2009/5/27 Ted Harding Ted.Harding@manchester.ac.uk:
Long story, so apologies -- but the details matter.
A few days ago I was checking my bank account online. I noticed a Direct Debit for £7.99 made that day. Puzzled, I checked the full transaction details: it was to PC World. I checked back earlier -- another one, a month earlier.
Well, I had been to PC World in Cambridge a couple of months earlier. Objective: pick up a cheapish laptop to play with some Linux distros, then do a proper installation.
I noticed a quite nice Hewlett Packard T2390 on special offer at £329.97 (not too keen on the keyboard, but it's OK. The rest seems fine). While I was looking around, one of the shop-floor assistants latched on to me assiduously. I tried asking him something about printers, (built-in PostScript with auto-duplex capability) but he didn't know much. While I was at it I picked up an ethernet switch and a laptop carrier bag. Total bill £387.20 (added up in my head).
He then offered to help me carry the stuff (cardboard box with the laptop in, switch box, bag) to the checkout, which I didn't really need but since he offered ...
He then stood beside me at the checkout while I paid. Total payment £387.20 (as added up in my head). I got the receipt, along with what looked like some publicity leaflets, and went out to my car. I didn't get an offer of help for that bit.
I didn't check the details on the receipt at the time -- I felt that things had basically taken their expected course.
After checking my bank account, however, I did check the receipt in detail. At the top:
HEWLETPACK A961EM T2390 £329.97
and beneath that, in very small print:
Discount Manager Offer - Manager Discretion -£7.99
then:
PC PERFORMANCE £7.99
followed by the items for the network switch and the bag.
So I had been signed up for their "PC Performance" cover, including the first instalment of £7.99, without noticing (it had not changed the total price).
And I have no recollection of being asked at any time if I wanted this. If I had been, I would have said no -- because the first thing I intended to do was to wipe off Windows and put on Linux, which would probably have voided any warranty. (In any case, I never take up these "product cover & support" things).
I then phoned "PC Performance" (a PC World sideline), and was told that they would cancel the cover, and cease the D/D, but I could not get a refund because more than 2 weeks had passed. If I wanted to get the money back, I should contact my Bank to initiate an "Indemnity Claim".
So I phoned my Bank, and described the situation. "Oh, it looks as though they've been a bit cheeky", she said. We discussed Indemnity Claim, and it seemd a long shot (there had been two of them at the till, one the cashier, the other the shop-floor assistant), so I dropped the idea. But she said she would immediately close the D/D.
She rang back a few minutes later, to say that since the D/D had been cancelled on the same day a debit had been made, the debit of £7.99 for that day would be refunded. So that left me overall £7.99 out of pocket (break-even on the first one, due to "Manager's Discretion"). Not worth trying to take further, though I felt annoyed enough to want to!
Well, that's my PC World experience! Moral: look closely at the receipt! (Though by the time I could have done that, it would all have been set up already -- but at least I would have been within the 2-week period for getting any money back).
(And I didn't get the impression that it was the first time the Bank lady had heard such a story ... ).
/
I think I would be inclined to send this message to every UK published computer magazine, /., The Register, any national newspaper that has a financial help column and just about any web site that PC World customers might possibly read. Name and shame. I never use PC World they are generally expensive and un-helpful/knowledgeable. Now it seems they are dishonest too!
Cheers, BJ