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ANOTHER
RAVE
Fair
Is Fair
A
few weeks back I wrote a Line
of Sight column about a poor customer service policy
at Best Buy regarding returns. (And to clarify, because
some people were confused, I wasn't looking for Best Buy
to make an exception for meI was railing against the
policy in general.)
Well,
fair's fair. If I'm going to complain about something bad,
I should give praise to someone who's doing things right.
Two years ago, Sue bought a book at Borders. She only now
got around to reading it (we have a lot of books, and sometimes
our to-be-read piles grow quite large). As she neared the
end, she found that her copy was marred by a printing error,
and a number of pages were missing and others were repeated.
In publishing terms, this was a repeated signature.
Now,
after two years, she did not have a receipt. But we took
it back in anyway. I went along mostly because I wanted
to know what would happen. Sue showed them the book and
they happily exchanged it for another exact same book, right
then and there. No questions asked. Even though she bought
it two years ago. Without a receipt.
As someone
who's priced both, I know that the value to the retailer
for a big, hardcover book (which this was) was considerably
more than that of a DVD (to refer back to the Best Buy policy).
Now, I'm sure that Borders will return the book to the publisher
for a credit and so they're not out anything but a little
clerk time (just like Best Buy could have done with my scratched
DVD). In being willing to do that, they gained a lot of
consumer good will.
Although
I'm overall a big fan of the independent bookstores, I certainly
think that Borders deserves some credit for a very customer-friendly
policy. There's no question that I'll continue to shop there.
Way
to go, Borders!
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