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Amazing Client Service From... Aurora?


TassoBarbasso

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I think it's no secret that Aurora's client service used to be horrible. Actually, worse than that. In the FP community, this used to be a running joke/nightmare, with people complaining of pens getting lost for months or years in the dark, secretive meanders of the Turin-based company's far-from-polite client service. I myself had something that can only be described as a nightmarish experience dealing with them, back in 2013. They did everything wrong you could possibly do in client service and eventually it took something like a thousand emails + the intervention of the original seller, + the help of the local representative for the UK, and a lot of time to get my pens back, in a far-from optimal condition. Eventually I ended up having to go to a nibmeister anyway...

 

... So it was with sheer terror and fear that I realized, a few months ago, that I would have to send my beloved 85th Anniversary, a wedding present with huge emotional value for me, out for repair... :(

 

The very last thing I wanted to do was to send it to Aurora, fearing to get bogged down in yet another mess like that. I contacted some pen repairers I know, but none of them had the parts needed for repair. So I had to give in: I sent the pen to Aurora. Well, I had to suffer anyway, as I already had to send in another pen, an Optima, for the replacement of the gold trims on the cap, a far-from-easy repair job which i had been delaying for ages, precisely because I didn't want to deal with said customer care.

 

So I sent the pens and started to tremble...

 

And here's where the surprises begun :huh:

 

First, they immediately - and politely - replied to my emails. :) Ok, nothing special here.

 

Then, contrary to what happened last time, they gave clear, precise and useful information. They kept me posted about the internal conversations they were having about the best way to replace the Optima's trims.

 

The person in charge of the whole process, the polite, professional and competent Erika Garrafa (which I can only hope will be given a big promotion and a pay rise!), was extremely supportive throughout the whole process. She was always cordial, timely in her responses, proactive, and very willing to adapt to the client's requests (and I can be a real pain in the butt as a client, as I work in client services myself, and know what "good service" should be like).

 

Ms Garrafa even took her time to answer to some not-so-important emails about nib style and stuff like that.

Up until that point I had seen such good client service only from their competitors at Montegrappa.
I was amazed but still skeptical: they will screw up at some point, I'm sure :lol:

 

And here's the greatest surprise: the cost of repair was affordable, nothing insane as I feared; the pens were delivered to them and they immediately got them fixed: instead of waiting for months, I had to wait only for a few days. Ms Garrafa kept me informed throughout the whole process, and when a minor issue arose, she was quick to apologize, as opposed to how her colleagues behaved 5 years ago, when they were constantly trying to shift the blame on the client. She informed me (without me even having to ask or negotiate!) that the company would take charge of any additional shipping costs due to the issue. A really nice touch that any customer would be delighted to be on the receiving end of :)

 

The pens arrived today, after what seems like a negligible amount of waiting time. The quality of repair work is astonishing. Both pens seem brand new. They even did some minor fixing that I hadn't even asked :o The 85th Anniversary's filling system works again, while the Aurora Optima now sports a magnificent, brand-new, old-style gold trim, instead of the previous one where gold was wearing off.

 

I am amazed.

 

Aurora has massively increased the quality of its client service and its repair team is top-notch. And I'm not saying so because I'm comparing them only with their "old" way of doing things. I'm comparing them with their competitors. And by contrast, other companies I dealt with in the past had great customer care, but poor repair service, or vice-versa. Aurora managed to nail both.

 

I don't know if this is because Ms Erika Garrafa is such a great person to work with and very conscientious in what she does, or if it's a new company policy. But either way it's been great to deal with Aurora's client service...

 

... and trust me, this is a sentence I would have never thought I would one day be able to write :D

 

I've always been a huge collector of Aurora (I have 14!), and this brand has always had a huge emotional role for me: my first "serious" pen was an Aurora, and my father and my grandfather both used Auroras. Cheaper Auroras are the pens I give as presents when I try to "convert" someone to FPs. My father's graduation pen was a Hastil. So it's a passion that goes back three generations. But in recent years I had become much more wary of buying more expensive Aurora pens because of the risk of having to deal with their customer care.

 

This is definitely going to change now. They make the most beautiful pens, the best nibs, and now they are also able to provide great service should problems arise. I can certainly see myself saving up for an Aurora Internazionale, or ANY iteration of the Optima or 88, in the very near future :P

 

No affiliation, only a formerly-very-disappointed-and-now-very-happy customer. :)

 

 

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Aurora has massively increased the quality of its client service and its repair team is top-notch. And I'm not saying so because I'm comparing them only with their "old" way of doing things. I'm comparing them with their competitors. And by contrast, other companies I dealt with in the past had great customer care, but poor repair service, or vice-versa. Aurora managed to nail both.

Thank you for your report! It gives me comfort, as I've now increased my Aurora collection from nil to four in two months, and contemplating a fifth (and possibly a sixth), but with concerns about the durability of Aurolide and the quality of Aurora's repair service at the back of my mind. (Only one out of the four has an Aurolide body.)

 

I was umm-ing and ahh-ing about whether to keep my Aurora 88 Sigaro Blu or return it in spite of a good price, but you've given me a bit more confidence in it; and now, once inked up, I love writing with it.

I endeavour to be frank and truthful in what I write, show or otherwise present, when I relate my first-hand experiences that are not independently verifiable; and link to third-party content where I can, when I make a claim or refute a statement of fact in a thread. If there is something you can verify for yourself, I entreat you to do so, and judge for yourself what is right, correct, and valid. I may be wrong, and my position or say-so is no more authoritative and carries no more weight than anyone else's here.

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Thank you for your report of the updated customer service.

 

I hope it will never be needed for my new A88 Saturno but your experiences are a reassurance.

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Good news! I have a cracked Optima Demo cap that needs to be replaced. Are you sending these from the US, do you go directly? It used to be though the distributor Kenro (before they were sold) which was lousy.

 

PS Can you share the email of said lady?

Edited by Calabria

"If you can spend a perfectly useless afternoon in a perfectly useless manner, you have learned how to live."

– Lin Yu-T'ang

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I sent my Aurora Africa on October 16 to Kenro & it was sent to Aurora in Italy to have the broken piston replaced; I received notice today that it has been returned, repaired & is on route to me for delivery Thursday.

 

Since I don't have the pen in hand, I am only presuming the repair was successful & if so, I just wanted to offer a recent example of another Kenro experience, which is FAR improved from a few years back when I sent a Nettuno to Kenro to have a nib switched. I was reluctant to repeat the experience but am hopeful that this time will be an example of their improved service.

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Barkingpig - but October is a long time ago ...

"If you can spend a perfectly useless afternoon in a perfectly useless manner, you have learned how to live."

– Lin Yu-T'ang

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You are indeed correct but I am pleased to say the pen arrived today & was repaired with a VERY well greased piston; it was a delight to refill it with its favored ink.

 

I have to say my second experience with Kenro's service is a far better experience than my first & I was reluctant to send the pen to them when I discovered the piston detached from the pen. But the alternative to hunt about for someone other than Aurora to replace the pen, convinced me I should send it in. I abstained from sending it in August since that is the vacation MONTH for all Italian factories & just didn't get it out until October. It was surely not a "quick" turnaround but I waited far longer the first time to merely have a nib exchanged, while this was a replacement of the pen's filling mechanism.

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  • 5 months later...

I am dealing with Aurora service 3 months and counting....I will not buy an Aurora pen ANYMORE ... :angry:

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  • 2 weeks later...

I had my first experience with Aurora service just the end of last summer. I sent two Optimas in for repair (repair to the filling mechanism on both and replacement of the feed on one) through Kenro.

 

It wasnt particularly quick, in part because I sent the pens to Kenro in mid August, and Italy is effectively closed for much of August and into September. The pens were returned, beautifully repaired, in early November, and the cost was very reasonable.

 

Overall I was pleased.

Edited by Frank_70
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