Best Buy Customer Gets Box Full of Bathroom Tiles Instead of Hard Drive 990
The Consumerist is reporting that a Best Buy customer recently purchased a hard drive only to discover that the box contained six ceramic bathroom tiles instead of the Western Digital drive he had expected. The rub of it is Best Buy is refusing to grant a refund or exchange for the non-existent drive. "The employee and assistant manager were more than willing to help, saying that it happens. So they set up the return and I repurchased the drive and while I was checking the contents to ensure it was a hard drive this time, the store manager came up, took the box from me and said to take it up with the manufacturer. Now to my surprise, I argued with the guy saying that they have already accepted the return and I have now purchased the new one. He said I was shit out of luck. I followed up with the manufacturer today and they said they would get the complaint to the Best Buy Purchasing department. Best Buy corporate said that they stand by their manager's decision."
It happened before. (Score:5, Informative)
This reminds me so much of the story of someone I know who back in the mid-90s had a shrink wrapping machine. He bought a CD-ROM drive from some department store, took it home, took the CD-ROM drive out. Then he took a brick and placed it back in the CD-ROM box, srinkwrapped the box and then returned it to the store like it was unopened.
Now can you imagine what the next person who bought that had to go through?
So thisb fhf could just be a case of someone trying to trick Best Buy and trying to use a grass roots campaign scam Best Buy.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
A guy from the local mafia decided he needed a new house. After the construction of his new house was finished, he called one of his best friends to see his home.
When he asked his friend, what he thought, his friend said he was rather impressed. But he didn't like the tiles in the bathroom, they were rather ugly and he wondered how his friend could afford such an expensive house, but buy such crappy bathroom tiles.
The guy from the mafia disagreed. "They are not inexpensive at all. Come with me"
They went to the bathroom again. "Can you see what's written on them?"
And his friend noticed with surprise that all tiles were labelled "Intel Pentium Pro"
Re:It happened before. (Score:4, Funny)
He should have gone with the old Socket 4 Pentiums instead and he would have had a wall-mounted space heater for those frosty mornings.
Of course even with Socket 8 walls he's got a very limited upgrade path.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
Home Depot only sells two kinds of tile: smashed tiles, and missing tiles. I'm sure this metal brick will be smashed into a million pieces before it even reaches the shelf.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Interesting)
A few years ago I went to the Virgin Mega Store and picked up a CD. I was with a friend and when we got back to my apartment I opened up the CD and inside was a blank CD-R. I took it back to the store and they thankfully exchanged the disc. I think it might have been touch and go there for a moment, but in the end we're talking a few bucks for them to replace it vs. losing my business forever if they don't.
Best Buy apparently doesn't understand this concept, that or they just don't care. Either way, I'm unpacking my purchase completely at the counter before I walk away, just in case.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Insightful)
- Always use a credit card... if he'd done that, as soon as Best Buy refuses to take it back, just stand there in front of the manager, call your card customer service, and have it charged back
- Contact your state's attorney general and notify them that Best Buy is fraudulently selling bathroom tiles labeled as hard drives
- Then complain to the BBB just to cover all the bases
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
During the day, he'd go pick up items off the shelf that he wanted to get into his system....a hard drive here, a cd-rom drive there, a nice new video card. He'd get them while showing people who were looking for similar items and then not return them to the shelf. Then a quick hop to the back, slip open the plastic, rem
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
As opposed to all those slick, corporate-funded attempts to scam Best Buy.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3DYbE44OIE [youtube.com]
According to the clip, if he bought it in Canada he might be covered by the Canadian Criminal Code where "there's legal precedent setting cases in law" for this sort of thing.
Or these precedents might only apply to "mice" not hard drives...
This is so easy to prevent (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
You also need to know that you can trust your employees for that to hold any water. When you specialize in low prices (seriously though, do these massively-overpriced stores only prey on people who've never actually seen that newfangled intarweb thang?) by paying your staff a pittance, you can't trust your staff, period. They have no
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Going through the products one night, I came across a video card box that "felt funny." The shrink-wrap was hard and
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
If I had the catalog handy, I'd be quoting you prices right now.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
I'm guessing one of the Geek Squad is a tweaker/video gamer who decided he wants a spiffy new hard drive for free. He's probably high as a kite, playing WoW right this minute.
Have you seen who works in Best Buy these days?
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Interesting)
Do you know how their hiring process works?
A couple years ago a new Worst Buy was opening, and I thought I'd apply - looking for a mostly back-room techie job. Went to their on-line application site, answered 2 or 3 questions about my technical expertise, then spent some FORTY FIVE MINUTES on psychological profile crap - you know, "would you rather kiss your car or step on a snake?" questions. Went to their hiring office in the mall, girl looked me up and told me they would NOT be calling me for an interview.
Apparently, based on that test, I wasn't enough of a "cheerful Charlie" which FAR, FAR outweighed any tech skills I might have possessed.
Haven't bought a thing from Worst Buy since them.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
This DorkStick actually tried to up-sell me to Vista in his back peddling!
I ordered him to turn in his Slashdot ID at the nearest kiosk.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
Not that you could trust the people doing the execution come to think of it. God damnit.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Interesting)
I had a bad shrink-wrapping experience once.
Back in 1993 or so, I was not only the chief Macintosh programmer for an educational-games company, I was its only in-house programmer and also the main Mac tech support guy. That meant my working on our next game would be interrupted by answering the phone to deal with customer complaints about the last game I'd written. It sounds cruel but it may have helped inspire me to write better software :)
Anyway, I got a really puzzling complaint from one woman who was irate, and had a right to be. Our software had infected her PC with the Michaelangelo virus. She was mad enough that I had to take the call despite it not being our Mac version. It took a lot of calming-down but I was able to make her understand that it was impossible for the floppy disks to leave our warehouse with the virus because we'd shipped the exact same disks to thousands of other people and hers was our first Michaelangelo complaint. But she had taken the disks to her local PC-repair shop and they'd tested positive for Michaelangelo.
So I asked her where she'd bought them. J&B Computer World. Fine. I called up her local J&B and eventually got put through to a manager... after some prodding, it turned out they'd had a Michaelangelo outbreak at their store a month prior. Oh, and yes they did sometimes "test out" the software they resold by playing it themselves. Oh, and yes, they had a shrink-wrapping machine.
I called back our customer with the news and she said she was going to take it up with J&B. I always wished I could have listened in on that call :)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Back in the 90s most stores wouldn't accept returns at all for software if the shrink wrap was broken. At the same time compatibility was much more sketchy, it wasn't uncommon to buy software and have it just not work at all on your computer even running a mainstream OS, etc.
Yeah, I returned software to Fry's a number of times using this story: "One of the salespeople TOLD ME it would work on my computer!" Lord knows salesperson incompetence is a believable story at Fry's.
Also, are you implying that today you CAN return software with the shrink wrap broken? I find that surprising, but I haven't tried to return software in a long time.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
Customers can be shameless (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
A few weeks ago I was in Fry's looking for a laptop stand. I asked a clerk and he said "You mean the kind you put coins in?"
I didn't know how to answer that.
Re: (Score:3)
And hey, who wouldn't be?
Re:It happened before (Score:5, Insightful)
This is actually a case *for* unique ids like RFID to be implemented everywhere. At least that way you would be able to track down the asshole that stole from Best Buy and the guy in question. Now it is still possible, but will take time. I'm sick and tired that Best Buy should "eat it". The thief should be the one that eats the damn tiles.
As for the guy that ended up with garbage (if BestBuy didn't do the right thing, as they didn't seem to),
1. file a police report
2. chargeback credit card
3. contact drive manufacturer and report that the drive in question was stolen -- this at least voids warranty on the drive
4. if new drive is not handed over by Best Buy (show them police report), add to the police report that they stole your new drive
5. if Best Buy continue to not hand over the drive, sue them for selling you a brick (small claims) + taking money for it + ALL your time you lost + court filing fees. Just do not exaggerate your time - judges don't like that.
Unfortunately, theft like this hits us all in the pocketbooks all the way from customers up to Best Buy shareholders.
As to parent, I don't know what "people" you hang around with that "do this all the time". Sounds like a bunch of assholes to me.
Re:It happened before (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:It happened before (Score:5, Insightful)
Agreed, and I've never given them my real info. *I* know I'm not ripping 'em off, and so feel no reason to jump through hoops clueless suits create.
Somewhere, in a marketing database somewhere, sits:
Elmer Fudd
22 Acacia Avenue
San Antonio, RI, 90210
Re:It happened before (Score:5, Funny)
I'm glad I finally twacked you down. I've been getting endless junk mail related to prowducts I've never purchased. I got a restwaining order against that pesky wabbit, but the junk mail still kept coming.
May you wot in hell.
sincerwly,
Elmer J. Fudd
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
So you are an identity as well as a hard drive thief! That is my name and address!
Err, wait. You have my apologies. I misread my ID which says Jules Vern.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Agreed. But if Best Buy is accepting returns without looking inside the box to verify that there is a real product inside it, it becomes Best Buy's responsibility. If I buy something from Best Buy and I get home and the box contains something else, I absolutely positively expect Best Buy to "eat it." It's their fault. They should have inspected the contents of the box before accepting the return, and
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
It is theft and scam. I hope Best Buy tracks down the assholes that are doing this and pass the "costs" down on them + a nice visit to police station in cuffs + nice fine and restitution.
This is actually a case *for* unique ids like RFID to be implemented everywhere. At least that way you would be able to track down the asshole that stole from Best Buy and the guy in question. Now it is still possible, but will take time. I'm sick and tired that Best Buy should "eat it". The thief should be the one that eats the damn tiles.
As for the guy that ended up with garbage (if BestBuy didn't do the right thing, as they didn't seem to),
1. file a police report
2. chargeback credit card
3. contact drive manufacturer and report that the drive in question was stolen -- this at least voids warranty on the drive
4. if new drive is not handed over by Best Buy (show them police report), add to the police report that they stole your new drive
5. if Best Buy continue to not hand over the drive, sue them for selling you a brick (small claims) + taking money for it + ALL your time you lost + court filing fees. Just do not exaggerate your time - judges don't like that.
Unfortunately, theft like this hits us all in the pocketbooks all the way from customers up to Best Buy shareholders.
As to parent, I don't know what "people" you hang around with that "do this all the time". Sounds like a bunch of assholes to me.
This would require effort on behalf of Best Buy.
Re:It happened before (Score:5, Interesting)
5. if Best Buy continue to not hand over the drive, sue them for selling you a brick (small claims) + taking money for it + ALL your time you lost + court filing fees. Just do not exaggerate your time - judges don't like that.
Unfortunately, one can't sue for time in small claims in the US. A small claims action is designed to replace property value. A plaintiff will never be made whole in small claims court.
IANAL but have been a plaintiff.
Re:It happened before (Score:5, Insightful)
Are you stupid? Do you look through everything you buy to make sure it's exactly what it's labeled as? I sure as hell don't open my cereal boxes in the store just make sure I'm really getting cereal.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem here is that the HD is probably worth $40-$120 -- the cost of a suit is much higher so WorstBuy basically knows they can do whatever they want.
I've proudly avoided WorstBuy for the last four or more years. I suspect this guy is going to join the rest of us who
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
WorstBuy it is.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Sad thing is, that doesn't even scratch the surface of how bad Worst Buy really is.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
The liability rests with the retailer for ensuring that what they sell you is what is advertised. If I were to tell you that I had a bridge for sale and told you the name of it was "London Bridge" and you got a crappy little bridge made from a few pieces of stone, I would be telling the truth, but if I showed you a picture of Tower Bridge in London and called it "London Bridge" you could sue me to high heaven for misrepresenting what I ended up buying.
The box shows a hard drive
Re:It happened before (Score:5, Informative)
To use your analogy, if you showed me a picture of Tower Bridge, and delivered the London Bridge, (Yes, even though I am an America, I do understand the difference.
The issue here isn't that the store refused the return. The took the return. The real issue is that after the guy bought a real (presumably) function hard drive, the manager of the store approached the customer, and seized his property. That is robbery.
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Interesting)
One of the employees discovered that when you climb the ladder up to the stock area up above the shelves, there are no security cameras to keep an eye on you, so here's what you do... Get a case of printer paper and carefully slip the plastic bands off that hold the box shut. Remove the reams of paper inside and place them on the shelf for sale. Tear open hard drive boxes, sound card boxes, software packages, anything you want and toss the remnants around and pack the contents inside the now empty printer paper box until it's completely full, then replace the lid and plastic bands and carry the box down the ladder and put the box full of "paper" on the back of the shelf behind several boxes that really contain paper. Come to the store on your next day off and pull your box of "paper" from the back of the shelf and pay $19.99 for it and walk out of the store with several hundred dollars worth of gear. You got the BestBuy!
This stupid employee came over to visit my brother and told him (in front of me) how he managed to get away with it and just assumed (incorrectly) that I wouldn't mention it to my manager or the store manager the next day. The store manager told me that they suspected him but didn't know how he was doing it and after hearing how they confronted him and told him that they were giving him one last chance to return the stolen items or they would call the police. His reply was something to the effect of "go ahead, if you had any evidence you would have already called the police." And then they kept him employed!!! They did not fire him!!! He quit on his own a few weeks later when he realized that he was under constant supervision and wouldn't have an opportunity to steal again.
Re:It happened before. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Insightful)
My wife and I purchased a comforter set at Target that included the comforter, bed skirt, and two pillow shams... except after getting it home, opening it, and putting it on the bed (it's a queen-size bed, so getting the bedskirt on is not a quick and easy process) we realized that one of the shams was defective. I took the bad sham back to Target and asked the customer service drone if she (or I) could just replace it with one of the shams from another set. She was sympathetic, but explained that The System would not allow her to do that; that I would have to return the entire set and swap it out for a new one. I didn't bother to explain how much of a pain it would be to pull the bedskirt and everything off, repackage it, etc., etc., and how gee, it would sure be nice to buy something and have it actually meet a certain standard of quality, etc., etc., since I knew that I was not up against this drone but against The System.
So I told her I would be back in just a moment... I went to the shelf, pulled off a matching set, and went to customer service to pay for it (just for the pure thrill of having her witness the whole transaction). Took it out to my car, swapped out the shams, and brought it back to the customer service desk. "I'd like to return this comforter set--" I says to her, "it has a defective pillow sham." She refunded my money and I went home with my nice new, non-defective sham.
Re:It happened before. (Score:4, Funny)
What the fuck is a pillow sham?
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It happened before. (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Sigs: Don't turn them off, they're useful sometimes.
Re:And it will happen again. (Score:4, Insightful)
Retail theft, and not the kind you're thinking of. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Retail theft, and not the kind you're thinking (Score:5, Insightful)
Incidentally, that's why I buy everything I can (except for low-cost stuff) with my credit card. If I'm unhappy, I can complain. More importantly, I can threaten to void purchases. The threat of voiding purchases via your credit card, in my experience, is more useful than actually voiding purchases. The only time I've actually had to follow through on the threat was when hotels.com charged my card but didn't reserve a room for me. Hotels.com refused to cancel the payment because I hadn't given them enough warning. (Ha!) I couldn't get the CSR droid to give up, so I just reserved a new room at the same hotel (for a lower price) and then voided the hotels.com purchase.
Most of the time, though, your credit card company will be on your side, especially if you are a high-value account that buys lots of stuff and have a high credit limit.
Re:Retail theft, and not the kind you're thinking (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
I've done this 3 times (visa and/or mc - no amex). One time I won by default (the vendor never replied apparently), the second time I lost (vendor disagreed) but I got my money back anyway as a courtesy from the credit card company (it was a small transaction, less than $50 I think), and the third time I lost and did not get my money back (vendor disagreed, case closed). Eac
Re:Retail theft, and not the kind you're thinking (Score:5, Interesting)
It would seem the only reasonable thing to do from this point on is to open a box and make sure your item is in there before leaving the store. That's what I intend to do after hearing enough of these stories. If you haven't left the store, then they can't put the blame on you and you can return it right there.
Film yourself (Score:3, Interesting)
My story is indirectly relevant. Back in undergrad, I was writing a research paper and had checked out a stack of books from the main library - probably about half a dozen. When I was done with them, I returned them. A few weeks later, I got a letter stating that I had never returned one of them, and that they were going to charge me a standard fee of $205. Now I knew that I had returned this book; I distinctly remembered doing it, and all the other ones had been returned, but since I had just dropped them
Re:Retail theft, and not the kind you're thinking (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, maybe at first, however, in TFA, I got the idea, that BB had already accepted the return, and the customer had bought and paid for a NEW harddrive and had that in hand.
The manager then took the drive from his hand, etc. Now, if the customer had a drive and receipt...I would think what the BB manager did to him was plain and simple theft. I'd contact the Atty General about that.....
yep! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:yep! (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3)
For me, the answer's as follows:
Price Match - They have a policy where they'll price match any local competitor's advertised price so long as it's in stock. Go with a print out of a Circuit City, CompUSA, Fry's ad and a list of the dozen stores within the range limit then ask them if they really want to call around. It's exceptionally rare they'll bother - meaning you can get everything at the same price you'd pay in the stores that
Re:yep! (Score:5, Funny)
Western Digital or bathroom tiles? (Score:5, Funny)
Chargeback (Score:5, Informative)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chargeback [wikipedia.org]
Granted it is only wikipedia, but it does list 'failure to issue a refund' as a reason for a chargeback.
Was it an open box item..... (Score:4, Insightful)
And the worst thing is... (Score:5, Funny)
Don't Shop at Best Buy? (Score:5, Funny)
I guess the one positive thing we could say is that at least the Best Buy employees don't drool on themselves within customer eyesight like RadioShack ones. :P
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Bestbuy sucks, compusa sucks, circuit city sucks.. all of them suck. They are staffed with minimum wage idiots that misinform more than they inform and their store policies treat you like you are more trouble than you are worth. Hell even Sears is doing this now. If I go
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
But even more seriously, why should we trust the report. A box without a harddisk. What is to say the customer did not make the switch. It would be nice for Best Buy to allow a return, but how much money is lost in the process? How much cheaper could the prices be if they did not allow such returns? Again, small shops have allowed me to return such products. I wouldn't expect large shops t
You Americans and your Crazy Laws (Score:5, Informative)
If I buy something and it doesn't work, I take it back to the store and they replace it or repair it. They can then take it up with the manufacturer, or not: I don't care. Repair is a high-stakes game, because if trading standards believe that they're doing it to delay, or that the failure was unreasonable, they vendor has a problem. SoGA protection is a movable feast, but applies for at least a year.
Re:You Americans and your Crazy Laws (Score:5, Interesting)
My guess of what happened: Someone orders the drive, gets it, removes it repacks it with tiles. If this guy has access to shrink wrap machine, he reseals the package and gets full refund. Store thinks the package has not even been opened and restocks it and sends out again to this honest customer.
Given the numbers and bar codes and the tracking they do, BB should be able to find out who ordered and returned the drive and pursue that scammer. To prevent the recurrence, BB should use shrink wrap with its logo and other counterfeit proof shrink wrap.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is not the laws.
Exactly. There are all kinds of consumer protection laws in the United States. Some vary from state to state, but basically there are implied warranties of merchantability and such. In addition, there are laws to protect consumers against price fixing, price gouging, retailer fraud, false advertising and so forth. See this article about consumer protection laws [nolo.com] for examples and details..
Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)
Where's the verification? (Score:5, Insightful)
Solution? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
sounds like what happened at target recently (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
When I was a Best Buy Manager ... (Score:5, Informative)
Let's all just avoid Best Buy. (Score:5, Interesting)
She asked me to pick it up for her at the Carbondale, IL store (dead HD, laptop still under warranty) and after they'd left me to cool my heels for 20 minutes, had me sign paperwork, etc. they handed me the, paperwork, old HD (in case she chose to send it to Toshiba for data recovery) and then stated that they "weren't sure" if the OS installation fee was covered by the service plan and wouldn't let me leave with the computer unless I paid $130(!) for OS installation (Toshiba recovery CD) and that if (IF!) they found that it was covered, I would be refunded.
I called her (I had places to be right then) and she called the store manager, corporate, etc. and after 1.5 hours decided they could waive the fee if I was willing to wait for them to REPLACE THE DRIVE, a wait of 1-2 HOURS. Well, no, I wasn't willing to wait, so I left. Shortly afterward she received a call that the recently installed drive was WIPED and the computer was ready to be picked up.
I'm going today to pick up the computer. My bet is that either 1.) they'll conveniently "forget" that they were waiving the fee, or that 2.) they've lost either the old HD or the entire computer. Bets, anyone?
No frickin' way would I buy a computer from Best Buy. DVDs and CDs, sure, and maybe hardware with decent factory warranties, but not computers, and if I were dumb enough to, I certainly wouldn't take it to the store for warranty work! I've heard too many horror stories from other people who've ended up spending the same amount of money they'd spent on their hardware, only to have to wait for half a month for a computer just as bricked as it was when it went in.
Best Buy and Geek Squad is about as crooked as the crookedest used-car dealership.
I also had this happen to me at BB (Score:5, Interesting)
When I got the new box, I noticed the shrink wrap was different. I always check the shrink now and often will open it after I purchase it while still at the register. I also NEVER buy the first item on the shelf, but go to one farther back.
I had a problem with this similar to this (Score:4, Insightful)
THE CUSTOMER IS NOT ALWAYS RIGHT. (Score:4, Informative)
He said, they said... customer is alway right... (Score:5, Interesting)
Unless they want to have their sales slowed down by every customer insisting that a salesperson open the box before the customer leaves the store... and plugging in it... and testing it... and initialling the sales receipt... which would add about half an hour to an hour's work time to every sale... they've got to believe the customer.
At least the first time.
If they've got records that show that this customer has been repeatedly returning items, each time claiming that the factory-sealed box had worthless contents, that's another matter... but one that should be handled by legal process.
There is no set of circumstances under which what Best Buy allegedly did was appropriate.
P. S.
When she was in college, my daughter once bought an item from L. L. Bean. UPS delivered it, not to my daughter, but to the front desk of the dormitory, and got an signature that wasn't my daughter's signature and that couldn't be identified. My daughter called UPS. UPS insisted there was nothing they could/would do, they'd delivered the package and got a signature. She called L. L. Bean. They said, "Oh, that's too bad, we're sorry, we'll send another one out right away." L. L. Bean made several customers for life that day.
Best Buy has really poor service... (Score:4, Interesting)
They literally refused to honor their warranty. The company sent a repair person who said it was on spec. Actually, what he basically said is this was a poor design that doesn't work well. And this is not uncommon for this model. So since it's not uncommon for this model they wouldn't fix it.
Go figure...that's like saying since it's not uncommon for the breaks to fail on this model car. So we're not going to fix it under warranty because this is pretty much a standard occurrence with this car.
***
All of this being BS as my mother's upstairs tenants have the same fridge and it doesn't have any problems.
Clear packaging? (Score:3, Insightful)
And perhaps vendors should also weigh the returns. Shrink-wrapped items should all weigh within about 1% of the standard, other items within a few percent.
Open the box in the store (Score:5, Interesting)
Fortunately for me, the manager let me return it (I had never returned anything I bought from them before, so maybe that helped). Nowadays, whenever I go shopping for computer parts (or small-and-pricey things in general), if the box doesn't have a transparent window or some sort of manufacturer's seal (beyond shrinkwrap, which is too easy to re-do), then as soon as I pass the checkout counter, I tell the cashier that I'm going to take a peek inside. I step back a little so I don't block the next customer, and I open the box right there before exiting the store.
Here's how to handle this kind of situation (Score:4, Informative)
http://consumerist.com/consumer/customer-service/no-ipod-soap-210348.php [consumerist.com]
Simple solution, credit card (Score:3, Insightful)
It is now the stores problem.
And mastercard can throw its weight around
Best Buy made TWO mistakes... (Score:4, Insightful)
We don't have enough information to determine who put the tiles in the box, and the customer might have done it himself. Okay, sure. But look at the actual words in the article concerning the replacement: If a person returns an item and the store takes that physical item away from them and replaces it with another physical item in return, the second that the transaction is complete, the customer OWNS the replacement item and any person -- store employee or not -- who tries to take it from them is STEALING.
If an employee believes that the customer tampered with the first item, then they should call the police and report the customer for fraud or for falsifying returns, or (so simple it's mindboggling) refuse to accept the return! However, once an employee accepts the return and gets to the point of putting the physical replacement in the customer's hands, I feel as though a judge is going to be sympathetic to the customer and say that he has a right to retain that physical item.
Not even did the manager take back the hardware, the manager physically removed the box from the customer's hands... a good lawyer might even be able to bring the manger up on assault charges.
What I really hate is..... (Score:3, Funny)
Best Buy laziness...... (Score:4, Interesting)
This simply illustrates how the US is way behind in terms of customer service and corporate policies. If management cannot think to implement such a simple policy to protect themselves and the customers they serve, they deserve whatever negative press they get. They will get no sympathy from me for their laziness and ignorance.
My Favorite Best Buy Open Box Experience (Score:3, Funny)
Then what does the blue shirt do? He puts the box BACK ON THE SHELF.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
And if word gets around that they'll trade boxes of tiles for hard drives, how much will it cost them? I feel for the guy but if I were running a store I'd have to be skeptical and not unquestioningly and immediately accept returns like this.
Re:Dumbasses (Score:5, Insightful)
We're not even 1% of the population, and while we might make 10x as many purchases as the rest of the population, we're still a small portion of BB and such's customer base; We're too likely to buy our stuff online from places like Newegg and tigerdirect.
Re:Similar incident (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
NEWegg.com
newEGG.com
newegg.COM
If UPS or Fedex deliver to your town, you can shop newegg. I don't understand all of the "I got ripped-off at Best Buy when