Lance Camper’s office and manufacturing team
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Lance Camper’s customer service and parts team
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Gary Conley, National Sales Manager, standing on a Lance drawer
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Charlie Sweeny, Lance’s brochure, advertising, and web site designer
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Gary Conley, National Sales Manager, shows us a Lance quality control checklist
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David Oseguerra measures and drills a roof into the cabinets below
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The Lance slide out production line
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Lance’s two camper assembly lines
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A new camper is pushed off the assembly line to be tested
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A slide-out is installed in the final stages of production
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After leaving the assembly line, campers are tested and detailed
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Lance has between 80 and 200 campers in inventory at any time
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Lancaster, California – Moments before we pulled up to Lance
Camper we received a call from Norm Jacobson, Marketing Manager.
Norm was pleased to hear of our imminent arrival and would be meeting
us out front. We no sooner parked the camper than Norm came out
to greet us. He told us that there had been a meeting about our
visit and that our two days at Lance had been scheduled to ensure that
we learned as much as possible.
As it was late in the evening before our first day with Lance, Norm
invited us to dinner. This is when we discovered Norm’s
proclivity for acceleration, and how. A few minutes later we
arrived at a restaurant and talked about the truck camping industry,
marketing, and trends. Lance’s marketing efforts with print
advertising, their web site, and annual brochure are legendary and it
was good to talk with the person who championed those efforts.
Handing Over Our Harley
On schedule, we began our first day at Lance’s Customer Service
building. We walked in the door and met Jim Allen, Customer
Service Manager. We had emailed Jim a list of minor things that
needed adjustment on our camper and he was ready to take care of them
immediately. If you bring your Lance Camper to the factory for
service, you will most likely be working with Jim. From what we
experienced, Jim really knows Lance Campers and can quickly diagnose
problems and prescribe solutions.
Before we handed over the camper keys, we moved Harley, our truck
camping cat, inside the building so he wouldn’t be in the way while the
camper was being serviced. Lucky for Harley, the secretary and
the Dealer Parts team gave him more attention than he could have
possibly deserved.
Meeting Paul Harris and His Team
After handing over our cat and camper we met Paul Harris, General
Manager of Parts and Service. Paul came to work with Lance eight
months ago after running his own Lance dealership in Eugene, Oregon for
many years.
Paul gave us a tour of the Customer Service building starting with the
conference room. There Lance holds regular seminars with fifteen
dealer technicians at a time from all over the country. The
technicians get parts and service training on truck support equipment
and service installation techniques. They’re also given a factory
tour, learn tips for customer walk throughs, and take a completion test
for Lance certification.
Then Paul walked us down the hall and introduced us to Doug
Means. Doug’s full-time job is answering customer
questions. If you have a question about your Lance camper, you
can call Doug at extension 255. Across the hall from Doug is Rod
Morgan’s office. Rod has been at Lance for twelve years and had
twenty years of Lance dealership experience before that. Paul
told us that Rod has a well known Lance catalog collection dating back
to the 1960’s and now answers questions from Lance’s 100 plus
dealership network.
After meeting Doug and Rod, Paul escorted us into the service and parts
warehouse area located in the rear of the building. There we saw
about a half-dozen Lance campers being worked on including our truck
and camper. The service area was very clean, open, and bright.
Paul then introduced us to Steve Castaneda, Lance’s Parts Warehouse
Supervisor. Steve has been at Lance for twenty years, eighteen of
which were on the camper production line. Steve told us how Lance
keeps its inventory bar coded and live on the parts warehouse computers
allowing him to know exactly what they have in inventory and where it
was.
To wrap up our morning with Customer Service, Paul took us into his
office to show us Lance’s online dealer parts catalog. On the
dealer only web site, Lance posts service and technical bulletins and
gives dealers the ability to directly order parts online. Once a
part has been ordered, a dealer can track the order through the web
site with UPS tracking. Paul told us that parts ordered by
dealers are almost always shipped same day.
Over to Lance HQ
After a good start with Paul and the Customer Service team, Gary
Conley, National Sales Manager, drove us over to Lance’s main building
for the rest of our day. Shortly after arriving, Gary escorted us
into Lance’s boardroom for a meeting with himself and Norm.
In the boardroom we were immediately drawn to a large bay window that
overlooks the production area. While took in the dense
manufacturing scene in front of us, Norm walked in and we all sat down
at the boardroom table. Gary showed us a recent National RV
Dealers Association (RVDA) dealer satisfaction report which polls 106
dealers on thirty-eight RV manufacturers. Norm called to our
attention a row of award plates behind him and explained that Lance has
won the RVDA Quality Circle Award for eight of the past ten years by
scoring 80% or higher in all polled categories including aggressive
sales promotions, innovative product design, and competitive product
quality. Gary said that only three to four RV manufactures a year
are typically awarded each year.
Next Norm pulled out a stack of the customer surveys that are sent in
with new camper warranty cards and invited us to take a look.
Norm explained that all eleven managers are required to read each and
every customer survey and sign-off that they have read it, including
Jack Cole, Lance Camper’s President. You read that right; if you
send in the customer survey for your new Lance Camper, the President
and the top brass are all required to read it.
After reviewing the customer surveys, our conversation jumped around a
bit. Norm talked about how there are between 1,100 and 1,300
Lance Campers in dealer inventories at any given time plus between 80
and 200 campers at Lance. He also said that by February 15th they
will have more camper orders than they can fill.
We asked Gary how he handles production forecasting. Gary
explained that he taps into his twenty-five plus years experience at
Lance and takes a careful look at trends in the industry. He also
tracks what’s selling on dealer lots on a monthly basis. Norm
added that there are different kinds of camper buyers depending on the
time of year. In December, buyers are typically people who are
planning a trip and have conducted a lot of research. In June,
buyers are typically more impulse buyers. This kind of
information tells the management team what campers to build, when to
build them, and in what quantities.
The Boardroom
Lunch was brought in while we were talking followed by members of
Lance’s senior team. Sitting at the table was Jack Cole,
President, Jeff Souleles, Vice-President, Gary Conley, National Sales
Manager, Geoff Ford, Plant Manager, Paul Harris, General Manager
of Service and Parts, Jan Kurahara, General Counsel/Chief Administrative Officer, Norm Jacobson,
Marketing Manager, Jim Allen, Customer Service Manager, Les Fowler,
Product Development Manager, and us, of course.
Sitting behind closed doors in Lance’s boardroom and taking questions
from their entire senior staff was one of those moments when we had to
ask ourselves, “How did we get here?” Suddenly the atmosphere was
quite serious, perhaps more so than at any other time on our
tour. We discussed industry trends, Truck Camper Magazine, and
how we can work together to
effectively grow the truck camper
market. About an hour later we left the boardroom feeling a bit
like we’d been on the Apprentice, only it was a very positive
experience and no one got fired.
Meeting Charlie Sweeny, and Beyond
After the boardroom, we walked down the hall to meet Charlie Sweeny,
Lance’s Creative Director . Charlie designs Lance’s web site,
brochure, advertising, and sell sheets. If you see something in
print or on the internet from Lance, Charlie designed it.
For our next Lance tour installment, we’ll get into the factory, walk
the assembly lines, peek behind the research and development curtain,
and reveal a surprise last minute meeting. Stay tuned.
For more information about Lance Camper Manufacturing, visit their web site at www.lancecamper.com .
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