Earlier this year, we reported on Corsair's plan to acquire Endor AG, owners of the sim racing specialist Fanatec. That looked somewhat less certain after Endor filed for insolvency in July, but the deal went ahead and Fanatec is now part of Corsair. That includes its debts, manufacturing difficulties, and a raft of upset customers. Nevertheless, Corsair is determined to fix it all, though its CEO admits that «it's certainly not going to be business as usual because business at the moment is not as we'd like it.»
Andy Paul, Corsair's chief executive officer, made the remark in an interview with The Drive and pointed out that the necessary work to resolve everything was already underway. For example, one common complaint from Fanatec's customers was that support was very limited, such as only being available for eight hours per working day.
Corsair says it will take a few months to set up a global 24/7 customer service but once complete it should prevent repetitions of incidents such as untrackable orders that plagued Fanatec, especially during and after the Covid lockdown periods.
Something else that Andy Paul wants to get on top of is the whole manufacturing process because Fanatec was taking months to complete certain orders. «It turns out the factories in China are not full, not busy, so costs are actually in pretty good shape,» Paul noted.
That comment raises a simple question, though. If the factory manufacturing all of Fanatec's parts wasn't at full capacity, why was it taking so long for orders to arrive? It would seem that the company just didn't have the infrastructure in place to deal with so many orders and would routinely sell items that it just didn't have in stock.
Fortunately, Corsair is a much larger operation and its vast portfolio of PC hardware and accessories means it has a significantly better grasp of managing large inventories and orders
«We have very large factories running that produce a lot of stuff. We're going to be able to tune up the
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