(from left) Tyler Kronebusch, Dan Orser, Clarence Oosterhoff and Matthew Giesbrecht from Babine Truck & Equipment of Prince George, Canada earned first place at the 2012-2013 Volvo Trucks North American VISTA World Championshp semifinals.

(from left) Tyler Kronebusch, Dan Orser, Clarence Oosterhoff and Matthew Giesbrecht from Babine Truck & Equipment of Prince George, Canada earned first place at the 2012-2013 Volvo Trucks North American VISTA World Championshp semifinals.

Service technicians from Babine Truck & Equipment of Prince George, Canada earned first place at the 2012-2013 Volvo Trucks North American Vista World Championship semifinals.

Conducted every two years, the competition recognizes technician excellence among Volvo dealer service personnel. By finishing first, Babine Truck & Equipment claims a spot among the best 32 teams in the world and will compete at the Vista World Finals June 25, 2013 in Gothenburg, Sweden.
 
Members of the winning team – Tyler Kronebusch, Dan Orser, Matthew Giesbrecht and Clarence Oosterhoff – out-performed 208 other teams representing Volvo dealers across North America. All four members of the Babine team are Volvo Master Technicians, the highest level of certification for service technicians. Master technicians typically have more than two years of work experience, more than 115 hours of training and have completed a series of tests to achieve and maintain the status.
 
The Vista 2012-2013 (Volvo International Service Training Award) began in August 2012 and included three rounds of online competition involving technical questions. The field was narrowed to five teams of finalists from the U.S. and Canada who traveled to Volvo Trucks’ North American headquarters in Greensboro, N.C. for the final round. The other finalists represented M & K Quality Truck Sales from Byron Center, Mich., Burr Truck & Trailer Sales of Vestal, N.Y., Truck Enterprises Inc. from Harrisonburg, Va. and Mobile Fleet Service of Yakima, Wash.
 
In Greensboro, the finalists were tested on their knowledge of service and parts literature and ability to look up parts and service information within the Volvo system. Contestants also had to troubleshoot pre-determined faults placed on two Volvo trucks and a Volvo D13 engine.
 
Participation in the competition requires a significant dedication of time and effort. Each of the five finalist teams invested up to 34 hours of additional service training throughout the process.
 
The best preparation for the competition, according to Babine’s Matthew Giesbrecht “is doing our everyday jobs. We have to be keen and aware of every truck that comes into our shop, diagnose the issue, fix it to the best of our  ability and get the customer satisfied.”
 
The biennial Vista competition began as a national event in Scandinavia in 1957 and expanded to a global event in 1977. The competition is open to all aftermarket employees in the service network. This year 16,710 people forming 4,391 teams from 93 countries participated worldwide.

0 Comments