Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Loyal-Tease - A Liz James Rant


I've had it! Had it up to my ears with retailers' plastic plugging up my wallet.

Had it up to my ears with having to produce a "club card" to qualify for a fair price, or for "points" that will get me little but the odd dollar off the price of a produce I don't want, five years hence.

What got me started on this rant?

The forecast was for rain all day today. So I promised myself a treat; this year I would buy myself a rain jacket at the beginning of the rainy season, rather than settling for a $14.99 job in a year-end sale.

Went to Work Warehouse, found nothing suitable. Went next door to Mountain Equipment Coop. Found a nice Goretex item. It fit. It was a good colour for winter visibility. Priced at $155 - $173.60 including taxes, it was not cheap, but not out of line, so I took it to the checkout counter and waited in line.

When I heard the customer ahead having a verbal with the clerk, after I saw him hand over a $5.00 bill, I had the first hint of what was to come.

Sure enough, "What's your telephone number, please?" the clerk welcomed me.

"Why?"

"Have you bought here before?" he followed up.

"No," says I.

"Oh - well we're a coop, " he explained, "you have to be a member to buy here; but it's only $5.00," he said brightly.

"In that case," I replied, "you'll need to return this to the rack, because I am not prepared to pay $5.00 for the privilege of spending close to $175.00 in your store."

What gives with us Canadians that we put up with these scams?

Safeway requires a club card to get a "member's price" that's often double the regular Walfart. Save-On also requires a card to rack up points whereby, if you ever get close to earning $5.00, they ask you to donate your points to charity - does it actually go to the charity?

Shoppers Drugs, Zellers, HBC - they're all on the same "loyalty customer" bandwagon - a bandwagon Indigo-Chapters excels at with, perhaps, the worst "membership" of all at $20 a shot...

And don't even get me going about gas stations and their 3.5 "savings" scam at the pump.

These schemes are nothing but rackets that, to my mind, fly very close to the line of fraud. The real purpose, of course, is to obtain personal information that we'd bitch loud and clear about, if the schemes were mooted by government. Retail establishments want to know who we are and how old; what we buy; how much we spend and how best to invade our space with telemarketing and email.

In many cases, "sale prices," "specials" and "20 percents off regular" are also spurious. How often must a store hold a Scratch n' Save weekend, or a "Senior's Tuesday", or a "Warehouse Sale" before its "regular" price becomes 30-40-50 percent lower than the sales tag indicates?

How many of last weekend's North Vancouver Sears Customers realized that the 25% off an $18.00 Alia top was beaten, hands-down, by the $7.99 price in the TanJay store just around the corner in the mall? No wonder the clerk was prepared to do a price-match - it was preferable to my having a discussion with her a couple of decibels higher.

Don't get me wrong here - that these scams continue is not the fault of the clerks. It is the fault of us customers who put up with it all -- and of the governments who fail, year after year, to tighten the rules.

So - if you readers out there agree with me, if you want things to change, if you are prepared to pay a fair price for goods but no more - then, for crying out loud, do something about it. Stand up for yourselves.

Send your concerns to Mark Startup, President and CEO of Retail BC at: mark@retailbc.org or to...

BC Minister of Economic Development at:

Hon. Ida Chong <ida.chong.mla@leg.bc.ca>

and to --

Sears Canada at: home@sears.ca

Shoppers Drugs at: ?? buried somewhere on its website?? or call your local store

Shell Canada at: questions@shell.com

Imperial Esso at: http://www.imperialoil.ca/Canada-English/About/A_Contacts.asp

Chevron Canada at: https://www.chevron.ca/Secure/Contactus/default.asp

PetroCan at: https://www.petro-canada.ca/en/independent/1449.aspx

and, to be fair, the best invite of all at: Chapters-Indigo - "If you are dissatisfied, write to us"

http://www.chapters.indigo.ca/contactus

It is not my intention to "pick-on" these retail establishments. They are not unique. They are just those I've remembered from recent experience. Most stores operate on a variation of this retail theme. It is their effort to attract customers to their products.

What no corporate decision-makers seem to realize, is that the very best attraction of all is for a store to offer its customers -- quality products - fair prices - truthful warranties - and attentive but not cloying, well-informed/trained customer service.

That would have far better effect than forcing customers to wait in line while someone has to find and dig out their plastic club/points card.

And lastly, remember this -- If it looks like a store, behaves like a store, and sells items for sale to make money like a store - it IS a store - no matter what it may call itself on the door.

Elizabeth James

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well Liz, I agree with much of what you write. We stopped going to Costco many years ago because of the yearly fee. I will not give my postal code at IKEA for no other reason than for them to track their sales -- if they want me to participate in their information gathering, they should pay me for the privilege. I have a card for Choices and Shopper's Drug Mart, and have yet to receive any benefit from said cards and I became a "member" of MEC so long ago I no longer know where my card is -- luckily they will take a telephone number as proof of membership. Reading your rant I am laughing at my participation in these "scams". However, if there were no cards, the prices would not be reduced and there are some benefits as a trade-off for their information gathering. Recently our family has, with Airmiles, obtained three flights to Spain in August at only the cost of the taxes. I have to say I felt pretty chuffed pulling this off. Yes, they got my consumer information as a trade off for my "free" flights, but what the heck, I did benefit in this case. Over the years, we have also had flights through Airmiles to Florida and Nova Scotia. Nonetheless, what you wrote has a definite ring of truth.

Mo.

Anonymous said...

The argument that some stores collect far too much consumer information is valid, but please pick a better target.

MEC is a COOPERATIVE, not a regular store, and not a price club.

For those who care, MEC designs and produces some the most technically advanced adventure clothing in the world, helping to make adventure camping accessible to the masses.

Believe me, die-hard MEC members would pay very much more for the privilege of belonging.

And, if you don't like the price and want to shop elsewhere, go ahead. But please, don't confuse a coop membership with a consumer rewards program.

Anonymous said...

Here is the real deal, shop in the States! American retailers are among the best merchandisers in the world and when they have a sale, they are not happy until they have empty shelves!

Here are very recent examples of the savings.

Avia training shoes - marked USD $125 - sale $15

Assorted children's clothes - marked USD $225 - sale $25.

Barbecue - marked USD $295 - sale $49 ............. and so on!

Forget greedy merchants here, avoid them like the plague, until, that is, they learn how to give the poor punter a good deal!

Anonymous said...

Hi! Someone in my Myspace group shared this website with us so I came to look it over.
I'm definitely loving the information. I'm book-marking and
will be tweeting this to my followers! Superb blog and superb design.
zetaclear reviews zetaclear reviews