Bill,
After your story, Lynn will have to sell her Home Depot stock...
Regards,  Bob S.

On Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 10:57 AM, William Robb <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "George Sinos"
> Subject: Re: Message from Henry Posner, Part I
>
>
>
>> These people raise the cost of doing business which raises prices for all
>> of us.
>>
>> You guy with the attitude of "the store should eat the cost."  You do
>> understand that that raises the cost of doing business which only
>> raises the price for everyone else, don't you?
>
> Dammit Geoge, I hate it when you make a liar out of me.
> For the past 9 months or so, I have been slinging lumber at my local Home
> Depot.
> Here are some actual returns I've dealt with:
> A cart load of 5/4x6/16' PT deck boards returned.
> The top layer was new wood, the bottom 40 boards had been pulled off a deck.
> I presume they replaced old wood with new and successfully returned the old
> product.
> Odd length boards such as 11 foot runs. We sell 8', 10' and 12'
> Soketimes you get to see where the customer calculated his cut and them
> marked it wrong.
> Boards with screws still embedded in them (I hit that with my radial arm saw
> when cutting it down to cull and I wouldn't be happy).
> Sheets of plywood that have been cut up and then returned because they did
> the cuts wrong.
> If you like, I can post a picture of a sheet of MDF that was broken by a
> vehicle driving over it.
> We gave them their money back for it, too.
> Broken sheets of drywall.
> A pail of drywall mud that had been opened and partially used.
> Two end plates from single device electrical boxes that the customer had
> bought, made a single two gang box with and then returned the unused end
> plates for a full refund.
>
> I bitched and moaned about this sort of thing at a Towne Hall metting once
> and was told that this sort of thing was a very small % of returns, and that
> the company's position was that it wasn't worth annoying customers over.
> We eat the loss, write off the product at full retail and I am sure that the
> Harvard guys figure out some way to turn it into a financial windfall.
>
> The point is, a good retailer takes the point of view that the customer,
> while not always right, at least deserves the benefit of the doubt, and
> should not be called out as a liar by the retailer.
>
> In the situation that led us to this thread, had B&H been as good a retailer
> as Home Depot is, they would have taken the hit, and not had the bad PR that
> anyone doing a Google search is going to give them when people find this
> thread.
> B&H has not only made it plain that they will not stand behind their pricing
> when they find it inconvenient, they have sicced one of their
> representatives onto this forum and he, in turn, has cast a few insults at
> forum members.
>
> It's one thing for Bill Robb to insult Henry Posner, Bill Robb is known for
> this sort of behaviour.
> It is something else entirely for B&H Photo to insult Bill Robb, who has
> been a good customer of theirs.
>
> William Robb
>
>
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