Princesca
<3 Pink sugar heart attack! <3
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2011
- Messages
- 2,117
So my family draws names at Christmas and we exchange lists... we always buy off the list. For some reason, the person who drew my name went OFF the list and got me something that I neither wanted nor needed. It was a travel coffee mug, and I a) drink coffee BEFORE I leave for work, and b) when I do drink coffee in the morning, it's an espresso shot, not something that necessitates a giant coffee mug.
Like a lot of people, I'm trying to declutter, so I don't really want something I'll never use sitting around. To make matters worse, it has my first initial on it, so I can't even regift it unless I suddenly make a new friend whose name starts with the same letter as mine. So I was really frustrated about that... we do lists for a reason. This person has very little in common with me, really, but relation by marriage, and doesn't know me well enough to be shopping for me without a guide.
I have never really understood people who will get a list and say "Wow, here's the list of things that this person really, really wants to have... aw, but to heck with that! Why rely on what they said they want - I know better what they want than they do. Who cares if I barely know them?! I'm sure it'll be a smash..."
I also had on my list that I didn't really want any gift cards, and this same person went to a store where I had something written down that I wanted (bubble bath or body spray in any scent) and got me a gift card. 
Anyway, the mug came in a bag from a boutique - not a chain - that had the store's address and website on a sticker decorating the bag. There was no receipt, but there was a tag still on it stating the price.
I contacted the store owner and politely asked if I could exchange for a refund or store credit, since it clearly came from their store and had the tag still on it. They told me, expressing no regret or sympathy, that I absolutely could not exchange it without the receipt. I even offered to take half the value in store credit, and was still told no. I didn't want to ask for the receipt, because I didn't want to cause any drama, but I was so irritated by the whole situation that I ended up asking for the receipt anyway. And you can bet, now, that I'm going to get a cash refund and I'm not going to spend one red cent of it in their store.
Really... if you're going to run a business, get some customer service skills! First of all, cut people a little slack. I'm not asking for something for nothing. I even offered an arrangement on which the shop owner would come out ahead. Either way, an email along the lines of this, which took me fifteen seconds to compose, would have made a world of difference:
"Dear Princesca - sorry to hear that the gift you were given wasn't something that you needed! Unfortunately, our store policy says that we can't accept returns without a receipt. I'd love to be able to help you out, but we have to stick to that. If you do get the receipt, I'd be more than happy to help you out with the exchange. We have lots of lovely items and I'm sure you'd be able to find something that better suits you."
Instead, I got:
"Princesca: We don't accept returns without a receipt. Regards, So and So"
I think the reason I'm so venty about this is that I'm noticing, lately, a plethora of small businesses that don't cater to customers and then seem bewildered when they don't do well. I've also been fortunate in my life to transact with some truly outstanding small businesses, who really do put the customer first. And those places are shops I'll be loyal to until they go out of business or until I die, whichever comes first. This place is the kind of place I ordinarily like to shop, but once I get this exchange handled, I'll never set foot in there again and I will probably also steer friends away from there and toward places with less rigid exchange policies and more sympathy for the customer. Why shouldn't I, when there are plenty of equally charming boutiques who know how to compromise?
Anyway, not looking for advice or answers really, just venting. And I feel kind of crappy for looking a gift horse in the mouth, so to speak, but we set rules for the gift giving and we all consent to them, and it's not like there are MANY, it's basically just 'spend X much and shop off the list' and it bugs me when people chuck them out the window.
Did anyone else have a similarly frustrating experience this Christmas?
Like a lot of people, I'm trying to declutter, so I don't really want something I'll never use sitting around. To make matters worse, it has my first initial on it, so I can't even regift it unless I suddenly make a new friend whose name starts with the same letter as mine. So I was really frustrated about that... we do lists for a reason. This person has very little in common with me, really, but relation by marriage, and doesn't know me well enough to be shopping for me without a guide.



Anyway, the mug came in a bag from a boutique - not a chain - that had the store's address and website on a sticker decorating the bag. There was no receipt, but there was a tag still on it stating the price.
I contacted the store owner and politely asked if I could exchange for a refund or store credit, since it clearly came from their store and had the tag still on it. They told me, expressing no regret or sympathy, that I absolutely could not exchange it without the receipt. I even offered to take half the value in store credit, and was still told no. I didn't want to ask for the receipt, because I didn't want to cause any drama, but I was so irritated by the whole situation that I ended up asking for the receipt anyway. And you can bet, now, that I'm going to get a cash refund and I'm not going to spend one red cent of it in their store.
Really... if you're going to run a business, get some customer service skills! First of all, cut people a little slack. I'm not asking for something for nothing. I even offered an arrangement on which the shop owner would come out ahead. Either way, an email along the lines of this, which took me fifteen seconds to compose, would have made a world of difference:
"Dear Princesca - sorry to hear that the gift you were given wasn't something that you needed! Unfortunately, our store policy says that we can't accept returns without a receipt. I'd love to be able to help you out, but we have to stick to that. If you do get the receipt, I'd be more than happy to help you out with the exchange. We have lots of lovely items and I'm sure you'd be able to find something that better suits you."
Instead, I got:
"Princesca: We don't accept returns without a receipt. Regards, So and So"
I think the reason I'm so venty about this is that I'm noticing, lately, a plethora of small businesses that don't cater to customers and then seem bewildered when they don't do well. I've also been fortunate in my life to transact with some truly outstanding small businesses, who really do put the customer first. And those places are shops I'll be loyal to until they go out of business or until I die, whichever comes first. This place is the kind of place I ordinarily like to shop, but once I get this exchange handled, I'll never set foot in there again and I will probably also steer friends away from there and toward places with less rigid exchange policies and more sympathy for the customer. Why shouldn't I, when there are plenty of equally charming boutiques who know how to compromise?
Anyway, not looking for advice or answers really, just venting. And I feel kind of crappy for looking a gift horse in the mouth, so to speak, but we set rules for the gift giving and we all consent to them, and it's not like there are MANY, it's basically just 'spend X much and shop off the list' and it bugs me when people chuck them out the window.
Did anyone else have a similarly frustrating experience this Christmas?