This was posted in a forum.  I cannot verify the truth to these claims but
it's better to be informed than to be sorry.

PJ

Price cheating in SM stores
** An email sent to me by a close friend. I think people should be aware of
this too! Its his mom who had the experience**



This was written by my mom to make people aware of the thievery that SM has
secretly engaged in for quite some time. You may not know it, but you could
be losing a few pesos when you shop at SM/SaveMore/Hypermarket. And what
more if you multiply this by the tens of thousands of people who shop at
these places? Imagine how much SM steals from the consumers each and every
day when they are unaware that they have been shortchanged. Please forward
this message to your family and friends. This information will help save you
a few pesos whenever you head towards SM. And keep checking on your
receipts. Thanks.

Oh, and if any of you personally know Henry Sy, tell him to go f**k himself.

And as of this writing, as I expected, we just received probably the 1st of
many harassing phone calls. So I guess we rattled the cages of these
thieves. So that's why I deleted our address and phone numbers here.

Robin
__________________________________________________________________

Dear Friends,


I have previously written about anomalies that I have both personally
experienced and heard about at SM stores. Almost unbelievably, I recently
was victimized again by the same modus operandi at an SM establishment.
Invariably, the anomaly consists of having a lower price tag on an item and
the same item punched at the cash register with a slightly higher price,
usually unknown by the consumer. Following are some episodes that relatives
and I have personally experienced:



Episode 1, SAVE MORE, P. Tuazon St., Cubao, Quezon City, Aug. 1, 2010

I bought at this grocery store over a kilo of bacon-sliced pork tagged at
P207a kilo. When the female server weighed my purchase, it came out as P220
per kilo. After I complained about this, she, assisted by other servers,
manually worked on the scale, punching it several times, until they
successfully came out with the price tag of P207 per kilo and the total
amount of P215.69. So I continued with my shopping and went home. Later in
the evening, I casually looked at the short grocery receipt before I was
about to throw it away. I was dismayed to see that the bacon-sliced pork
that had a tag of P215.69 had registered instead on the receipt as P229.24
at P220 per kilo. Furthermore, another item in the same list, Magnolia
Butter Gold Lite, which had a tag price on the shelf as P78 had registered
instead as P88!



Early the following day, I returned to Save More to complain about the
anomaly. I saw that the tag price on the bacon-sliced pork had already been
changed to P220 a kilo, but the tag price on the butter remained as P78. (I
have proof in my possession: the P215.69 tag price on the item; the receipt
of the same as P229.24; a digital shot of the P78 price on the shelf dated
8/1/10; and the same cash receipt showing P88 for this item. The supervisor
at Save More admitted there could have been “negligence” on the part of the
store. She said that daily memos from SM “Main” re price changes came daily,
so that it was possible that employees had failed to catch up and update the
tag prices. She offered to give me the difference between the tag price and
registered price. However, I refused to accept the money, because it would
have meant that I had accepted to accept their explanation.



Episode 2, SAVE MORE, Riverbanks, Marikina, Aug. 3, 2010

My son who had been my companion at Save More Cubao on August 1st, purchased
a 550gram pack of Skyflakes at Save More Riverbanks which bore a price of
P34.75. However, this item registered as P35! My son immediately complained
about this, but Customer Service refused to return the difference, saying
that the item was actually P35, but the tag price had not yet been changed.



Episode 3, SM MARIKINA, July 19, 2010

I bought two pairs of shoes, one of which I was tagged as P1,295. However,
the cash register came out as P1,495. Naturally, I complained. The cashier
explained the bar code showed P1,495. The sales rep of Outland shoes was
summoned and asked whether the shoes were indeed P1,295. She confirmed this
price, so the cashier had a supervisor come to adjust the amount that had
appeared in the register.



Episode 4, SM CUBAO, sometime in June 2010

My daughter-in-law purchased a piece of illustration board tagged at P26.80,
but the cash register marked this as P28.80. When she complained about it,
she was told that the tag prices had not yet been adjusted, but she was
given the P2.00 difference.



Episode 5, SM MARIKINA, Dec. 26, 2009


******

Below is my Jan. 16, 2010 reply to Ms. Cora Guidote, Vice President of
Investor Relations Department of SM Investments Corporation, which relates
an incident that happened to our nephew.



Dear Ms. Guidote:



Thank you very much for writing me to respond to my claims of cheating that
is going on at Makro and at other SM stores.


Well, please know that my husband and I personally witnessed the aftermath
of another apparent cheating incident--this time, at SM Marikina.


On Dec. 26, 2009, we happened to see our nephew, Mr. Chito Olivares Caluag,
complaining at Ace Hardware that his receipt had been apparently padded by
P2,000. Before Christmas Day, Mr. Caluag had purchased from Ace Hardware
several items and, although he was surprised then that his purchases totaled
P7,000, he did not check the items on his receipt. When he got home, he did
check and noted that one item worth P2,000 was something he had not bought
and was missing from the items he had brought home. So, he returned to Ace
Hardware after Christmas and asked to be shown what that P2,000 item was. To
his great surprise, the item was a huge plastic trash can that he never even
thought of, much less bought! He demanded a refund--and to his amazement and
ours, he instantly got a P2,000 cash refund with very few questions asked.
(As far as I know and based on my personal experience regarding returned or
exchanged items at SM, nobody ever gets a cash refund--only a credit memo.)
Obviously, there was something fishy in the case of my nephew.

Yes, by all means, the management of SM should investigate what's going on.
Thank you.

Yours truly,

NEOMI T. OLIVARES



Following is the email of Ms. Cora Guidote to me:


On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 5:51 PM, <[email protected]> wrote:


Dear Ms. Lopez and Ms. Olivares,

Your emails have been forwarded to me and I have, in turn, forwarded them to
the head of the Food Retail Group of SM. They might contact you directly
about this to check what may have happened in the store while you were
there. Please feel free to email me anytime should you have any concerns
about the service of any of our businesses and we will be glad to address
them.

Thank you and wish you a very Happy New Year!

Cora Guidote
Vice President
Investor Relations Department
SM Investments Corporation
10/Floor OneE-com Center
Harbor Drive, Mall of Asia Complex
Pasay City
Tel: 857-0100



NOTE: This was the first and last communication I got from Ms. Cora Guidote.
I do not know of any action taken by SM regarding our complaints. –Neomi
Olivares

Episode 6, Makro, Dec. 11, 2009

--- On Fri, 12/11/09, Virginia Lopez <[email protected]>wrote:


From: Virginia Lopez <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: Cheating by SM and Makro
To: "Mabel Macaraig" <[email protected]>
Date: Friday, December 11, 2009, 1:36 PM

Sharing my own experience....just recently at Makro...

I bought "garlic"...4 packs of of them.....Lucky for me, that the "kind and
nice salesclerk" noticed when he punched, that the item is tagged as
"crabs"....and as well know, the price per kilo of crabs is much, much
higher than the garlic. My husband then went back to the area and got
instead another pack, making sure he
got the right coding from where he got it and which when re-punched again in
the paying counter, turned out to be ok, correctly coded "as garlic"....


The kind salesclerk however, requested the assistance of another salesclerk,
to go back to the area and have the other packs properly labeled. He
returned, with the packs of garlic, supposedly with the right price code
..but, again, it's still priced and tagged as CRABS !!!! Nakakaloka ang sabi
ng "good" salesclerk sa paying counter !!!! How is this? How come my husband
got it right ??? Two labelling machines?

I ended up just getting just that one pack properly labeled as garlic....and
even jokingly said to the nice clerk (who's also as surprised as I am and
wondering
why this is so !!!!] "I didn't know garlic's name has been changed to CRABS
and still surprised that crabs look like garlic nowadays !!!

Where is the price quality control then ??? Nobody checks????? Had it not
been for the "kind" and watchful salesclerk who still checks on what he
punches, then I would have been paying for a garlic for the price of crabs
!!!!!

Lesson.... be sure to check the item as they are punched !!!!!! Do watch as
they are keyed in !!!

Episode 7, Makro, Cubao, 2009


Dear Friends,

I got this email entitled "Too Much Cheating at SM".



I have encountered exactly the same problem several times at Makro (Cubao).
On two occasions, I happened to watch the monitor on which one can see the
items electronically entered by the cashier. Since I had been enticed to buy
certain items (specifically, potatoes, lemons and french fries) due to the
low prices on their labels, I had sort of memorized the said prices. I was
shocked that the amounts electronically registered were not simply higher
but actually double the price that was on their labels.



I explicitly manifested my displeasure and demanded to speak to the manager,
but predictably, when such things happen, they say the manager is out, and
so I was able to talk only to the supervisor each time. The excuse? They
said that the prices had been increased but unfortunately their staff had
not yet adjusted the labels. Tell that to the marines! The most I could do
for was to return the anomalously marked items.



Think about how many thousands of consumers are fooled in this manner!



Feel free to circulate this warning about MAKRO and SM (which, by the way,
belong to the SM Group of Companies).

NEOMI OLIVARES


Episode 8, SM Hypermart



Subject: Too Much Cheating At SM

I want to warn you about TOO MUCH CHEATING at SM - and that includes their
supermarkets and their department store.

Almost every time I purchase something at SM supermarkets, the price the
cashier rings up for one or more of the items I purchase does not match the
tag price on the shelf. This happens CONSTANTLY. Yesterday, for example, I
purchased a liwanag candle at SM Hypermart in Tiendesitas which was tagged
at P29.95, and just noticed this morning that I was actually charged P91.75.
A few days ago the same thing happened with two different items.

Sometime ago, I purchased a blender from SM Department Store at the basement
of Megamall for around P1100.00, and then walked to the department where
they sell TVs, etc., and saw the exact same blender for just over P800.. I
complained and asked that they give me a refund for the difference since it
was just a matter of minutes (yes, just minutes), and I was refused with the
reason that they are two different departments and run by different
management.

My maid just told me that this happens to her also constantly. When she
recently bought achuete that was tagged at P10.00, she noticed when she got
home that she got charged P15.50 instead. And then a can of Canola oil
tagged at P129.00 got rung up at P131.00

I have complained many times to customer service, and all they tell me is
"sorry sir", but do absolutely nothing to return the difference, and instead
give fucking excuses.

This is nothing but BLATANT CHEATING.

So next time you shop at SM, PLEASE BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR MORE CHEATING.

Manny Manapat

Conclusion

What conclusions can we draw from the above?

Clearly, there appears to be a pattern of anomalies occurring at different
SM stores. I do not know if the supposed daily memos of price changes are
intended to confuse both SM employees and customers alike, but the end
result is that thousands of SM customers are duped daily and that SM is the
one reaping huge profits from such anomalies.

WARNING: From now on, closely monitor the prices registered on the cash
register as they are punched in by the cashier, and check your grocery
receipts vis-à-vis your individual purchases. More importantly, speak up
against these evil practices!



PLEASE PASS ON THIS MESSAGE.

-- 
PJ C. Reyes

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gimik" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/gimik?hl=en.

Reply via email to