one of
their bills. My only choice has been whether or not I wanted my Optacon to be
repaired so I could use it again. If I ask that they repair it, I am expected
to pay my bill, and rightly so.
So, although I don't intend to respond to Mr. Israel's protestations, I believe
you should have his letter and these few thoughts. His letter does make me wonder,
however, if I will receive their high standard of service on my Optacon when
I send it for a check-up for the final time before my service agreement runs
out.
Sincerely,
Cynthia E. Handel
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