As you know following this forum and my work, my brain tends to wander a lot about different ideas.
Today's idea was along the lines of asking an engineer anything that's not brand specific. I'm heading to a Ram HD event on Sunday and for some reason this idea struck me.
Here's what I'm thinking to give you some idea of the questions. Chime in if you have some. IF I get a chance to do this kind of interview, a BIG IF, I think it would be interesting.
Questions:
Do they read comments on YouTube, social media, forums, etc... (side question: how much willpower does it take to not fire back at some people. LOL)
What do they think when someone says their product was built for "planned obsolescence."
(If they have decades of experience)
How do they see new vehicle reliability? Are the new sensors, turbos, multi-gear transmissions making vehicles less reliable?
How much has changed when doing product testing? Are they doing less real-world testing due to computer software doing more of the work?
When a recall happens, what do they think about it? Do they question their work?
How much do they fight with the bean counters or product planners for their parts of the vehicle?
What is 1 or 2 things they have heard from consumers, the media, YouTube channels, etc... that's just flat out wrong?
Today's idea was along the lines of asking an engineer anything that's not brand specific. I'm heading to a Ram HD event on Sunday and for some reason this idea struck me.
Here's what I'm thinking to give you some idea of the questions. Chime in if you have some. IF I get a chance to do this kind of interview, a BIG IF, I think it would be interesting.
Questions:
Do they read comments on YouTube, social media, forums, etc... (side question: how much willpower does it take to not fire back at some people. LOL)
What do they think when someone says their product was built for "planned obsolescence."
(If they have decades of experience)
How do they see new vehicle reliability? Are the new sensors, turbos, multi-gear transmissions making vehicles less reliable?
How much has changed when doing product testing? Are they doing less real-world testing due to computer software doing more of the work?
When a recall happens, what do they think about it? Do they question their work?
How much do they fight with the bean counters or product planners for their parts of the vehicle?
What is 1 or 2 things they have heard from consumers, the media, YouTube channels, etc... that's just flat out wrong?