
12-13-2014 12:06 AM
I have a buyer that is claiming an item is not as described and wants a full and total refund because one of the two pictures in the ad were not of the item being sold. However, the title and the written description describe the item EXACTLY. Is he correct or
Should I:
A) deny the refund
B) return the cost of the item but not shipping
C) return everything
The item is not expensive enough for me to pay for return shipping. $10.50
12-13-2014 06:10 AM
The correct answer is:
d) give full and immediate refund with apologies for the mistake.
As a seller you are 100% responsible for inserting the wrong image in your listing. The buyer should not have to pay for return shipping.
12-13-2014 11:56 AM
"The item is not expensive enough for me to pay for return shipping. $10.50"
So the buyer gets to keep the item for free even though (assuming he could read) he got what he wanted and bid for.
I don't think he has a case and is using the pic to get a freebe.
At the most I'd refund the bid and tell him to ship the item back at his expense if that's according to your return policy.
I had a similar complaint that went to the higher courts and when the buyer found out to return the item he would have to pay for a shipping service that had tracking he backed off. The item was a repo however the buyer didn't read the description.
12-13-2014 12:19 PM
If the item is not worth you paying the $10.50 return shipping it is not worth the buyer paying it either. Were I the buyer and you tried to pull that I'd leave appropriate feedback and DSR's.
As a seller I'd refund immediately and apologise for my mistake.
12-13-2014 12:38 PM
"Were I the buyer and you tried to pull that I'd leave appropriate feedback and DSR's."
I doubt Add1956 was trying to pull anything. The wrong picture was an honest mistake.
12-13-2014 12:52 PM
"The wrong picture was an honest mistake."
I think most sellers will agree it was an honest mistake. It is a mistake nevertheless by the seller and the buyer should not be out one penny for a mistake by the seller.
We all have to accept responsibility in life when we make mistakes. In this case, it will cost the seller a few dollars. Nobody else should have to pay for that mistake.
12-13-2014 01:45 PM
We all have to accept responsibility in life when we make mistakes.
12-13-2014 01:47 PM
Sorry forgot the quotes.
The seller should also remember, if being adult about errors is not enough, that the buyer can leave feedback and Detailed Seller Ratings describing her feelings about the transaction.
Is your business worth $10.50?
12-13-2014 03:44 PM
So no matter what Femme it's a gotcha no matter if it's $10.50 or $150? There is no principle as far as the seller is concerned? The one I described earlier was $75 and I wasn't prepared to let it go because the buyer didn't read the content.
12-13-2014 03:54 PM
The seller gave conflicting information in their listing...one picture didn't match with the info given. In a perfect world the buyer would have read everything and then asked the seller about the conflicting info. But ultimately the seller made the mistake so they are responsible for it.
If you put new in your title and then put repo in your description, you wouldn't feel that you were responsible for it? Or if you put a picture of a brand new, never used item and put repo in your description...it's up to the buyer to catch that mistake too?
12-13-2014 03:56 PM - edited 12-13-2014 03:57 PM
This "Is your business worth $10.50?"
if you believe you're business is worth more than I think you should get him to ship it back than refund and pay for it all if u think it's not worth it than give him the item if you don't think it's worth getting it back. Honestly how much do you think you're losing i'll just assume 20$ if you are paying 10 for shipping back to you and it's a 10$ item also if you have insurance jar than i'm sure you aren't actuley losing that much you just lost you're insurance jar fund which was put aside for these cases!
Good luck!
12-13-2014 05:14 PM
"If you put new in your title and then put repo in your description, you wouldn't feel that you were responsible for it? Or if you put a picture of a brand new, never used item and put repo in your description...it's up to the buyer to catch that mistake too?"
You're making assumptions, there was no mistake. New was not in the title. Repo was in the description which the buyer failed to read I guess.
12-14-2014 03:35 PM
Or if you put a picture of a brand new, never used item and put repo in your description...it's up to the buyer to catch that mistake too?"
You're making assumptions, there was no mistake. New was not in the title. Repo was in the description which the buyer failed to read I guess.
The picture was not correct. That's not an assumption. My point is that if there is conflicting information, the seller is responsible.
12-16-2014 10:13 AM
"Or if you put a picture of a brand new, never used item and put repo in your description...it's up to the buyer to catch that mistake too?"
Yep, here's a repo, can you tell if it's new or a repo? This was a reissue in 2006 by the Heddon lure company. A new repo!