Skip to main content

LiuGong’s new customer experience facility opens

LiuGong has opened its new Global Customer Experience Centre in Liuzhou, China. The facility is intended to boost cooperation between LiuGong and Liuzhou Vocational and Technical College (LVTC) and also extends LiuGong’s offering to its global dealers and customers. The Customer Experience Centre will be managed by both LiuGong and LVTC as a platform for talent cultivation, service training to LiuGong employees and dealers as well as for its customer experience. The facility can provide multi-functional
March 28, 2017 Read time: 2 mins
269 LiuGong has opened its new Global Customer Experience Centre in Liuzhou, China. The facility is intended to boost cooperation between LiuGong and Liuzhou Vocational and Technical College (LVTC) and also extends LiuGong’s offering to its global dealers and customers.

The Customer Experience Centre will be managed by both LiuGong and LVTC as a platform for talent cultivation, service training to LiuGong employees and dealers as well as for its customer experience. The facility can provide multi-functional support including training, hands-on operations, professional skill appraisal, competition, customer experience, and technology exchange. The initiative will build a practical base for both LiuGong and LVTC to cultivate industry talent within the region, and also allow LiuGong to improve its customer service and enhance after-sales service.

The facility covers an area of 40,000m2 in which the building area is 10,000m2. The construction will be finished in two stages. Work is now completed for the first stage, including practical labs for axles, gearboxes, engines, hydraulic systems, electrical systems of construction equipment. Training classrooms are put into use as well. Work on the second stage will start in July and will include the construction of the outdoor fields which will provide operation and customer experience opportunities.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • LiuGong is investing in its facilities and product line
    November 29, 2012
    The acquisition of the HSW firm making the Dressta bulldozers has been strategically important for LiuGong. This facility is its first factory in Europe and has brought with it a very well-proven product line. The factory has benefited from a number of changes and David Beatenbough, vice president of LiuGong research and development said, “What we’ve found is that every machine tool is old but the maintenance has been tremendous. We’ve only had to replace one or two machine tools. So for this year we’ve bee
  • Hang on for this year’s CASE Rodeo challenge!
    October 3, 2018
    CASE is challenging operators in Europe, Africa and the Middle East to demonstrate their skills in the CASE Rodeo final in Paris in October. Action-packed events will take place at the Paris CASE Customer Care Centre as operators compete for the title of CASE Rodeo Champion 2018. The competition kicked off in February, with the first heat in the Czech Republic followed by events in Italy, the UK, Sweden, the Netherlands, Norway and Denmark. In the rodeo-style championship – since its exception in 2007 - c
  • Caterpillar stages grand opening of new parts distribution centre in Dubai
    March 6, 2013
    Caterpillar employees, executives, dealers and customers, along with local dignitaries, today celebrated the grand opening of the company’s new parts distribution centre in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE). The 46,451m² Middle East Distribution Centre (MEDC) employs 130 people and will further strengthen aftermarket parts support in the East-Africa and Middle East region. The facility will also serve as a regional office for employees from other Caterpillar service groups. The MEDC follows the opening of o
  • Deciding whether to buy new or used equipment
    May 20, 2015
    Customers can face the choice of buying used or new equipment – Dan Gilkes writes. The decision to buy either new or used equipment is almost as old as the construction plant market itself. However some of the reasons for choosing between the two might well be changing, to meet new demands from customers across the world and to cope with a changing supply base. Ever more stringent emissions legislation in Europe, the US and Japan, rapidly developing emerging markets that want the productivity of the latest