Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Target is able to sell those diapers, so it's not an issue getting target credit for diapers bought from Amazon.
Sure but it’s deceitful, taking advantage because you’re lazy, and it messes up Target’s inventory. They may be able to sell them in that size, but they didn’t order them in that size. This might seem innocuous, but imagine if many people tried to do this on a daily basis. It’s no longer “no big deal.”
Target wouldn't take them if it messed up their inventory. And it isn't deceitful. I'm not going into the baby aisle and leaving one box and taking another. Once they scan everything in its even Stephens. I'll probably end up paying more because I got these diapers with subscribe and save
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Target is able to sell those diapers, so it's not an issue getting target credit for diapers bought from Amazon.
Sure but it’s deceitful, taking advantage because you’re lazy, and it messes up Target’s inventory. They may be able to sell them in that size, but they didn’t order them in that size. This might seem innocuous, but imagine if many people tried to do this on a daily basis. It’s no longer “no big deal.”
Target wouldn't take them if it messed up their inventory. And it isn't deceitful. I'm not going into the baby aisle and leaving one box and taking another. Once they scan everything in its even Stephens. I'll probably end up paying more because I got these diapers with subscribe and save
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Target is able to sell those diapers, so it's not an issue getting target credit for diapers bought from Amazon.
Not always. And even if so, it may then be under discount, and the store eats the cost. That's a liability the store takes on when you purchase from them, but it's unfair to try to force them to take it on when they didn't get your business for the product. Here's What Happens To A Product After You Return It To The Store (2012). Return fraud costs industry an average of $8-10 billion a year.
If you can't tell the truth about what you are doing, you shouldn't do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Target is able to sell those diapers, so it's not an issue getting target credit for diapers bought from Amazon.
Sure but it’s deceitful, taking advantage because you’re lazy, and it messes up Target’s inventory. They may be able to sell them in that size, but they didn’t order them in that size. This might seem innocuous, but imagine if many people tried to do this on a daily basis. It’s no longer “no big deal.”
Anonymous wrote:Target is able to sell those diapers, so it's not an issue getting target credit for diapers bought from Amazon.
Anonymous wrote:Target is able to sell those diapers, so it's not an issue getting target credit for diapers bought from Amazon.
Anonymous wrote:
How is this remotely comparable than trying to exchange something at a store that sells the thing you're exchanging? I didn't say I was going to machete the cashier if they said no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally confused by this question. You purchased the diapers from Amazon, and you're trying to return them to a completely different store? You didn't buy them from Target, you bought them from Amazon. Do you typically return things to totally random stores that weren't the original point of purchase? People actually try to do this?
I know, right?
This is why retail is hell. You have no idea how weird the shenanigans people get up to are.
I'm a doc. My private peds clinic was closed Wednesday afternoons and had been for years. We were very accommodating, and I'd even make special appointments on weekend. ALWAYS fit people that day in if they called before 9 am, never ran more than 10 minutes behind. I saw everyone at least once a year, so all the families knew, and there was an urgent care down the street with extended hours.
But then one dad barrels past the "closed" sign Wednesday at 3pm, yelled at my front desk person, and brought her to tears, saying he didn't give a f--- if we weren't open -- he thought his daughter had a UTI, and he was going to stay until I saw her, and it better be quick. I was on the phone with a pediatric oncologist trying to coordinate care for a child close to dying with multiple medical issues, and I had to leave for my own specialist doctor's appointment within 5 minutes (I have a serious but stable medical condition). I was -- flabbergasted? Appalled? when he tried to block me from leaving my own office. Child had pulled out the toys in the playroom and was happily playing.
So I started double-checking to make sure the deadbolt was shot each Wednesday afternoon. It was just so bizarre and abusive.
Thank you. That was very relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally confused by this question. You purchased the diapers from Amazon, and you're trying to return them to a completely different store? You didn't buy them from Target, you bought them from Amazon. Do you typically return things to totally random stores that weren't the original point of purchase? People actually try to do this?
I know, right?
This is why retail is hell. You have no idea how weird the shenanigans people get up to are.
I'm a doc. My private peds clinic was closed Wednesday afternoons and had been for years. We were very accommodating, and I'd even make special appointments on weekend. ALWAYS fit people that day in if they called before 9 am, never ran more than 10 minutes behind. I saw everyone at least once a year, so all the families knew, and there was an urgent care down the street with extended hours.
But then one dad barrels past the "closed" sign Wednesday at 3pm, yelled at my front desk person, and brought her to tears, saying he didn't give a f--- if we weren't open -- he thought his daughter had a UTI, and he was going to stay until I saw her, and it better be quick. I was on the phone with a pediatric oncologist trying to coordinate care for a child close to dying with multiple medical issues, and I had to leave for my own specialist doctor's appointment within 5 minutes (I have a serious but stable medical condition). I was -- flabbergasted? Appalled? when he tried to block me from leaving my own office. Child had pulled out the toys in the playroom and was happily playing.
So I started double-checking to make sure the deadbolt was shot each Wednesday afternoon. It was just so bizarre and abusive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally confused by this question. You purchased the diapers from Amazon, and you're trying to return them to a completely different store? You didn't buy them from Target, you bought them from Amazon. Do you typically return things to totally random stores that weren't the original point of purchase? People actually try to do this?
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally confused by this question. You purchased the diapers from Amazon, and you're trying to return them to a completely different store? You didn't buy them from Target, you bought them from Amazon. Do you typically return things to totally random stores that weren't the original point of purchase? People actually try to do this?
I know, right?
This is why retail is hell. You have no idea how weird the shenanigans people get up to are.
I'm a doc. My private peds clinic was closed Wednesday afternoons and had been for years. We were very accommodating, and I'd even make special appointments on weekend. ALWAYS fit people that day in if they called before 9 am, never ran more than 10 minutes behind. I saw everyone at least once a year, so all the families knew, and there was an urgent care down the street with extended hours.
But then one dad barrels past the "closed" sign Wednesday at 3pm, yelled at my front desk person, and brought her to tears, saying he didn't give a f--- if we weren't open -- he thought his daughter had a UTI, and he was going to stay until I saw her, and it better be quick. I was on the phone with a pediatric oncologist trying to coordinate care for a child close to dying with multiple medical issues, and I had to leave for my own specialist doctor's appointment within 5 minutes (I have a serious but stable medical condition). I was -- flabbergasted? Appalled? when he tried to block me from leaving my own office. Child had pulled out the toys in the playroom and was happily playing.
So I started double-checking to make sure the deadbolt was shot each Wednesday afternoon. It was just so bizarre and abusive.
Anonymous wrote:Totally confused by this question. You purchased the diapers from Amazon, and you're trying to return them to a completely different store? You didn't buy them from Target, you bought them from Amazon. Do you typically return things to totally random stores that weren't the original point of purchase? People actually try to do this?
Anonymous wrote:Totally confused by this question. You purchased the diapers from Amazon, and you're trying to return them to a completely different store? You didn't buy them from Target, you bought them from Amazon. Do you typically return things to totally random stores that weren't the original point of purchase? People actually try to do this?