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Survey
shows US
automakers
making
improvements
All
three
U.S.-based
automakers
are
doing a
better
job of
satisfying
their
customers
than
they
were a
year
ago,
according
to a
recent
survey.
General
Motors
Co.,
Ford
Motor
Co. and
Chrysler
Group
LLC all
posted
significant
gains in
this
year's
American
Customer
Satisfaction
Index
released
Tuesday
by the
University
of
Michigan.
"Although
the
future
will
obviously
be
challenging
for
Detroit,
the rise
in
customer
satisfaction
provides
a much
needed
improvement
in
competitive
standing,"
Claes
Fornell,
the
University
of
Michigan
business
professor
who
heads
the
annual
survey,
said in
a
statement.
Fornell
said
keeping
customers
happy is
key for
the
automakers,
especially
at a
time
when
less
people
are
buying
cars,
because
they
will be
more
likely
to come
back the
next
time
they
need a
new
vehicle.
GM's
Cadillac
and
Toyota's
Lexus
brands
tied for
first
place in
the
survey
with
scores
of 89
out of
100.
That
marked a
4 point
increase
for
Cadillac
from its
2008
results
and a 2
point
improvement
for
Lexus,
which
also
ranked
first in
last
year's
survey.
GM's
Buick
brand,
Honda
and
Ford's
Lincoln
Mercury
vehicles
all
received
an 88.
The
Lincoln
Mercury
score
marked a
5 point
increase
over its
results
for the
previous
year,
while
Buick's
score
rose by
3
points.
BMW
received
an 87,
while
Mercedes,
Toyota
and
Volkswagen
each got
an 86.
Volkswagen's
increase
of 5
points,
or 6.2
percent,
marked
the
biggest
jump
from the
year
before.
Hyundai
received
an 85,
while
the
Chrysler's
namesake
brand
rose 4
points
to 84.
GM's
Saturn
brand
also got
an 84.
The
Chevrolet
and Ford
brands
rose by
4 points
and 3
points
respectively
to 83,
while
GMC fell
by 1
point to
82.
Dodge,
Kia,
Mazda
and
Pontiac
all
received
an 81.
Jeep and
Nissan,
fell to
the
bottom
of the
pack
with a
79 and
78,
respectively.
Nissan
was one
of the
few
brands
to post
a
decrease
from the
year
before,
falling
4
points,
or 4.9
percent.
The
overall
automotive
industry's
score
was 84,
up from
82 the
year
before.
There
were
over
11,000
telephone
surveys
conducted
and
about
5,500
for the
auto
industry
in the
second
quarter
of this
year,
asking
respondents
to rate
their
satisfaction
of the
vehicles
on a
scale of
zero to
100. At
the
industry
level,
the
margin
of error
is plus
or minus
1 point.
At the
company
level it
is plus
or minus
3
points.
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