You really think customers listen? I had a lady blame us for lightning
hitting her TV. People are going to blame you regardless of how much
money you lose on them. We also keep routers separate of our
responsibility. We do require our customers to have one at the time of
the installation and we set it up for them.  We explain that our
responsibility starts at the little white/black box (injector) includes
the cable and the unit on the roof. Anything else is their problem.

 

We have a nifty screen that pops up when their router is on DHCP letting
them know that they're "internet is working great! But oops! Your router
has lost its configuration" "here's the instructions in this pdf or you
can call us for a $30 router setup." "you're also welcome to bring in
the router for us to configure free of charge."

 

From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Darin Steffl
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2012 9:43 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Customer Routers

 

They should have no reason to do that and if they do, they're only
causing problems for themselves with double or triple NAT. I make it
clear when I install that the router I give them is the only router they
can use and I will fix/replace it free of charge if THEY don't break it.
If they cause an issue with my equipment or by adding another router and
they expect me to fix it, there will be a charge. If they follow my
instructions, they will be taken care of.

On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 6:08 PM, Justin Wilson <li...@mtin.net> wrote:

How do you handle the customers who then put a link sys behind your
provided router?

 

From: Darin Steffl <dcsho...@gmail.com>
Reply-To: WISPA General List <wireless@wispa.org>

Date: Thursday, April 26, 2012 6:38 PM


To: WISPA General List <wireless@wispa.org>

Subject: Re: [WISPA] Customer Routers

 

        I understand not wanting to touch the router but I want to
control everything up until I hand off to the customer's equipment which
means I provide the router.  I hear from too many people that blame
their ISP like Charter or the phone company for bad internet when much
of the time it is their own wireless router.  That same bad mouthing
will happen for my company if the customer continues to use crappy
routers so I thought I would provide one to them, configure it, lock it,
and replace it if it ever fails.  That way, I am handing out something
reliable that works and if they need help, I'm there to fix it for them.
In my opinion, that should cut down on tech support calls if the router
is stable. 

         

        I am currently testing the Ubiquiti Airrouters and the TP-Link
TL-WR841N

        On Thu, Apr 26, 2012 at 5:34 PM, Josh Luthman
<j...@imaginenetworksllc.com> wrote:

                I would avoid the 751 for now based on my hell of an
experience.  That's just me.

                Josh Luthman
                Office: 937-552-2340
                Direct: 937-552-2343
                1100 Wayne St
                Suite 1337
                Troy, OH 45373

                On Apr 26, 2012 6:27 PM, "Justin Wilson"
<li...@mtin.net> wrote:

                        My Take on routers.

                         

                        Off the shelf routers are the #1 trouble issue
on the Zig network.  Anything from gaming issues, to speed issues, to
reliability issues. They account for roughly 92% of all calls.  The
first thing we have the customer do after reboots of everything is
bypass the router. Most of the time this shows the customer it's their
router, or something behind it.

                         

                        In our past life we started out selling routers.
We looked for the cheapest ones we could find, which at the time were
dlink. What we found was customers then considered that our equipment.
"Well the router you sold me went out." was something we heard a lot. Or
"I reset the router now you have to come out and configure it"

                         

                        What we are doing this time around is we have
only one officially approved router. The Mikrotik 751. We have a local
computer shop which stocks them and sets them up.  What he does as far
as support is between him and the customer. I am pretty sure he tells
them he is just a retailer for the product and if they want his help he
will gladly charge them his hourly rate. All about expectations up
front.

                         

                        By doing all of this we are not in the router
business, but the customer gets a solid product and cuts down on our
calls. In turn we have a happier customer base. And if need be, we can
actually login to their router and do torch, etc.

                         

                        Justin

                         

                        From: Darin Steffl <dcsho...@gmail.com>
                        Reply-To: WISPA General List
<wireless@wispa.org>
                        Date: Thursday, April 26, 2012 2:31 PM
                        To: <wireless@wispa.org>
                        Subject: [WISPA] Customer Routers

                         

                                Hey guys,

                                 

                                What are some of you providing for
customer wireless routers if you include them in the install as I do?  I
currently have a batch of 10 Ubiquiti Air Routers and the first two I
pulled out are giving me some problems.  Could be a bad batch.

                                 

                                I am also looking at TP-Link as they are
about $30 on Amazon with external antennas and pretty good reviews.

                                 

                                TP-Link TL-WR841N

                                 

                                What are you guys using?

                                 

                                -- 
                                Darin Steffl

        
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        -- 
        Darin Steffl

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-- 
Darin Steffl

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