Squanto wrote:
I just want a reasonable amount of honesty, and a smidgen of respect.
I know that you're trying to sell me something, so the facts might get fudged a little bit. Just don't outright LIE. I went with a friend to the BB in Amherst since he didn't know shit about HDTVs. The salesman was flat out bullshiting much of the conversation. The worst was the calibration nonsense.
They had two TVs setup next to each other. One had a decent picture, one was crap. That was their 'proof' that calibration was needed. Both were 'displaying HD video' , except there was one problem. The crappy TV was hooked up with a standard RCA jack, the good one was connected with HDMI.
A standard single RCA jack can't carry HD video.
My other pet peeve is their pushiness on extended warranties. If I decline, don't keep pushing it. Also, don't try to sell me a $20 warranty on a $15 item. Before I moved into my house, I went out to get an antenna because my DirecTV dish was already taken down. They seriously asked me 4 times if I wanted a $20 extended warranty on the el cheapo antenna that was $14.99.
Ponderous, just ponderous.
The Amherst store is awful, before I continue my story...
But I think some people (I am not talking about you, squanto, just people in general) are too paranoid that we are trying to lie to them.
Some people get it. They believe us, they know how it is, and they take our suggestions.
We have no reason to lie. We do not run on commission. They don't look at individual numbers too often.
I'm a computer guy, and every day I give honest answers about my opinion on the products. If I didn't, I wouldn't feel very truthful to myself. I do not tell people Microsoft office is going to be difficult to install. I do not tell people that we need to install windows for them. Best buy is around for a good reason. People do not fully understand technology yet. They think they do, but the average joe does not.
I've even been called out about being honest to customers, by customers, which is ridiculous. I had one instance where a guy wasn't giving me a chance about a set of speakers, and he asked what my personal "favorite" was. I told him for the money, the store brand insignias were not bad. Then he said money was not what he asked about, so I said the high end Logitech would be a good choice, which he replied "Way too much for the money, RAWRRR" and then "don't bullshit me, I just want an honest answer RAWRRR"
Sure it is a decent feeling when you get 500 dollars worth of services on a sale, but the customer usually needs it and feels good too. The regular computer tech doesn't need it, but do not snarl at me when I offer an anti virus free for 6 months and say "RAWRR I can download AVG, Best Buy is trying to rip me off!!! RAWRRR"
People suck.