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The Rural Voice, 1991-07, Page 34GICRATES FOR 40 TRUST COMPANIES 9.90 % 37 Months iV 0 5 years All Investments Guaranteed & Insured ° No Fees or Charges - Fuds Transferred VIA Chartered Banks INVESTMENTS r' GODERICn 1-800-265-5503 HURON BRUCI FlI I.D ONTARIO NOM 110 AgVise. Mervyn J. Erb Agronomist Independent Crop Consultant I'lil.lil'llON : (519) 233-7100 MORILO: (519) 661-9451 READY TO LAY PULLETS BABY CHICKS WHITE & BROWN EGG LAYERS FISHER POULTRY FARM INC. AYTON ONT NOG 1C0 519-665-7711 DEPENDABLE FARM DRAINAGE • Farm Drainage • Backhoe Service • Septic Systems • General Repair Service K.M.M. FARM DRAINAGE Ron McCallum Call Today Walton 887-6428 30 THE RURAL VOICE 'O EN.IN A' WOMAN HANDLES SERVICE MANAGER POSITION AT TRACTOR DEALERSHIP "Service. Joanne speaking." "Can I speak to the service man- ager?" "You are." Such phone conversations are less common as word spreads that a wo- man now heads customer service at Huron Tractor, the largest and most productive John Deere service depart- ment in Canada. "As far as we know, Joanne Traut is the only female John Deere service deparunent manager in Canada," ac- cording to her boss Herb Verbeek, general manager and co-owner of the Exeter dealership. Verbeek notes there is no gender bias at Huron Tractor. "The person who can best do a job, gets that job. We stress teamwork. Everyone must work together and respect each other." As management of the service de- partment became too much for one individual, an executive decision was made in 1989 to divide duties between customer service and technical sup- port. Joanne was put in charge of the former. "It wasn't a tough choice for us. Joanne doesn't need to know all the minute technicalities — that's the job of her counterpart. The service department is detail -oriented, and in my opinion women arc better at detail than men. The customer service man- ager's job is a front-line position. That person gets all the calls if some- thing breaks down in the field, and a woman is more sympathetic," Verbeek asserts, adding "We are very happy with Joanne." Joanne is equally happy with Huron Tractor. "The company has guided and supported me from day one," she reflects. Joanne held a variety of jobs after high school, but her hopes were riding on an application submitted to Huron Tractor, and she was hired as a service clerk in 1980. Initial duties included work orders, gas audits, and balancing time cards. On her own initiative, she gradually took on more responsibilities to reduce the service manager's work Toad. "The more I got into it, the more I wanted to do," she says. "What I Teamed, I learned through fellow employees and the owners." Among Joanne's acquired skills are accounting, budgeting, customer relations, and scheduling. She directs an annual service inspection plan im- plemented in 1987 whereby farmers are contacted to bring a machine in for overhaul when one of the company's 16 skilled technicians has time to give it full attention. "Some want to wait to the last minute, and we can't handle 25 com- bines at once," Joanne points out. She has picked up a general knowledge of farm equipment tech- nology. This enables her to quickly respond to a call by determining what area of expertise is needed, and which technician to assign. Joanne is proud that Huron Tractor's service department was one of eight from an eligible 200 nation- wide to qualify as a Superservice Dealer in a program inaugurated by John Deere in 1989. She intends to maintain that standard. Verbeek didn't hesitate to promote Joanne, partially because of the good examples of his two daughters. One daughter, Anita, is a partner is an 80 - sow farrow to finish operation near Tillsonburg, while the other, Charlene, who has a M.A. in Speech Pathology, works at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto. by YRO