Lee
Saint Peters,#2UPDATE EX-employee responds
Wed, September 24, 2003
As an ex-employee of Best Buy I can attest to the fact that they require you (sales associate) to be vigorous in persuit of the extended warranties. I was constantly reminded that I was not agressive enough and not selling enough of the warranties. Silly me, I thought that the customer was always right, and that if after explaining the advantages of the warranty they refused, once was enough! Just so you know why the sales guys are so hot to move the extended warranties. It's a corporate mandate, and they are serious about it. It's a VERY big money maker for them.
Lee
Saint Peters,#3UPDATE EX-employee responds
Wed, September 24, 2003
As an ex-employee of Best Buy I can attest to the fact that they require you (sales associate) to be vigorous in persuit of the extended warranties. I was constantly reminded that I was not agressive enough and not selling enough of the warranties. Silly me, I thought that the customer was always right, and that if after explaining the advantages of the warranty they refused, once was enough! Just so you know why the sales guys are so hot to move the extended warranties. It's a corporate mandate, and they are serious about it. It's a VERY big money maker for them.
Lee
Saint Peters,#4UPDATE EX-employee responds
Wed, September 24, 2003
As an ex-employee of Best Buy I can attest to the fact that they require you (sales associate) to be vigorous in persuit of the extended warranties. I was constantly reminded that I was not agressive enough and not selling enough of the warranties. Silly me, I thought that the customer was always right, and that if after explaining the advantages of the warranty they refused, once was enough! Just so you know why the sales guys are so hot to move the extended warranties. It's a corporate mandate, and they are serious about it. It's a VERY big money maker for them.
Tom
Lakeland,#5UPDATE Employee
Fri, September 12, 2003
First of all, what you purchased on your $30 CD player was a Product Replacement Plan; NOT an expended warranty. PRP only covers for 2 years, and is good for one use only. If the CD player fails within the Mfg warranty period (as yours did), then we would replace it with a new one, or credit you the amount paid for the malfunctioning unit towards a better one. At which time, you would have the opportunity to purchase coverage for another 2 years at $5. (or whatever) If the product had failed within 30 days, you would have been given a new one reguardless of your having purchased the PRP or not. As far as you not being able to return the new product the next day....? I think that was a miscommunication. Probably what they MEANT to say, was that you had the chance to buy the PRP on the new unit then, but it would not be made available to you if you wanted to buy it tomorrow.
Gail
Wabash,#6Consumer Comment
Sat, July 12, 2003
My husband and I bought a small cd player for $30 at best buy. When checking out, the cashier aked us to purchase the extended warranty. We said "No" but she continued to tell us that for $5, the cd player would be repaired or replaced for 2 years, no matter how many problems we had with it. After several minutes, we decided it was only $5, why not? Three months later, the CD player broke. We drive an hour to the nearest Best Buy where we had originally made the purchase. We were told to exchange it. Of course, they were out of stock. We chose a different model, paid the price difference and the returns clerk told us that if we took home the cd player home and had problems with it today, we could not return it tomorrow. After arguing for several minutes, the manager came out. He didn't even know the return policy in his own store!! If I would have paid cash, I would have had a thirty day warranty, but since I purchased the extended warranty, I could not return it at all. I was misled when purchasing the agreement("You can return it as many times as you need to!!" Yeah, Right!!!) I was lucky that had only bought a small item. I will never shop at a Best Buy again, and i will encourage anyone to never purchase a high-ticket item from Best Buy. If they weren't willing to accomodate me at $30, how will they handle someone who spends $10,000 on a plasma t.v.?
Sue
Carey,#7Consumer Comment
Sun, July 06, 2003
I think you missed the consurmers point entirely she did not want the warranty they were offering her she said no. She wanted to purchase the TV only. Why was she constantly asked over and over? Why can't a consumer go in and purchase a TV and only a TV we do still have that right don't we? If the TV breaks then its on us to pay for the repairs, yes you as the employee have done your job letting us know it could break and have informed us of your plan. But we have the right to say no once, twice is more than enough, its absurd to have to keep saying no, and have employees gang up on a customer. I don't understand your behavior but it wouldn't make me want to buy a TV from you.
G
Indianapolis,#8UPDATE Employee
Tue, July 01, 2003
Best Buy does push service contracts. And when it comes to anything electronic, you are better off to pay extra and get the warranty. I've made a point of getting the service contracts and have had to replace my products twice. In both cases, Best Buy honored the contract and I came away with a new, better product. This is 2003 - we're all about electronics. But we're not all about perfection. You need to have some extra coverage for when things go bad. It's called "insurance" in other business. Do yourself a favor, rethink your future purchases.