Best Buy Says Customers Not Always Right
linuxwrangler writes "Best Buy is one of the retailers that has now decided that the customer is not always right. Best Buy consultant Larry Selden has identified "demon customers" like those who file for a rebate then return the item. OK, I get that one (hey Best Buy: dump those customer-despised rebates and you won't have that problem...). Other categories like customers who only buy during sales are more interesting. Best Buy declined comment on how they are dealing with those customers. Some stores have actually "fired" customers. Welcome to the end result of all that customer information data mining."
The last two paragraphs are a great example of putting in a worthless interview that has nothing to do with an article, solely to defend an undefendable topic.
If best buy is sick of people using rebates, then stop offering them. Rebates work by the majority of people not using them, while thinking they are buying it at a great price. If people are going to use rebates without actually buying the item, Best Buy is going to have to live with that. If they think they can get it both ways, they are wrong. It is just another example of horrible customer service and deception backfiring, and then the company having such a great monopoly that they can somehow blame it on the customers, the very people they rely on to make money. Just absurd.
I would have thought that many of the customers who only buy during sales would be buying a lot more products than if they bought on a semi-regular (non-sale) basis. Surely this means that the customers make up in bulk for the slightly lower profit margin due to sales? After all, the point of sales is to attract a higher product turnover at a lower profit margin, so what are they complaining about?
Disclaimer: The above comment was made while under the influence of too much coding and not enough sleep.
What on earth is wrong with waiting until a sale is on til you buy whatever it is that you have your heart set on?
If it is an urgent purchase that can't wait, then buy it then and there, but if you're happy to wait until whatever it is goes on sale due to it no longer being the newest and shiniest widget, what is wrong with that?
This is penalising people who are swimming against the tide of instant gratification that our credit driven society has pushed.
People have done this from time immemorial in raiding the new years and mid year sales at department stores they don't otherwise shop at
"And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14
Normal costomers like my mom are alright. I mean she thinks, "oh, I need a TV" so she goes to BestBuy or Costco or whatever, finds one that looks pretty, and buys it. Big profits for the store.
If I need a TV, I wait a few weeks until I find a good deal on dealsea or FatWallet. Then I price match to someplace with massive coupon discounts, then I try to even pricematch the rebate. Then if they try to get me to pay for shipping I bitch about it and get that charge taken off. The stores make nothing.
If I was running a business, I wouldn't want people like me as customers. I would want people like my mom. It's just plain business sense.
How dare they pay Best Buy money in order to obtain products they seek to purchase.
In all seriousness, comments like these tell me I should be taking my business elsewhere. Not that I didn't already know ths, but it just reaffirms it. "Firing Customers" is quite possibly the dumbest thing I've heard today. And that's saying something. It goes against the whole idea behind a business; that is, to get customers and meet their needs while making a tidy profit. (Perhaps they believe their profit isn't quite tidy enough with people who use rebates and buy sale items.)
Home electronics resellers have a pretty spotty past - seems they expand exponentially, then raise their prices and reduce their service to customer-unfriendly levels, then they go bankrupt. It's a constant cycle caused by cutthroat competition and low margins.
Best Buy is just summiting the mountain and headed to the downhill side of the cycle. Profits are up. The problem is that i'm not going there anymore because the prices are pretty exorbitant. I'm sure others are getting the same impression.
They are following in the path of Crazy Eddie, The Wiz, Circuit City, and lots of smaller outfits.
HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
...and I don't think I like to be bundled in with people attempting fraud. I'm not high maintenance but I can spot a deal. Either you're selling something or your not. Don't start trying to second-guess what I might buy next. Maybe I'm taking advantage of a cheap offer to find out how good your service is...
I run a small business, and sometimes I refuse to take on a client because I can tell they're going to be more trouble than they're worth. Why would I want to bother with someone who's going to constantly bitch about prices, try to wheel and deal me, and make me work twice as hard as the average customer? I don't need the money that bad.
It's probably the same thing for Best Buy. Why would they want to bother with people they know are going to take up their customer service reps' time, which costs money, and thereby result in no profit for Best Buy? There is no "right" to shop at Best Buy. There's probably a "we reserve the right to refuse service to any customer at any time" notice somewhere near the entrance to the store. Best Buy is simply choosing to exercise that right.
We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
Your "friends" sound like a bunch of assholes.
Now, mailing in a rebate then returning an item is unethical on the customer's part (didn't think it was possible since most require original UPC).
However, it's been my experience that BB more often then occasionally won't have a rebate item on stock/shelves right when the store opens on the first day of the rebate sale. 3 cases where I've tried to get a rebate item (modem, HD, monitor) I'd get there and be the first few when the doors open only to find the item NOT on the shelf. Ask a salesperson and they'll say there's no more in stock. When questioned about the promotion, it's the usual B.S. "The item has been on sale for the past week, so we ran out".
I see rebate sales going out of popularity soon. I won't dare touch BB, and once great-for-quick-rebates-turnaounds OfficeMax has gone down the crapper recently for denying legitimate rebate submissions. The second "denied" rebate from OM, I really let the guy on the other end have it on the phone. (got approved after "resubmitting") Since that day, OM's made it on my shitlist along with BB. My sanity and karma isn't worth it. There's only so much crap people in general will take, and more will start to ignore them and not care as word-of-mouth spreads. Perhaps that's the goal of some retailers...
$cat
I think people should read the articles they submit. Best Buy did NOT say they fired customers. Also, in my experience, Best Buy has been a better retailer than Wal Mart, Circuit City, Target and the like. I've received great service and pricing there and 100% satisfaction when I needed to return a dud digital camera.
SEARS dropped the "customer is always right" motto a long time ago and replaced it with "The customer isn't always right, but they are never wrong".
Lets face it, if you haven't worked retail then you simply don't know what hell is. Customers are often devoid of communication skills, arrogant, flat out dumb or in such a god damn hurry that they just don't care about anyone or anything else. We've become a consumer culture where everyone says "gimme!" with complete disregard. I'm not even gonna get into the number of thefts frauds etc. Just enter a Fry's Electronics some time and try to find an item on the shelf that doesn't have a return label already on it.
People suck most of the time, especially during the holidays. Sales or no sales everyone is pinching pennies and it's usually the rich pricks pinching them hardest and giving you a hard time for no reason other than to be a complete prick.
What I find ironic is that Xmas is the worst time for all of this. A time supposedly for giving, for your fellow man, love, compassion etc etc which when put into perspective is complete hypocrisy from what it really is. Greed, parking lot arguments, massive crowds, bad tempers, increased suicide rates, fraud. I could go on and on. The fact is, people suck whether they are shoppers or the assholes who own the store.
I'm no fan of Best Buy, I go only once in a rare while. But I don't see them as evil or wrong in this. You and I can decide not to patron them, they however have no fucking clue we are coming or what we'll do when we get there. As far as I am concerned they have the right to refuse service to anyone they like.
Honestly if someone takes the time to do a bit of research and sift through the ads in order to get free shit from promotional deals from companies like BestBuy that have horseshit customer service to begin with (anyone else remember the Native American dude arrested for trying to get his instant rebate on his pre-ordered NVidia card a while back?), then more power to 'em. Or maybe I'm just bitter because I've gotten screwed on so many of these rebate deals in the past.
"Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned for SEGA. ..."
As a person who has (thankfully no longer) worked retail, I can tell you that this very often doesn't work. If it's clear that you're going to be an ass just to get your way, a lot of managers will fight back.
What's funny is when someone would go "Oh yeah, I'll go over to store-in-next-city and they'll return it". So I call the closest few branches of our store and say "Hey, this guy blew up his radio and want's a refund, don't give it to him", and they don't.
Being a prick isn't always the best route.
I've found the best route is to be as understanding as possible w/the clerk and they will often help you out. For example, I had a cell phone die, and they wanted to repair instead of replace it. I calmly talked to the repair manager "Look, I know about your policy. I've been in your position and I know what a pain in the ass this is... thing is, I gotta business trip tomorrow, and I REALLY need it, " etc. etc. She was like "ok, I understand" and helped me out.
I made sure to thank her again the next time I went to that store, and they got my business. When my burner needed service, they expedited it for me.
Oh, and Mods.... this fellow might be abrasive, but it's not a Troll, c'mon...
"Faith: Belief without evidence in what is told by one who speaks without knowledge, of things without parallel." - A.B.
There'd be nothing illegal about programming the store computer to detect the phone number or credit card of people who have more-frequent-than usual claims against the "purchase protection plan" schemes and then make sure to forget to prompt the salesperson to try to pitch the scheme to such people... or for that mater, raising the price for such people if they want that plan.
It's only illegal descrimination when you're manipulating prices or offers based on the so called "protected classes" mentioned in the laws. "One who frequently breaks stuff" is not such a class...
" This reminds me of a funny story."
That statement is only half right.
heh
Actually, I believe we have entered an era where PSP arn't as bad of a deal as they used to. In the race to get items for the lowest price as possible, manufacturing is cutting back to the point where stuff doesn't last as long as it used to.
I bought a cheap DVD player recently, and I bought the 'extended warrenty' for 4 years. Cost me 9 bucks. The DVD playes cost me 50. So for 59 bucks, I am gaurenteed to to have a DVD player for 4 years. If this POS dvd player doesn't crap out at least once, I will be surprised.
I mean, buy super cheap, get the extended warentee for a few bucks, and then when it breaks, you gte a new one, which will i all likly hood be an upgrade from the one you bought, because that one won't be sold anymore.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
Rebates, as compared to simply lowering the price, are designed to take advantage of people who will forget to fill out the forms, or who will make an error in doing so. Perhaps stores and manufacturers who try to take advantage of consumers in this way shouldn't be surprised when consumers try to take advantage back...
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The problem is not necessarily with the company, but with society in general.
Who of us has not heard the phrase "the customer is always right". And I'm not just talking from a retailers point of view; I'm referring to parents, friends, newspapers, television, etc. What these sources fail to qualify is that this phrase has power only to the end of the customers desires. And this is what retail is supposed to be for; the customer knows what they want, and the retailer provides the product that meets the customers needs. Everybody wins! But society has bred a noticeable few retailers that care only about themselves, producing a noticeable number of customers who are "always right" on every topic, thus breeding a vicious cycle.
Retailers, stop trying to deceive your customers, you can trust them to buy your product if you give them what they need!
Customers, stop assuming that you you can get a deal just by demanding it, kicking and screaming. We all don't get a commission, and we all can't lower your price by X%!
Alternatively, do some research yourself. Go into the store knowing what you want to buy. Talk to the sales person, negotiate price, and if its going nowhere, leave. Don't walk in assuming you can get a 25% discount on whatever you like, especially when markups on most consumer electronics run below 10%!
Maybe in the world of mindless retail, "the customer is always right" but this is absolutely NOT the case in other industries. As a developer and technology consultant, one of the most significant responsibilities I have is translating the customer's needs into something real and functional. In almost every case this involves at some point, me telling the customer what he wants may not be practical, economical, or even viable.
I vehemently believe that behind EVERY botched tech job, there was at least one greedy, obsequious player that was too afraid of telling the customer he is WRONG.
A few years back my company turned down a job for one of Stephen Spielburg's companies because what they wanted to do was ridiculous. We knew from the beginning that a bunch of detached executives had an idea for a net-based solution that would backfire on them, and we choose to not be the sacrificial lamb when the whole thing imploded. I lost some potential money in that deal, but I'm certain I would have been much worse off trying to patch the fatally flawed system they suggested we develop. Not a month goes by where I don't have to have one of these types of conversations with customers who want the earth, sun, moon and Jesus Christ piled on top of a rich creme filling that will rot in a few months time.
In the area of technology and application development, it's almost imperative for the customer to defer to the wisdom and superior working experience of the IT professional.
Back to the world of retail, how many of us have been in a store and saw some mindless consumer drool over a product that we knew was crap. Every day the goofballs in places like Best Buy have to nod and accommodate these people, even when, among the few employees that have a clue, are fully-aware the customer might as well toss their money down a drain.
Life is too short to go through that. I am so thankful I'm in a position where I have clients who respect the wisdom of my recommendations. If you're not there, you might want to strive to get there and not be a slave to the all the goofy, destructive, superficial mantras corporate america tries to brainwash consumers with.
You sure will.
In a lot of ways I think Best Buy is a pain in the butt. Let's start with rebates.
But at the same time, anyone who says "the customer is always right" has never worked retail. Contrary to popular belief, at least 90 percent of the time the customer is full of shit. In the past, businesses only let them *think* they were right. Most businesses had to take that line, because they had a limited number of customers in a given location, and they wanted to make everyone happy. Thanks to an era of retailers on every street corner and nationwide sales via the internet, those days are over. I will admit that there are a lot of instances where businesses are very guilty of poor practices and poor customer support. But there are just as many instances, if not more, where the "customer" should be told to go shove his head up his ass and shuffle it on out the door.
Lets start with customers who regularly come in to a store, tie up a sales person asking endless questions, then go home and buy the item on the internet from a mailorder business. And before anyone fires up a reply saying "well then, the store should lower its prices", no brick-and-mortar retailer will ever be able to match the price of a mail-order only business, and you are being totally unrealistic (and very ignorant of business) expecting them to do so.
I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
My old man was a cheapskate, but he grew up in Europe without a lot of money. I was with him one trip when he pulled up to the Texaco in his Jaguar and bought $1 worth of gas. (OK, that was 2 gallons in those days, but still...) That would keep him going until the Esso where he could use his Esso Credit Card. Oh, and he got a fantastic deal on the Jaguar...
I don't have that kind of brass, or I'd be the "you're fired" customer. If I go to Joe's Eats, I don't know what a burger costs til I walk in the door and read the menu, and I don't know how good it is until it arrives. If I was brassy, I could then reject it and walk out without paying , but it's so much simpler at the big franchises. Plus, sometimes (often) my wife and I will split a single meal; I feel imposing to do that in a small private business (lack of "brass"), but McDonald's couldn't care less if you order nothing but a small coffee and a cup of water.
People will agree that getting rebates on returned merchandise is theft, but I don't think BB will win customers by telling them not to take advantage of sales. I think they'll win more friends with a "let's get simple" approach. Also, here in Canada, eh?, you pay sales tax on the price before rebate - no rebate on taxes - 14% or more! Hmm... I wonder if they claim GST (VAT) back on that rebate? Rebates are a practice I tolerate because I have no choice - and usually take months for the cheque to arrive - and oh yeah, the bank will charge you a service fee to deposit - another 50-cent insult...
The rebate is a gimmick that (a) allows them to advertise a lower than true price - exaggerrated low price gets you in the door so the salesman can work his magic... - and (b) puts some limit on the quantity you buy (If like many box stores, the small retailer says "Their retail is lower than my wholesale!". The Grocery chains enforce limits with their "club" cards, but food is a whole different class of retail.
Those stupid warranty programs are a rip. When Sears first tried selling me one years ago for my fridge, my response was "are you suggesting you expect this product to fail??" When we bought coverage for our car tires from the dealer, and had to claim while away from home, it was almost as more trouble than it was worth. "Sorry, that warranty is through the dealer 1500 miles away, talk to them..." Had to buy a used tire as a spare and ask the dealer later for reimbursement of extra expense. Good thing they liked us...
BTW, notice that the world's biggest, most successful retailer is the one that offers NO gimmicks or sseasonal sales or other crap? Just "everyday, low prices". OK, so they're not always, but for all the (many) complaints thrown at Wal-Mart, the rarest are "I just bought it and then it went on sale", "I found it MUCH cheaper at another store", and "they tried to sell me an extended warranty".
Start a Co-op & own the store.
If you work in customer service and you believe that harassing customers about crap like PSPs is the proper way of going about your job, you seriously need a new job. I've worked in customer service for over 6 years, and now manage a store. If any of my employees ever treated a customer the way I'm reading in this thread about Best Buy customers being treated, that employee would be thrown out on their ass in no time at all.
Customer service is NOT customer harassment. They are two very different things. Good customer service/salesmanship is saying "we also have an extended service plan available which gives you these extra benefits (lists benefits). Would you be interested in finding out more about that?" Then, if the plan is well presented in a curteous manner, the customer may be interested in finding out more, and the sales rep can tell them more and get them signed up. If on the other hand the person doesn't want it, a good customer service/sales rep will back off, sell them the product, find out if there are any other items they may need ("do you need any cables to get that hooked up?" or "especially since you won't be covered by the extended service plan, you should be aware that the biggest killer of these widgets is power surges... do you have a quality surge supressor or UPS?"). Then the customer leaves well informed and having made a purchase, but feeling as though they were helped by a truly caring person instead of feeling harassed and pushed into buying something they didn't want.
You say you "see people all the time who enjoy getting pissed off at customer reps." Did you ever stop to consider that probably many of them have good reason? Yes I get the occasional inconsolable asshole in my store, but I probably have at most 1 or 2 pissed off customers every month.
All in all, customer service is what you make of it, and customers will typically treat employees much as they are treated by the employee. If the customers are treated with respect, they will typically treat the employees with respect. If the rep is rude and pushy, the customer will also be rude and pushy, to an extreme.
On the other hand, if you have a service plan, you get about 3 years of coverage, you can take it back to the store for an instant return (rather then waiting for the mail) and the service plan covers you if you break it yourself (such as a broken screen on a PDA).
this is one of those BOLD lies that Worst Buy employees push on people.
the PSP does NOT cover customer abuse and specifically states that LCD screens on pda's and laptops are not covered for any reason what-so-ever.
the PSP is 100% worthless as the supposed "3 years" is really only 2 years as they intentionally forget the 1 year from the manufacturer.
read it VERY carefully.
Besides, the best argument that shut's them up is... "the company will not let us buy the PSP for company items."
always tell them you are buying it for your work. it shut's them up and eliminates their sales-pitch.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Reminds me of when I tried to buy a mobile phone in Phones4U (a UK chain). I did my research, told the salesman which phone I wanted and on which priceplan. He tried to upsell me to a different phone; I said no. He tried to upsell me to a different price plan; I said no. He tried to sell me insurance; I said no.
He then started to plead with me that if I didn't buy anything extra or more expensive, he wouldn't make any commission. Eventually he said he'd need the manager's approval to sell me an item that was advertised on the shop floor and that I was trying to buy! At that point I walked out of the store, to his apparent amazement. (Though the amazement was all mine when I saw the same guy working there a year later. If he's as efficient at getting rid of other customers as he was with me, it's amazing the store is still open.)
The author of this post asserts his moral rights.
You refused based on principle? WTF? How about just showing the guy the receipt? Or if you wanted to make a point about it, ask him "Why?" and proceed to go into a lengthy discussion on random receipt checking.
It takes just a couple of seconds to flash your receipt. It's not offensive, it's a company trying to protect their assets. They aren't targeting you in particular, they check random people. They're just doing their job.
SmashTech - No smashing of tech involved
Guy at the door stops me, insists on seeing my receipt.
You're still on their property, and I think they have a right to monitor what is leaving their store. It's not like they searched your pocekts or anything.
The mentality that says, "I'm insulted if I have to participate in security screening" bugs the crap out of me.
Evil is the money of root.
In 1999 I bought a stereo system from BestBuy. I was going to get a free sub-woofer but they were "out" of them so i got a rain-check. After visiting the store about 10 times over the next 6 weeks to get the woofer, I finally became so irrate that I virtually turned the store upside down talking to the managers.
After the heated discussion, I went out to my car and got a book I had laying in the car and went back to the same manager, now engaged in another discussion with a customer and said "Here! You take this book since I believe you have an urgent need for it!" The books name was "Customer Service for Dummies". I ended up getting a much more expensive woofer than the cheap one they bundled with the stereo system.
BestBuy hear this: Since 1999 I have not been inside one of your stores and I have spent over $20000 on consumer electronics. Money that your stores could have gotten if you had people with the faintest clue on how to treat customers. Remember BestBuy, it's customer like me who pay your paycheck!
If you mod me down, I *will* introduce you to my sister!
"Do not mention the fucking PSP again, this is abusive, I have stated clearly 3 times that I am uninterested and have also kindly asked you to simply just stop talking to me about it at all. You don't seem to get it. Here can you understand this "I don't want the fucking PSP"
Rule #1: Never drop the f-bomb. It gets you noplace and changes the basis of the conversation. Forty years ago, it was shocking and people would react by surrendering. Today it just makes them angry and you immediately lose any opportunity to win the argument.
You built a fuckin' store the size of Texas and have an inventory of goods bigger than some 3rd world countries. Yet, you only have 2 cash registers of your 30, actually open at any one time because you want to save money. Here's an idea, open all of your cash registers every operating hour of the day and advertize..."No lines in our store, ever" The sales from that will more than pay for the shitty wages that you think you're saving. I don't know how many times I've dropped my items and walked out of Best Buy/Home Depot/etc. because those idiots had 2 registers open with a huge line.
If every pissed off customer just walked out without getting his name and complaining to management, all that management knows is that he has a 100% success rate in upselling customers.
You were part of the problem that kept him there, not the solution that might have helped.
Exactly ..... they're a gamble. Next time you're in a bookie's shop -- preferably around the time of some important sporting fixture, so it's nice and packed -- add up the estimated total wealth of all the punters, and compare it to the estimated total wealth of the owner.
On which side of the glass is there more money?
That's not to say you can't make money out of gambling, far from it. If you can estimate the odds better than the bookie, then you're on a winning ticket. But electronic component failure is fairly random -- more like the lottery or the roulette table -- whereas performances in sports are somewhat predictable (and, crucially for a gambler, can be influenced by events occurring after the odds have been fixed, but before the game is played).
Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
I've never been denied a rebate. Why? Because immediately after purchase of the items, I read the rebate instructions carefully and follow them exactly to recieve my rebate. Sure enough, X weeks later I do get my rebate check.
Rebates are somewhat tricky, and I agree that the plot of the rebate is that Joe Consumer forgets about ther rebate or fails to follow the proper instructions to recieve the rebate. However, if you follow the instructions to get your rebate, you will get it in most cases.
"You spoony bard!" -Tellah
That's why I always go in claiming to want something smaller, and let them think they're selling me on more than I want. Like when I bought my new bike, I knew that I was in the $400-$600 market: I told the guy $300, maybe a bit higher, and walked out with a bike that was at $430. Let 'em think they're winning.
Buying a stereo at Best Buy? Ick...just can't imagine paying money for the typical consumer crap they sell there. If you bought $20K over the years...and started back then with better equipment...think of where you'd be now? A quality sounding system that will last....not some crappy bose system, with sanyo componets..etc....
Just advice...if you want to put together a GOOD lifetime sound sytem...buy quality...buy it one piece at a time over the years....it is worth it in the end.
Do your research...look for bargains, and they can be had...but, in the end...you WILL pay for quality in audio....but there is a difference and you will hear it..
Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
"Get real," yourself. A refund hardly seems out of their reach, or asking too much. The monitor was still being manufactured, Best Buy had just stopped carrying it. And if they couldn't provide a replacement that did what the original did-- a plain old refund seems like the best option. Store credit is no help if the store no longer stocks what you're after. I ended up with a crappy monitor and $200 left over to spend at Best Buy, when what I wanted was a good monitor.
If I had been older, richer, and had the time, I would have sued them. The terms of their warranty were clear-- they agreed to uphold the terms of the manufacturer's warranty. THAT warranty was quite clear that replacement, if the original model was unavailable, would be with an equal or better product. As it was, I was a poor recent college grad, and didn't realize I had such a high chance of winning. Lesson learned, though-- the next time it happens, we're going straight on to small claims court. Nothing else will work when a company refuses to do the right thing.
And while we're at it, why does *everything* suck so much? My recent experiences include the previously-mentioned fiasco with HHGregg ("it will be done in a week" when the part wasn't even ordered for another three weeks, despite knowing what was wrong) as well as:
1. Moved, set up new phone line. Three days later, SBC cancels both new AND old phone lines, removes DSL orders. 7 hours of phone calls later, I had my line and a $150 credit. But it shouldn't have happened, and it shouldn't have been that hard to fix.
2. Had Brighthouse cable at old house. Picture was snowy (not just "i'm a picky video nut" snowy, but roughly 50% noise) but technician claimed that quality was acceptable. When asked, technician was unable to read text on CNN on a 43" screen.
3. T-Mobile sidekick. So poorly built that I needed four replacement units in six months. Service was terrible-- calls never ring, etc...
4. DirecTV installer missed two appointments, failed to install grounding block (while lying to say that he had, and I just couldn't see it from the ground...) Installer at new house was better, but was still three hours late for his four-hour appointment window.
5. HHGregg delivered TV to wrong address.
6. Hotel on vacation last month tried to double(!!) my booked rate on checkout. I was lucky to have a printed receipt with me-- they claimed they had never offered the lower rate.
Does ANYBODY have good customer service anymore? Or is screwing us just "good business" now? I spend an awful lot of time fighting just to get the things I paid for. Which makes me laugh about this article-- the article makes it sound like Best Buy *just recently* decided that it wanted to treat customers like crap. It's been standard operating procedure there for years.