Customers have always been entitled pricks. Employees are just finally starting to not take the bullshit anymore.
Customers have always been entitled pricks. Employees are just finally starting to not take the bullshit anymore.This.
Customers have always been entitled pricks. Employees are just finally starting to not take the bullshit anymore.
And again, there is no way for us to know that it was broken until my dad picked that one out to use it.You mean other than the incredibly obvious way of testing them all out real quick after buying them?
Seems like the policy is 48 hours and he didn't feel like breaking it for a strangerThis but you know other stores let them
Long story short, the cashier ends up cussing me out and calling me a racial slur.people who spend their years lying here are just bizarre
people who spend their years lying here are just bizarre
lol no
My dad literally tells me that getting anything returned to retail stores were much harder to do back then than it is today because they would always get you on the "technicality's". It wasn't until Amazon became more laxed on the return policies did most other retail stores follow suit. Also the customers that tend to be the most entitled are the boomer and gen xers because most of them probably never worked in a customer service job and always have the "the customer is always right" mentality.
And I had all the documentations to prove that I made the purchase.And yet you are being the unreasonable one considering they have a 48 hour policy.
Receipt, my name was printed on the product. Original packaging.
but those guys just wanted to be assholes and not refund me for selling me a defective product.
And yet you are being the unreasonable one considering they have a 48 hour policy.
Used to be you could return unused stuff in the US even without a receipt, but then customers started abusing it, like stealing stuff and wanting a refund. Now packaging is more complicated to stymie people using something then putting it back in the box for a refund.
Should have checked it in the window of time then.
Fair, next.
Wasnt even my product.Karen, this is a Wendy's.
It was for my dad who is a medical patient.
Not very reasonable to expect someone to open multiple packages and try every single one to make sure it works.
There should be an assumption that it works when you pay for it dude and if it doesnt work, they should either replace it or give you a refund.
Thats the right way to do business.
Customers have always been entitled pricks. Employees are just finally starting to not take the bullshit anymore.I'm with tc. I've never given any store a reason to be rude to me. I'm always nice and respectful. But frequently I get rude employees mouthing off or just ignoring me for 0 reasons
Maybe if their wages ever went up in the past 50 years they'd have a reason to give a shit.
Used to be you could return unused stuff in the US even without a receipt, but then customers started abusing it, like stealing stuff and wanting a refund. Now packaging is more complicated to stymie people using something then putting it back in the box for a refund.
Customers have always been entitled pricks. Employees are just finally starting to not take the bullshit anymore.
This is the tip you gave me?! I DESERVE MORE!!!!
It's like you people haven't bought anything in bulk before. It's not reasonable for someone to test every single item within the 48 hour limit to see if it's defective or not.It's also not reasonable for the cashier to go against policy. If they don't like the return window, they can find somewhere else that better suits their needs to do their business or plan more careful next time. I'd obviously also reprimand the cashier if I was in charge of them.
Sounds to me that people here just dislike the TC and want to be the contrarian just to spite him. _
didn't read the rest of the topic, just up til where tc gave his story
I don't believe you were 100% polite to the cashier. And they're following policy, not withholding refund because they want to be a dick to you.
Don't know what the law is in the US, but you should not be able to override protection against selling defective goods by imposing a time limit.
Customer exchanging because they changed their mind, or bought the wrong thing? Sure. But goods not fit for purpose? No.