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Create Good Sales, Sears!
Posted Tue May 20, 2008 12:00 pm, by Rosie C. written to Sears.com
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I believe a store of your magnitude should not have the necessity to fool people with your so called sales! For THREE years now I've been trying to buy a patio bar set that you have. I've been waiting for a good sale (usually 20% or more) but the minute you place it out on display you put up a big sign of for sale on it, which is not true!! These three years I've never seen it at a different price but at your so called sale, which by the way lasts since beginning to end of season!!
This is not a sale. A sale is when you are selling it at a certain price (regular price) then on a special day or event sale (either a weekend or day) you decide to take 20% to 50% off, or if you have it on your so called sale give an additional percentage off (and I'm not talking about 10%).
Make people say WOW! You usually do pretty good with your sale on clothes, why not do the same on other items!
Create good sales! REALLY mark down prices not just pretend!!
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I'm so glad you're at this site.
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by Timothy C. Posted Wed May 21, 2008 @ 8:41 AM
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SEARS! Ha! They are notorious for this "Sale" Crap.
Try this though...look at the plastic card holder that says what the price is. There will be several tags in there because they love to change them around at will. Pull the lowest tag and make sure it is shown through the plastic, putting the higher prices behind it. Take a cell phone picture of it, then demand they sell it to you at that shown price! This plastic card holder is usually found near the larger ticket items like electronics(TVs) and appliances(fridges)
I personaly hate Sears for doing this pricing stuff and calling it "Sales"
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Nicole
by ♪♪Venice♪♪ Wed May 21, 2008 @ 7:00 PM
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by ♪♪Venice♪♪ Posted Wed May 21, 2008 @ 1:59 AM
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I know what you mean, Rosie. I want to say WOW when I see a sale price. I want to be offered something too hard to resist. It's the only way to shop.
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by Nicole F. Posted Wed May 21, 2008 @ 12:30 AM
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If you are looking at patio furniture that we regulary carry (sounds like you are) those don't usually go on good sales. I know that occasionally they do a twenty percent off sale. Items for one season only usually go on steeper sales.
Best time to buy patio furniture is in the early fall/early winter...steep discounts. I bought a 800 dollar seven piece set for 70 bucks a few seasons ago. (It helps if you are the one that does the markdowns for them. LOL) Deals do exist...you just got to play the waiting game with some of them and wait until we are trying to clear the place for Christmas.
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thanks
by Nicole F. Sat May 24, 2008 @ 12:31 AM
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by Donno Posted Tue May 20, 2008 @ 3:04 PM
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at A&P supermarket. They would go on sale occasionally, and it was an actual sale. Periodically a "Sale" sign would go up, and the price was the same as the regular price.
I spoke with a manager about it, and he claimed that was just a sign they had in the back, and he would speak with the produce manager about getting a sign with the regular price that didn't say "Sale". Yeah, right.
Needless to say, nothing changed. I lost respect for them and they lost some of my business after that experience. I don't like being screwed around, and I definitely don't like being lied to.
As someone else pointed out, this is a marketing ploy. As always, it pays to be an alert consumer. Frankly I don't see why they would put a set like that on sale at this time of the year. Maybe at the end of the season to empty the shelves. After three years I'm surprised you just don't buy it.
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by ~Fiƒi-la-ƒlea~ Posted Tue May 20, 2008 @ 9:01 AM
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Those kind of sales are just to get you to look at it.
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1. I agree that tiny amounts off don't make it a sale. I remember one clothing store that would, for example, take a $50 top and mark it as being "on sale" for only $46.90. Ooh, yeah, that makes a huge difference. I couldn't afford it at $50, but at $47, it's a real bargain. Lame.
2. Stores find expected, typical ways around laws governing sales. For example, I worked at a department store that would have some items permanently "on sale," then maybe two weekends a year (every six months), they would go OFF sale so the letter of the law could be met regarding regular price v. sale price. Our experienced sale setters (I was a sale setter but relatively new) would just leave these items on sale, having decided that it was a waste of time to swap out a bunch of signage on Thursday night, only to have to swap it back to the sale price a few days later.
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