I am going to buy the bionic from costco and I am going to return it for the vigor or prime(if it comes it verizon). Anyone think this a good idea?
Why dont you do the ethical thing and not take advantage of them? Honestly, there would be a lot more retailers that would offer better return plans if it wasnt for people who do the exact same thing that you are planning.
It is in the policy, yes, but that doesn't make it ethical. The ethics comes into intent. If he actually bought it wanting the item then found out it was defective or he didn't like it, it would be ethical to return or exchange it. Instead he is buying it with the full intent of returning the unit. Worked into margins or not, the store has to eat that cost. Which ends up getting passed onto the consumer in one way or another. There was a time when you had 90 day return policies, didn't need receipts, and could make as many exchanges/returns as you needed. But because people game the system now you need a receipt almost anywhere, have to provide ID, and some stores are only allowing a limited number of returns within a year.I see nothing un-ethical in what you propose. You are merely using the system for what it was designed. Return dates are there to give the customer reassurance that if they don't like the product, or if they find another product they like more, within the pre-arranged time that you the customer and they the retailer agree upon, you may return it for a full refund. It is a business contract between you and Costco that you both agree upon. Trust me, things like the are already built into the margins. they run the risk of people doing this, but what they gain is more customers feeling comfortable and having a reduced fear of initially buying the phone. Who knows, you may end up liking the phone enough to not return it at all. That is the basis by which these return agreements are based on. Get the product in the customer's hand and they will like it.
I say go for it!
If you don't like it, change your return policy.I too agree it is unethical if you are only doing it to try it out. I own a store and believe me most stores do not build experimental purchases into the margin. I hope people do not shop my store purchasing items on an experimental basis until the next best thing comes out. You cannot resell a product at full margin that has been used...you just hope you can get what you paid back. In those cases you have probably lost money most times because of the costs associated with getting the product in your retail establishment and the overhead of selling it..freight, credit card fees, staff salaries. Not good. So sad.
The return policy says (at least at Verizon) you can return it "for any reason." That obliterates the intent. Retailers know this happens. That's why there is a restocking fee.It is in the policy, yes, but that doesn't make it ethical. The ethics comes into intent. If he actually bought it wanting the item then found out it was defective or he didn't like it, it would be ethical to return or exchange it. Instead he is buying it with the full intent of returning the unit. Worked into margins or not, the store has to eat that cost. Which ends up getting passed onto the consumer in one way or another. There was a time when you had 90 day return policies, didn't need receipts, and could make as many exchanges/returns as you needed. But because people game the system now you need a receipt almost anywhere, have to provide ID, and some stores are only allowing a limited number of returns within a year.
Its like free samples in grocery stores. They expect you to take one. Then somebody keeps taking more and more free samples. Now how often do you see free samples in grocery stores? That was worked into their margins too....
I see nothing unethical about it. If u love the bionic you'll end up keeping it. If not you pay $35 for the privilege of returning it.
It is in the policy, yes, but that doesn't make it ethical. The ethics comes into intent. If he actually bought it wanting the item then found out it was defective or he didn't like it, it would be ethical to return or exchange it. Instead he is buying it with the full intent of returning the unit. Worked into margins or not, the store has to eat that cost. Which ends up getting passed onto the consumer in one way or another. There was a time when you had 90 day return policies, didn't need receipts, and could make as many exchanges/returns as you needed. But because people game the system now you need a receipt almost anywhere, have to provide ID, and some stores are only allowing a limited number of returns within a year.
Its like free samples in grocery stores. They expect you to take one. Then somebody keeps taking more and more free samples. Now how often do you see free samples in grocery stores? That was worked into their margins too....