HOME SHARED LETTERS RATINGS MY PLANET COMMUNITIES MISSION SIGN UP!
Shared Letters

Join and browse our exclusive open discussion forums and talk about whatever you like.

Channels
» The Suggestion Box
» Company Responses
» PFB Feedback Line
» Consumer Podcasts
» Mommy Talk & Daddy Dialogue ™
» Shared Letters


Newsletter

Sign up for PlanetFeedback's "Consumer Café" email newsletter!





Ripped Off By Wal-Mart

Posted Fri April 30, 2010 12:00 pm, by Michael L. written to Wal-Mart

Write a Letter to this Company  |  Rate this Company


I have been a long time Walmart customer and shop there at least once a week buying everything from food, hygiene products, clothing and vehicle supplies and gifts. Today, I was punished for supporting my local store in Lake Worth, Texas. I browsed online for a shaver product that was 9.96 on your website. Needing it now, I drove to the store to purchase it. Upon checkout, it rang up 11.82. I assumed it would be corrected at the end, but it was not. I have never seen in your store or online, any reference that says that Walmart and Walmart.com are two separate entities. When I find a price of 9.96 on your site, I expect to find the same price for the same item at your store. Some items, a person can order online from site to store and wait for a few days. Others, they need now and should not be punished for driving to your store and pay more. I feel outraged that in order to save money, I have to order online and have a product shipped to your store that is already sitting, INSTOCK, on your shelves.
My proposed solution is to refund the difference and make the prices online and brick and mortar, the same. If you refuse to do this, I have been told by several associates of yours that you participate in price matching. If a customer brings in the ad from a competing chain, you will honor that price for the identical item. If a consumer prints the ad off your website and brings that in, the price should be honored just like you are willing to do for competitors . I am very disappointed to be treated this way after many years of loyalty to you. I am looking forward to this matter being resolved or I will be giving my future business to one of the other chains.


Reply



Log In/Create an account | 32 comments
     Add to your del.icio.us  del.icio.us    Digg this story  Digg this  
PlanetFeedback Comments are subject to strict terms and conditions. We reserve the right to deny site membership privileges to any individuals acting inappropriately.
by wilbur Posted Tue October 18, 2011 @ 2:44 PM

Walmart is becoming a bait and switch store. They advertise one thing
and when you go to purchase that item, they don't have it but have a
more expensive item for you to buy. They also have some items that
are the same but are in different locations of the store with
different prices on them to confuse the consumer. I was looking for
cup cake papers and through my ventures throughout the store I found 4
different packs of papers in 4 locations with 4 different prices. I
also purchased last year the line for my weed wacker that cost $6.97.
I needed it again this year and figuring with this being the end of
the year if anything the price would be less. To my surprise and
horror the price increased to $9.97. And when I mentioned this to a
supervisor at Walmart, she told me she bought the identical item last
year for $6.97. I guess the 4 owners of Walmart are not happy enough
that combined they are worth somewhere in the area of $95 billion, yes
that's correct, $95 billion from ripping off the consumers that they
need and want more money and don't care who they have to rip off to
get it.

Reply
by wilbur Posted Tue October 18, 2011 @ 2:37 PM

Walmart is becoming a bait and switch store. They advertise one thing
and when you go into to purchase that item, they don't have it but
have a more expensive item for you to buy. They also have some items
that are the same but are in different locations of the store with
different prices on them to confuse the consumer. I was looking for
cup cake papers and through my ventures throughout the store I found 4
different packs of papers in 4 locations with 4 different prices. I
also purchased last year the line for my weed wacker that cost $6.97.
I needed it again this year and figuring with this being the end of
the year if anything the price would be left. To my surprise and
horror the price increased to $9.97. And when I mentioned this to a
supervisor at Walmart, she told me she bought the identical item last
year for $6.97. I guess the 4 owners of Walmart are not happy enough
that combined they are worth somewhere in the area of $95 billion, yes
that's correct, $95 billion from ripping off the consumers that they
need and want more money and don't care who they have to rip off to
get it.

Reply

by Irving Patrick Freleigh Posted Fri May 14, 2010 @ 8:20 PM

"I feel outraged that in order to save money, I have to order online
and have a product shipped to your store that is already sitting,
INSTOCK, on your shelves. "

Well yes, this is how that online shopping thing works. Brick and
mortar stores almost never match their online store's prices. The
overhead costs of employees, electricity, water, and taxes are much
higher because there's thousands and thousands of physical stores but
only a few warehouses.

The difference in price was less than two bucks anyway. I personally
wouldn't be making a big deal about that if I needed the shaver in
hand right away.

Reply

by Terry F. Posted Sat May 8, 2010 @ 1:24 PM

I have 3 Wal-mart's within 10 minutes of my house. I have encountered
different prices in all 3 for the same item. It all depends on the
area in which they are in.

Reply

by KenPC Posted Mon May 3, 2010 @ 3:45 PM

Not only do the prices vary from online to brick-and-mortar, but they
also vary from region to region across the country. This is just the
nature of retail.

Reply

What Ken said n/t by MizMarple Wed May 5, 2010 @ 7:05 PM
by BigShot Posted Sat May 1, 2010 @ 9:54 PM

As others have already stated, this is very common in retail. Your
competitor price match vs. online price match comparison is comparing
apples and oranges. You're talking about having an item shipped right
to versus being sent to a distribution center, put on a truck,
unloaded from the truck, stocked on the shelf, and sold by the cashier
who rings it up. All this costs money. You pay more now or you pay
less and wait, that's the deal.

Reply


by PepperElf Posted Sat May 1, 2010 @ 3:50 PM

They do claim that the online price can be different from the in-store
price.

On Walmart.com if you click "Terms of Use" you get this link.
http://www.walmart.com/catalog/catalog.gsp?cat=538449


"We do our best to provide you with great values on the Site as well
as in our stores. However, sometimes a price online does not match the
price in a store. In our effort to be the lowest price provider in
your particular geographic region, store pricing will sometimes differ
from online prices. Our stores do not honor Internet pricing or
competitor advertisements from outside of a store's local trade
territory."



Reply


The policy by Donno Mon May 3, 2010 @ 11:03 AM
by cissy Posted Sat May 1, 2010 @ 11:56 AM

As others have pointed out, the devil is in the details. I hope you
take your OUTRAGE and direct it to deserving causes in your area. I
assure you, the benefits will not be disappointing.

Reply

by Eclipse Posted Sat May 1, 2010 @ 10:44 AM

You are wrong. Wal Mart did not punish you. On the website it clearly
states right below the online price that prices vary in stores. How
much more clear can they make it?

Reply


by Donno Posted Fri April 30, 2010 @ 9:01 PM

I don't know if they are, but I DO know they have a statement that
prices may differ in the online terms and conditions.

And it makes sense that it prices may differ, they do not price match
themselves.

There are a few reasons prices differ - it is cheaper to run a mail
order operation than all of those mammoth stores.

If you "need it now," you pay more. I had this happen just yesterday
with parts for my vintage tractor. I could have gotten them cheaper
online, but my local parts shop had them on the shelf.

I would NOT be outraged by this - many if not most retailers have a
similar policy. Whenever shopping online, always read the terms and
conditions.

Reply
by KJCat Posted Fri April 30, 2010 @ 2:55 PM

Each time you pull up an item on the Walmart website, it gives you the
price, and then directly under that, it gives you the option of
searching the item's availability in stores. In that section it
clearly states- in bold red letters, no less- that "Prices in Store
May Vary."

Reply

by RedheadwGlasses Posted Fri April 30, 2010 @ 1:43 PM

It's 2010. It's time the entire shopping population figured out that
prices vary from websites to brick-and-mortar stores.

DUH.

Reply


response to "DUH" by Diane H Fri April 30, 2010 @ 2:51 PM


But if you read ST's response below.. by Harleycat Fri April 30, 2010 @ 9:42 PM


"If he bought it off the website, he would have probably bought just that." by Just Simply Bella Sera Sat May 1, 2010 @ 10:33 AM


I do the same thing... by Harleycat Sat May 1, 2010 @ 12:56 PM


I agree with the sentiment of Angela by Donno Sat May 1, 2010 @ 3:49 PM


Duh right back to you by RedheadwGlasses Sun May 2, 2010 @ 2:47 PM


by ST Posted Fri April 30, 2010 @ 12:55 PM

I went to WalMart's website immediately after reading this letter.
The prices on the website clearly state "Online Only". When you pull
up an item that is availble both online & in the store, it gives
prices for online. When you go to locate stores that have the item
(for in-store pickup), it clearly states "Prices in Store May Vary".


The online site doesn't have the overhead costs that the brick n'
mortar store will have. Their prices are going to be lower for online
purchases.

The one store I haven't found this issue with is Best Buy, with their
in store pickup option. I purchase an item through the website, but I
can go to the local store to pick up my online purchase. Works great,
and I love the quick service.

I don't see where WalMart's doing anything deceptive - they make it
very clear the prices may vary in store.

Reply

by Diane H Posted Fri April 30, 2010 @ 12:49 PM

I understand what Nathan G means about the store paying for
electricity, water, employees etc. But-the warehouse has to pay for
those same things. I agree with the gentleman's premise that in order
to save money, he has to order online and have shipped an item already
sitting on their shelves. That is inconvenient to him. In charging him
more, it also tells him that it's better to stay home and order online
than to support his local store and economy including the employees
who live in his town and work there. Since the store does price
matching with competitors, I would think they could include their
website because I'm guessing few customers would probably take time to
do it, thus not affecting the stores bottom line too terribly but in
preserving the loyalty of this customer who says he shops weekly, it
would be in their best interest.

Reply

by Casmly Posted Fri April 30, 2010 @ 12:23 PM

This happens all the time. Go in to just about any brick and mortar
store, take down a few prices, and then compare them to the internet
`prices. Much more often than not, the prices in store will be at
least a few dollars more than the website. It's to be expected, as
the previous poster pointed out. I personally don't know of one store
that price matches their internet prices.


Reply


Re: Ripped Off By Wal-Mart by NathanG Fri April 30, 2010 @ 12:01 PM


I don't understand by LadyMac Fri April 30, 2010 @ 12:35 PM


If by NathanG Fri April 30, 2010 @ 12:45 PM


Nathan by PlanetFeedback's Mr. Helpful Fri April 30, 2010 @ 1:53 PM


Yes by NathanG Fri April 30, 2010 @ 2:18 PM


I would love to see that report by PlanetFeedback's Mr. Helpful Fri April 30, 2010 @ 4:33 PM

by NathanG Posted Fri April 30, 2010 @ 8:10 PM

how much would it have been up if there was no online presence?

Like I said they were talking mainly about online vs brick and mortar.
The other issue was a very small percentage.

Reply

by PlanetFeedback's Mr. Helpful Posted Sat May 1, 2010 @ 4:15 PM

According to the annual report, online traffic is up 9 times and in
store traffic is up 1.3%.

What that proves to me is they have a strategy of being whereever
their customers are and to open themselves up to people who might not
go in their stores but would buy Walmart merchandise online. This is
also a defensive play to keep Amazon.com from picking off their
customers.

Reply


"This is why its cheaper to buy online. " by Just Simply Bella Sera Sun May 2, 2010 @ 10:00 AM




Home | Shared Letters | Ratings | Login | Communities | Categories | RSS | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | FAQ
Copyright 2013 © All Rights Reserved PlanetFeedback.com | Web by Cicada