win a ball from Bowling.com

Author Topic: Question, please read and post...  (Read 6489 times)

billdozer

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Question, please read and post...
« on: December 01, 2015, 06:39:09 AM »
Have any of you guys attempted to purchase a ball ever...or anything for that matter on the internet, and the website changed and upped the price of an item?

I understand the website can do as they please.. However...I feel even after a customer service rep was contacted I should have gotten the price as advertised.

*It was in my cart for probably 5 min while I continued to shop*

What do u think?  Needless to say I never really did business with them before..and I certainly won't be in the future. 
In the bag [Infinite Physix, Volatility Torque, Night Road, Phaze III, Burner Solid, Hustle AU]
*Now Testing* IQ Ruby, Renevant, another IQ Tour solid
Coming soon...???

 

Monster Pike

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #16 on: December 01, 2015, 10:47:11 AM »
I can understand from a retailer's point of view.  Prices may change during the course of the day for whatever reason they deem.  Putting an item in your cart is not the same as paying for it. The transaction if finalized when you pay.  Not saying this is the same, but imagine holding items in your cart for an extended period of time.  Prices change.  Unfortunately it happened during you shopping time.

Out of curiosity to others who have posted, what industry has prices change multiple times a day?  The only one I have dealt with (with negative experience) is apartment rentals.  If an apartment has 10 vacancies, there is a price set up to fill one unit.  Once a unit is rented (contract signed) the price on the other 9 will go up.  Even as you are waiting to fill out your paper work for the next one. 

Good ol' supply and demand.  Gotta love it.

I disagree.  Once it's in the cart, it's in the cart as advertised & priced.  Supply & demand is determined before it's put up for sale or at least before someone places it in their cart... Not after.

I've seen gas prices change more than once in a day.  But the price to be paid is known at pump BEFORE it's pumped not at the end of the transaction.
« Last Edit: December 01, 2015, 10:50:34 AM by Monster Pike »

dmonroe814

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #17 on: December 01, 2015, 10:47:24 AM »
@Billdozer.
I have only ordered a few balls online.  Buddies usually has the same price as my local pro shop.  Never any issues.
I thought once you had it in your cart, the price couldn't change.  Silly me.
14lb 15.5 mph at pins 325 Revs. Silver Coach, Ball Driller. In Bag:  Storm Pro-Motion, Hyroad X, Matchup, Code Red.

CBB

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #18 on: December 01, 2015, 10:51:31 AM »
Please for all of our sakes tell us the name of the online store that did this to you? also do you order small items from Buddies? I see they charge shipping rates like UPS, etc.

Metal_rules

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #19 on: December 01, 2015, 11:06:32 AM »
I did remember a time that I was reserving an airline ticket. From the time I found the correct departing time and date, then filled out all of my info (name,address,etc) then clicked the charge to card button. The site stopped the sale because the airfare price changed to a higher cost.  I had to start over for that price, if I wanted it.
« Last Edit: December 01, 2015, 02:16:49 PM by Metal_rules »
There's two kinds of music METAL and bullshit!

dmonroe814

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #20 on: December 01, 2015, 11:47:21 AM »
Please for all of our sakes tell us the name of the online store that did this to you? also do you order small items from Buddies? I see they charge shipping rates like UPS, etc.
I order small items from Buddies.  I usually wait until I need $50 worth of stuff so shipping is free.
14lb 15.5 mph at pins 325 Revs. Silver Coach, Ball Driller. In Bag:  Storm Pro-Motion, Hyroad X, Matchup, Code Red.

Bowler19525

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #21 on: December 01, 2015, 12:03:03 PM »

I disagree.  Once it's in the cart, it's in the cart as advertised & priced.  Supply & demand is determined before it's put up for sale or at least before someone places it in their cart... Not after.

I've seen gas prices change more than once in a day.  But the price to be paid is known at pump BEFORE it's pumped not at the end of the transaction.

All sites have different policies, usually outlined in their Terms and Conditions.  For example, one bowling equipment site clearly states that placing an order does not constitute an agreement to sell, and they reserve the right to cancel any order for any reason.  The same site also says they are not responsible for pricing errors and are not obligated to honor any price on any order.  It is important to review the T's and C's of the various sites, and also to make sure that deals that seem too good to be true are actually legitimate. 

One time at work, we received notice of an amazing deal from a long-standing vendor for a printer.  Several of us ordered printers for ourselves.  The vendor immediately canceled our orders stating the price was erroneous.  Fortunately, none of our actual end user customers ordered the printer from us as well.

My co-worker had an event at a gas station a few years ago where she pulled up to get gas, and the price was posted as $3.15.  She got out to start filling up, and the gas station attendant came over the loud speaker telling all customers to wait a few moments while the pumps were reset to the new price of $3.22.  They re-priced the pumps and the digital sign out front and then gave everyone the go ahead to resume gas purchases.

TonyinPortland

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #22 on: December 01, 2015, 08:21:48 PM »
I put an item, a sweatshirt, into the shopping car on Amazon at $10.99, along with a couple other items.  A couple hours later I got an email saying it had risen to $14.00, so I immediately went back and took it out, hoping maybe they would change it back, but they didn't.

I ended up buying a similar item from local Costco, instead.

billdozer

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #23 on: December 01, 2015, 08:32:52 PM »
I don't need to bash any particular site. 

It's not one of the better managed popular sites. 

It's not buddies, bowlers mart, bowlers deals, BOWLER x...

It's one that marks up stuff and charges handling fees on top of it ha-ha.  They actually had a good deal and I was going to give em my business..so much for that.

The above listed are the 5 I shop at, and will continue to shop at. 

I assure my story is true.  Customer service emailed me today about the issue a 2nd time.  "So-sorry"...it's a sellers market I guess. 

Oh well :) life goes on!
In the bag [Infinite Physix, Volatility Torque, Night Road, Phaze III, Burner Solid, Hustle AU]
*Now Testing* IQ Ruby, Renevant, another IQ Tour solid
Coming soon...???

Monster Pike

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #24 on: December 02, 2015, 10:13:45 PM »

I disagree.  Once it's in the cart, it's in the cart as advertised & priced.  Supply & demand is determined before it's put up for sale or at least before someone places it in their cart... Not after.

I've seen gas prices change more than once in a day.  But the price to be paid is known at pump BEFORE it's pumped not at the end of the transaction.

All sites have different policies, usually outlined in their Terms and Conditions.  For example, one bowling equipment site clearly states that placing an order does not constitute an agreement to sell, and they reserve the right to cancel any order for any reason.  The same site also says they are not responsible for pricing errors and are not obligated to honor any price on any order.  It is important to review the T's and C's of the various sites, and also to make sure that deals that seem too good to be true are actually legitimate. 

One time at work, we received notice of an amazing deal from a long-standing vendor for a printer.  Several of us ordered printers for ourselves.  The vendor immediately canceled our orders stating the price was erroneous.  Fortunately, none of our actual end user customers ordered the printer from us as well.

My co-worker had an event at a gas station a few years ago where she pulled up to get gas, and the price was posted as $3.15.  She got out to start filling up, and the gas station attendant came over the loud speaker telling all customers to wait a few moments while the pumps were reset to the new price of $3.22.  They re-priced the pumps and the digital sign out front and then gave everyone the go ahead to resume gas purchases.

I should have prefaced by saying "Should be once it's in the cart..."

To me it's just the way business "should be" conducted... I would never buy from a store, on-line or brick & mortar, who did that to me... changed the price once I picked it off the shelf or placed it in a cyber shopping cart...  Again, I believe price changes should be made advertised as the supply price is changed for the new stock, not once someone decides to buy it & especially not stock that was already purchased by seller at a previous lower price... That smells of rotten business.  Now if it was an obvious Oops on the sellers part by leaving a zero off like say a ball that all other shops are priced at $135.00 & it was accidentally marked as $13.50, then I see a legit reason for the seller to pull back & say wait a minute that's not the real price...

I don't even like gas stations changing price on gas that's already in their underground tanks.  It should be changed once that tank is refilled by the supplier.

Bowler19525

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Re: Question, please read and post...
« Reply #25 on: December 03, 2015, 08:10:41 AM »

I should have prefaced by saying "Should be once it's in the cart..."

To me it's just the way business "should be" conducted... I would never buy from a store, on-line or brick & mortar, who did that to me... changed the price once I picked it off the shelf or placed it in a cyber shopping cart...  Again, I believe price changes should be made advertised as the supply price is changed for the new stock, not once someone decides to buy it & especially not stock that was already purchased by seller at a previous lower price... That smells of rotten business.  Now if it was an obvious Oops on the sellers part by leaving a zero off like say a ball that all other shops are priced at $135.00 & it was accidentally marked as $13.50, then I see a legit reason for the seller to pull back & say wait a minute that's not the real price...

I don't even like gas stations changing price on gas that's already in their underground tanks.  It should be changed once that tank is refilled by the supplier.

I agree that prices shouldn't change from what is posted/advertised, however it happens all the time whether online or at brick and mortar retailers.  Stores such as Target and Walmart sell several thousand products in their stores, so it isn't surprising when the price on the shelf doesn't match what comes up at the checkout.  They will usually honor the posted price if you call them out on it.  Some supermarkets locally here will actually refund you double the difference of a mispriced item and give you another of the same item for free if you catch them in a mistake.

Having also worked on the other side of the fence, I have gained an appreciation for pricing challenges faced by companies and fully understand circumstances in which pricing errors or even price quotes simply cannot be honored due to the potential for significant loss.  The pricing at our company is real-time based on current supplier pricing, however that does not prevent issues.  If the pricing data supplied by the supplier is wrong, then we have an issue.  If we sell based on the incorrect price, and go back to the supplier to get them to honor it, they may say "no" which then puts us in a tough spot with our customer.  We either take the loss, take reduced profit, find another distributor with stock and negotiate with them to sell to us at the same pricing as the original supplier, propose an alternative product that we can sell at the same price, or ultimately cancel the order and apologize to the customer for an error that really wasn't our fault in the first place.

I would love to get an understanding of the pricing parameters in which the bowling equipment industry operates as it relates to the distribution channel, profit margins, shipping and delivery, direct vs. indirect distribution, etc.