wrh3
Well-known member
They really did not make it right. To do that they would issue a call tag and have UPS pick it up. Driving a package to UPS is a pain and a cost with no benefit.
holy ****, that is horrible man!!!
so you ordered something. some kid in a warehouse messed up, and now they are returning your money and paying for shipping for the bad item all in a matter of 30 minutes???
yeah that really ***** a lot... you should have gotten your item you ordered in the first place, but they did make it right, not much else you can ask for.. unless you wanted your package gold plated????![]()
They really did not make it right. To do that they would issue a call tag and have UPS pick it up. Driving a package to UPS is a pain and a cost with no benefit.
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" width="100%"><tbody><tr class="sec-row-od"><td class="sec-pad" width="35%">
</td> <td class="sec-pad" width="65%"> You can have your shipment picked up from your home or office by scheduling your pickup online at ups.com or by calling 1-800-PICK-UPS<sup>®</sup> (1-800-742-5877). UPS will pick up all packages with a single pickup request; you will not be charged pickup fees per package.</td></tr></tbody></table>
So what if those prybars he ordered were part of a deal of the day over at Sears.com? He purchased them at 50% off. But now, rather than send him what he ordered, they refund what he paid. Now he's out of luck getting the pry bars 50% off. Sure, he has his money, but he thought he was about to get a good deal on something he ordered.
I definitely don't agree that they "made it right" by any means. They didn't go out of their way to ensure that they satisfied their customer. While a business doesn't have to do that, they do to ensure they stay in business.
So what if those prybars he ordered were part of a deal of the day over at Sears.com? He purchased them at 50% off. But now, rather than send him what he ordered, they refund what he paid. Now he's out of luck getting the pry bars 50% off. Sure, he has his money, but he thought he was about to get a good deal on something he ordered.
I definitely don't agree that they "made it right" by any means. They didn't go out of their way to ensure that they satisfied their customer. While a business doesn't have to do that, they do to ensure they stay in business.
yeah sears went out of business back in the 80's didn't they? how did he even order from such a bad business anyway if they aren't in business anymore?
I agree. Sears didn't really make it right and any company out there except for Sears would have shipped the man his pry bars instead of giving him a refund. A call tag for the return would have been very reasonable too, but not completely necessary. Not shipping the pry bars is just wrong.
yeah sears went out of business back in the 80's didn't they? how did he even order from such a bad business anyway if they aren't in business anymore?
Sears did not go out of business in the 1980's.
People have been predicting Sear's demise for the last 15-20 years, yet they seem to pull it through and continue on in some form.
to you i guess.One word, "Entitlement"
Many feel they're entitled to a "deal" of the day or to a cheap and good quality tool.
Many regulars from this site know before hand the quality of customer service and the buggy website of Sears AND YET THEY STILL DANCE With them when a deal comes up.
There's somebody out there who ordered a pot and is wondering what to do with a new pry bar set.![]()

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although the OP did get a refund, and everything was taken care of. i find it very..... american.... that a lot of people assume that your time when not working should be paid for, like, the fact that there was an error and they corrected the error, and now YOU should get paid because of their error? you don't collect money for sitting in traffic jams, you don't get paid by the hour for standing in long lines at the dmv. and you certainly don't receive money in pocket for being in a store when a computer system goes down and they can't even ring you up anymore and your trip was wasted. so why does everyone feel the need to be paid when there is a mistake made even after it's corrected?
.................
I you are commenting on my comment of what an American's time is worth as "getting paid", you have totally misunderstood my point.
I do not advocate making a profit on a customer service resolution. What I do advocate in a good customer service resolution is making the original deal right if at all possible.
I will give you an example of the value of my time and probably most people:
An online order from Sears shorted me a 10mm socket, probably less than $5 or so IIRC in cost. Call to "Bob" in India had him reading a scripted loss item statement to me. Basically "Bob" told me that he was sending a UPS guy to pick up the torn package that the 10mm socket had fell out of for inspection and claim processing. As I explained to "Bob" in India, I could not take a full day's work off to wait for the UPS guy that they could not give me a specific time of when he would show up. So basically, I was expected to loose a full days wages to wait for them over a $5 item. That is what I am talking about in terms of value of my time.
And Sears back in the 80s had better customer service.
Tell me again how well Sears has been doing over the past 5 years.
i think people have the right to feel "entitled" when a retailer takes their money and promises something in return, and then the retailer does not deliver.
And many people, myself included, continue to shop at sears because many times the deals make it worth it. But that is not to say that they don't sometimes have absolutely horrid customer service or other problems.
Just like very many retailers during the recession-- Not very well
........and most everyone had better customer service back in the 1980s
I think people have the right to feel "entitled" when a retailer takes their money and promises something in return, and then the retailer does not deliver.
And many people, myself included, continue to shop at Sears because many times the deals make it worth it. But that is not to say that they don't have absolutely horrid customer service or other problems.
. Sears has been doing quite a bit worse than many of their competitors.
And I guess calling customer service and taking to a foreigner who doesn't speak English for **** and can't do jack for you is only "sometimes" an inconvenience.
they match prices up to 90 days in the past, for purchases. I have also had them honor a price on the weekend after black friday before the trend was to do sales all weekend. I'm pretty sure they would do it, but the only thing you will lose is time if you fail.
you don't collect money for sitting in traffic jams, you don't get paid by the hour for standing in long lines at the dmv.
And better than others---Circuit City ring a bell?
If It happened all the time then I would agree. Seeing how it doesn't your statement is irrelevent.
I would venture you have never worked in the IT world. It's full of foreigners as you say on the other end of the phone line
Circuit City is hardly a Sears competitor. That's you stretching trying to prove an invalid point.
Next time you have a problem with sears call:
(847) 286-2500
or
888-266-4043
Really, they will solve your problem like (almost) no business has ever done before.


Is this like "For a good time, call"...![]()
Time, whether at work or not, has value associated with it.
If there's a certain way of doing things that is an inefficient use of my time (costs more than the value it provides), I won't do it. Same reason why I renew my DMV sticker online, pay bills online instead of having to go to the **** that is the post office, or shop on Amazon instead of wasting my time at a big box store.
obviously, but you still aren't entitled to someone else's money if they happen to hold you up for a certain amount of time. thats just ignorant. you know that there is a chance something could happen when doing things. expecting something to take X time, then wanting money when it takes X+2 minutes because your time is money. is the same as suing an alarm clock company because their alarm didn't wake you up on time for a couple of days a week until you returned it.
everybody knows that regardless of where you are shopping online, you are shopping ONLINE. you know that when you place your order, it has to go through the hands of multiple people until reaching some guy in a warehouse on a pallet jack or forklift, filling an order to go on a truck, to get to the ups shipping warehouse, to get to your houes. theres a hell of a lot of **** that can go wrong when waiting for a package to make a 2000 mile trip in 2 days. be glad they have this system down so well in the first place.
even if shopping in the store, if something happened to the item inside the box and no one knows it until you get it home. it's a minor inconvenience to have to bring it back for another because something unexpected happened, and still doesn't entitle you or anyone else money in the pocket for minor errors. granted there will always be those people who complain and complain and complain until they get "compensated", but we all can't be understanding of circumstances beyond someone's control, can we.
Circuit City sold TVs, cameras, DVD players and other electronics as well as vacume cleaners and Big Ticket appliances- a large portion of Sears business is in those areas.
That is a direct Competitor. The selling of like merchandise. Are you willfully ignorant?
Circuit City actually dropped large appliances about a decade prior to their collapse. While Sears sells many similar electronics, that department doesn't account for a quarter of their sales. Circuit City did not compete with Sears in clothing, hardware, home, shoes, or appliances. That would mean that Circuit City was nowhere near a direct competitor to Sears. A minor competitor, sure, but not direct. However, the last few years of Circuit City does share many similarities with Sears today.
Maybe we should be questioning your ignorance?
Seriously, nobody said the OP is entitled to money from Sears. I think someone did say that Sears should have sent him the tools that he ordered!
That said the OP and everyone does have the right use the time = money argument to decide whether or not to spend their money in any store. For instance, this last spring I was changing the oil on my Sportster both crankcase and gearbox. So I broke out my Craftsman torx socket set, the T25 was too small the T30 was too big. Checked the manual and sure enough its T27. No problem I hop on the computer to see if I can order online at Sears and pickup in store. The product shows not available for shipping or pickup. OK no problem, the store is 20 min away they probably have one on the rack in the store. Nope not even a spot on the wall for the T27. So the nice sales guy called the next closest store and they said they had one. Drive 30 min to that store and the guy was wrong, he had the T25! So now I am out 1.5 hours of driving around chasing a common tool, that's $45 of my time! On way home I stop at a local hardware store and drop ten bucks plus change and I have a new Proto T27 socket. What was cheaper for me, the $10 Proto or the $5 Craftsman that I wasted 1.5 hours on and still didn't get? I am not saying I am entitled to any money from Sears, but the next time I need a new tool, especially with all the other changes, I am far less likely to go to Sears first anymore!
uh.... thats the point, if you don't like it, then don't bother, but mistakes happen. but there are still many a people that feel their time should be compensated with money. and even though the only thing the OP was out, was time. he still felt like sears didn't make anything right, which is my point i was getting at.