Best Buy must just hate gamers

Ummm they cant actually do that...they are tryin to skip out on fees they me be charged....but they cannot tell you you cant use a credit card thats backed by lets say VISA...if its a debit card......no way...a big F>U bitches would come from me!

Actually, they might be able to. Wal-Mart was in a lawsuit with VISA because VISA was forcing merchants that accept VISA credit cards to accept VISA debit cards too. I'm not sure if they settled the lawsuit or not (Wal-Mart was suing for many millions of dollars), but this could be the end result. Merchants might now able to either completely refuse or limit the use of the debit cards by not allowing debit cards to be used as credit cards.
 
A quick call to my bank (US Bank) told me that if I'm forced to do a debit transaction at BB or other places, I'm not charged a fee, and they said it was a state-specific rule.

So, for me, it's not an issue, though for my miniscule cashback award I get on it for credit card transactions, it'll irk me a tiny bit.
 
I didn't quite read through it.. but forcing people to use debit cards as debit is illegal. Numerous businesses have been sued for the same procedure. They want you to use debit, because then they don't pay the 1.9% (or so) surcharge to the cc company.. but they cannot force you to use it as debit.
 
I've had the problem when I try to use the Gift Card immediately the money won't be in the system that fast. Anyone else have this problem?
 
Most games I don't buy anymore through BB anyway. The personal the work there are really bothersome to work with. The people in their Video game department are morons when it comes to that subject matter. Most of their employees are quite unhelpful as well. Not to mention at one of my BBs there is an employee there that I despise more than anything.
 
I'm going to put one of the new creepy looking Jeffersons on the next GGC I get:
01.1.jpg
 
[quote name='Powerforward']I've had the problem when I try to use the Gift Card immediately the money won't be in the system that fast. Anyone else have this problem?[/quote]

Nope, no problems with using it within minutes of buying/activating it.
 
[quote name='shrike4242'][quote name='Powerforward']I've had the problem when I try to use the Gift Card immediately the money won't be in the system that fast. Anyone else have this problem?[/quote]

Nope, no problems with using it within minutes of buying/activating it.[/quote]

nope, nothing here as well
 
[quote name='throol']I generally try to keep a couple of the coupon + cards in my wallet, just in case I'm in there and there's a spectacular deal. When I use one, I make sure the next time I go in to pick up another one - 5 bucks on the card. I keep 2 handy in case there's another deal the next time I go in. Never really had a problem - I buy 'em on a separate day from when I use 'em, and 5 bucks on the card is pretty reasonable when you consider you'll be spending at least 15 total to use the coupon. Totals up to just 10 bucks held in reserve, for 20 dollar value when used. Not too shabby.[/quote]
One of the many people who say screw the other gamer
 
These days, the only time I buy a console game at BB is when it's on-sale at a decent discount (such as RDR from last week), or it's $19.99 everywhere and I can get it for $14.99 via GGC.

I did pick up Warcraft 3: Battle Chest and Diablo Battle Chest from them for $25 each after GGC, but those were flukes.
 
[quote name='yeahokthenfu'][quote name='throol']I generally try to keep a couple of the coupon + cards in my wallet, just in case I'm in there and there's a spectacular deal. When I use one, I make sure the next time I go in to pick up another one - 5 bucks on the card. I keep 2 handy in case there's another deal the next time I go in. Never really had a problem - I buy 'em on a separate day from when I use 'em, and 5 bucks on the card is pretty reasonable when you consider you'll be spending at least 15 total to use the coupon. Totals up to just 10 bucks held in reserve, for 20 dollar value when used. Not too shabby.[/quote]
One of the many people who say screw the other gamer[/quote]

How's this screwing the other gamer? I've yet to see any local BB that didn't have dozens of the gift cards on-hand, half of them in the games aisle in the store.
 
Technically, all you have to put is one cent on the GGC, but $5 is what's recommended. Now some may say that it doesn't matter which you put on the card because you're still going to pay the same amount in the end. That's true, of course, but only if you use it. If you don't use the coupon, then BB saves itself of a $5 loss of revenue, but a $14.99+ gain of revenue as well (on the actual products purchased). If you don't use the gift card, then BB "gains" however much you put on the card, whether one penny or a thousand. It may not cost a lot to make the case, packaging (including coupon), shrinkwrap, and gift card, but that cost is at least partially offset when someone buys something with it. A company like Best Buy probably ran projections on profits/costs to come up with a reasonable minimum that would cover so-called abuses in the long run, and $5 would probably cover it (and then some).

As for the availability of the GGCs themselves, unless BB is reversing course and changing their discount policy, I don't see stores not getting box-fulls of them whenever they run low. Certain store managers may choose to limit their availability (or place them in hard-to-find places, effectively "hiding" them), but I don't see that directive coming from corporate. That's probably to keep margins up and the store (meaning that actual brick-and-mortar branch) looking good in the company rankings (and, consequently, the management bonus lists). Suggesting that GGCs only be used as gifts (to other people and not the purchasing gamers themselves) would increase profits, but I don't see that being enforced anytime soon.
 
perhaps I am missing something, why would people buy the gift card to not use it. i don't understand the rational behind this and frankly i don't think that this is the problem at all. They created the system and if they don't like it then they have the right ot do whatever they want to, however by doing what they are doing it makes them look like they are just waging war on cheap gamers.
 
You'd be surprised how many people end up not using their gift cards. It's actually a major profit center for retailers that offer them. Whether forgetting (or never bothering) to use them altogether, or leaving a balance that gets eaten away by fees or time, the less money gift-card recipients use, the more money the retailers get. Really. Ask any manager or PR person. Gift card sales are good for business. Also, customers with gift cards spend some large percentage more than customers without (it's 50-75% or so). Same with credit cards, actually.
 
Bestbuy doesn't hate gamers, they hate all their customers. They see them only as competition for their money.

Anyone that doesn't want to pay full price or only buy things on sale are "demon customers". This is why I'll never shop at Bestbuy again.

I really don't even care about the GGC... They probably shouldn't even have it if its a problem for them. I don't feel bad for them at all because gift cards are extremely profitable.
 
[quote name='dafoomie']Anyone that doesn't want to pay full price or only buy things on sale are "demon customers".[/quote]

Guess that makes me a "demon customer", since that's the only time I shop at BB, CC or CompUSA, knowing their prices as so through the roof as it is.
 
[quote name='FSUEagles']Ummm they cant actually do that...they are tryin to skip out on fees they me be charged....but they cannot tell you you cant use a credit card thats backed by lets say VISA...if its a debit card......no way...a big F>U bitches would come from me!

Actually, they might be able to. Wal-Mart was in a lawsuit with VISA because VISA was forcing merchants that accept VISA credit cards to accept VISA debit cards too. I'm not sure if they settled the lawsuit or not (Wal-Mart was suing for many millions of dollars), but this could be the end result. Merchants might now able to either completely refuse or limit the use of the debit cards by not allowing debit cards to be used as credit cards.[/quote]

Yes they were forcing...thats just it neither can force...you have your right to choose as a consumer...besides the dude behind the counter doesnt look at your card he says "debit or credit" so fuk him its credit beotch..break yourself....dave chappelle style...yeayyy!! :lol:
 
I don't know what you are talking about as far as gift cards go. I am only talking about them in reference to buying games and the gift card coupon. I would be very surprised that any of us on here would buy a lot of gift cards and then never use them. That doesn't make any sense. I just think that Best Buy made an assload of money off of me and now due to their decisions I will be shopping elsewhere, I know that in the grand scheme of things I will not do any damage to their total business but I will feel better not supporting a company that makes arbitrary rules that are solely for the purpose of stopping people from using the coupons and gift cards they created. If they didn't know that the cards would be used by people looking to save money then they should be blaming the guy that came up with the idea. What they should have done is set a price on the gift cards like say 50 dollars which is what the price of a game goes for and then include the coupn as an added bonus, not only would this give them more money it would stop all of us evil gamers from coming to their store and spending money which apparently they are against.
 
Around here, Best Buy is the #1 electronics store. A friend of mine that works for CC said that, in their meeting reports BB out sells them and CompUSA combined. I don't know if BB has a huge head or something, but they treat their customers like CRAP! Everytime I've had an issue/problem and I talk with them, they act like I should thank them for being able to shop in their store. I've had trouble even getting them to honor their own warranties (they will think of and try ANYTHING to get out of replacing/fixing your warrantied stuff). This pracitce seems to be spreading to other areas of their 'amorphous' policies as well.

I avoid their store whenever possible. So, I would have to agree with Dafoomie. I don't know if they go so far to "hate" the customers, but they sure don't act like the give a crap about them.

On Topic: If the cards/coupons are such a big problem, why don't they get rid of them?
 
[quote name='sociopharm02']I don't know what you are talking about as far as gift cards go. I am only talking about them in reference to buying games and the gift card coupon. I would be very surprised that any of us on here would buy a lot of gift cards and then never use them. That doesn't make any sense.[/quote]
I'm not saying that people buy gift cards with no intention to use them, for games or anything else. (Is that what you mean?) I'm just saying that enough people end up not using their gift cards to give retailers a cushy profit. If you're referencing my earlier message, then I was talking about Best Buy losses that result from people buying their gift cards for one cent and not using them (material costs versus revenue, just one cent in this case). If the card's used eventually, great -- everyone wins. If not, no big loss on the part of the consumer, but Best Buy's loses a sale (or any profits that might have been gained on the forgotten gift card). I'm not trying to defend Best Buy; I'm just trying to explain a possible reasoning for some of their employees' actions. Oh yeah, coupons also encourage more consumer spending (like gift cards and store credit cards), so they're unlikely to get rid of them anytime soon.
 
Guess that makes me a "demon customer", since that's the only time I shop at BB, CC or CompUSA, knowing their prices as so through the roof as it is.
Yep, according to Bestbuy, you and me and most people here are "demon customers", and they're finding ways to "fire" us.

Nowhere else have I seen a corporate policy of such loathing and contempt for the customer. Not even at the post office.
 
[quote name='dafoomie']
Guess that makes me a "demon customer", since that's the only time I shop at BB, CC or CompUSA, knowing their prices as so through the roof as it is.
Yep, according to Bestbuy, you and me and most people here are "demon customers", and they're finding ways to "fire" us.

Nowhere else have I seen a corporate policy of such loathing and contempt for the customer. Not even at the post office.[/quote]

Shame we're the intelligent ones who do research to find something for the cheapest price possible, but damn, it's my money, I'd like it to go as far as I can manage. If they can find a way to "fire" us, then so be it.

I remind them that routinely, I talk to many many people, who ask my advice for products to buy, be it cellphones, computer equpiment, software, whatever, and I can easily tell them to go somewhere specific, or tell them to avoid somewhere specific. When I've bitched to their corp office about issues, when I bring that up and how much potential money I can cost them, they tend to get silent pretty quick.
 
[quote name='dafoomie']Bestbuy doesn't hate gamers, they hate all their customers. They see them only as competition for their money.

Anyone that doesn't want to pay full price or only buy things on sale are "demon customers". This is why I'll never shop at Bestbuy again.[/quote]

Wha?

You're probably referring to Larry Selden's book ("Angel Customers and Demon Customers").

However, "Larry Selden has been Consultant and Advisor to more than two hundred public and private companies in North America, Europe, Asia and South America, such as BBC, BellSouth, Best Buy, Citibank, Fluor Corporation, Fortis International, General Electric, GE Capital, Johnson & Johnson, JP Morgan, Mercedes-Benz, Merck, Morgan Stanley, New York Times, Royal Bank of Canada, Royal Dutch Shell, Shell Oil and Thomson Corporation. He has been advisor to Her Majesty’s Treasury in the United Kingdom, and his consulting work with Royal Dutch/Shell has been featured as a Best Practice in Fortune and Fast Magazines."

So you have to make sure not to do business with any of these companies.
 
Maybe it's just me, but I don't understand how Best Buy can enforce the wait 24 hours thing? I'd just go to the service line, buy a couple cards, then go back get my game and take it to the regular checkout. I highly doubt I'd have any problems that way.
 
They can't; they don't; it's one store's attempt to fight blatant abuse, which wouldn't happen and wouldn't even be an issue if it weren't for some of you "I got 50 GGC coupons and put 1 cent on each card LOL" jerks.
 
Wha?

You're probably referring to Larry Selden's book ("Angel Customers and Demon Customers").

However, "Larry Selden has been Consultant and Advisor to more than two hundred public and private companies in North America, Europe, Asia and South America, such as BBC, BellSouth, Best Buy, Citibank, Fluor Corporation, Fortis International, General Electric, GE Capital, Johnson & Johnson, JP Morgan, Mercedes-Benz, Merck, Morgan Stanley, New York Times, Royal Bank of Canada, Royal Dutch Shell, Shell Oil and Thomson Corporation. He has been advisor to Her Majesty’s Treasury in the United Kingdom, and his consulting work with Royal Dutch/Shell has been featured as a Best Practice in Fortune and Fast Magazines."

So you have to make sure not to do business with any of these companies.

Its not just that Eldad9. They have a systematic pattern of behavior of treating customers like crap.

And as a matter of fact Eldad, I do not do business with companies that treat me like crap. You have that right as a customer.
 
[quote name='dafoomie']And as a matter of fact Eldad, I do not do business with companies that treat me like crap.[/quote]

Except microsoft. (rimshot).

Sure, I'll go with that, but 1. your post didn't really say that, and 2. you're in the minority. You will find that most people will be happy to be insulted a bit for $5 off a game.
 
[quote name='jazzman']When you aquire a GGC, you simply put $5 on each card. Therefore you can get 4 or 5 of them at one time. The next time your at BB, use your giftcards to make a purchase and keep the coupons for later use. Personally, I feel this makes it easier than going in and out every time you want to use a GGC. Maybe this is just me :?[/quote]


this is exactly what I do, I always have a GGC in my wallet. Oh and didn't Defender say that 20 buck games cost him like 17 bucks ? So I always thought that when we got a game for 15 after GGC BB was losing money.
 
[quote name='eldad9']They can't; they don't; it's one store's attempt to fight blatant abuse, which wouldn't happen and wouldn't even be an issue if it weren't for some of you "I got 50 GGC coupons and put 1 cent on each card LOL" jerks.[/quote]

Cry more?
 
[quote name='KingDox']this is exactly what I do, I always have a GGC in my wallet. Oh and didn't Defender say that 20 buck games cost him like 17 bucks ? So I always thought that when we got a game for 15 after GGC BB was losing money.[/quote]
The games at Best Buy don't always give the company a $5+ profit, so, yes, BB can lose money on the GGC. Naturally, the company will seek to reduce losses if at all possible (by discouraging coupon "abuse" and so on), but I won't look badly on people who go for the best advertised deal. I've added everywhere from $5-$15 on the things.
 
Its not just that Eldad9. They have a systematic pattern of behavior of treating customers like crap.

And as a matter of fact Eldad, I do not do business with companies that treat me like crap. You have that right as a customer.[/quote]


exactly.....

I've witnessed:

-management refusing to sell a laptop to a guy who wouldn't agree to purchase the PSP(warantee)

-refusing returns of PRP and PSP(warantees)

-threatening to fire employees if they didn't purchase a PSP/PRP with their employee purchases

-management urging the salesteam to make false claims regarding the PSP/PRP coverage

-refusing to honor PSP/PRPs'

-a loss prevention guy threatening to physically beat a customer if the customer didn't let him see his receipt on the way out of the store

-refusal to honor rainchecks

-selling broken items as open-items


...to name but a few

-
 
[quote name='Trakan'][quote name='jazzman']When you aquire a GGC, you simply put $5 on each card. Therefore you can get 4 or 5 of them at one time. The next time your at BB, use your giftcards to make a purchase and keep the coupons for later use. Personally, I feel this makes it easier than going in and out every time you want to use a GGC. Maybe this is just me :?[/quote]

It'd be nice if you left some for other people to use also....[/quote]

Quick, hard the GGC in Oak Creek, Quick!!!
 
[quote name='Sartori'][quote name='paz9x']IS there anything in the actual text on the coupon stating you have to use it in conjunction with the GGC?
Im pretty sure there is not. It simply stated the coupon entitles the buyer to a discount of $5.00 on any video game or accessory priced $19.99 and above.
Im gonna take just the coupon up there next time im there and see what they say.

I dislike buying all small items with the exception of cd's from BB. the majority of BB employees/management act like the customers owe them for shopping there.[/quote]

No. I toss the cards after I leave the store and stash the coupon in my wallet.[/quote]

Real smart, considering you are going to have to spend money anyway on the game or accessory. So in fact you are wasting that 1 cent. Smart, why didn't I think of wasting that money? Brilliant!!!!
 
[quote name='int80h']I've always walked out of the store with multiple GGC's without putting any money on any of them, and just use the coupons. Nobody at BB ever seemed to care.[/quote]

Somehow I think that is called theft.
 
[quote name='sying'][quote name='Sartori'][quote name='paz9x']IS there anything in the actual text on the coupon stating you have to use it in conjunction with the GGC?
Im pretty sure there is not. It simply stated the coupon entitles the buyer to a discount of $5.00 on any video game or accessory priced $19.99 and above.
Im gonna take just the coupon up there next time im there and see what they say.

I dislike buying all small items with the exception of cd's from BB. the majority of BB employees/management act like the customers owe them for shopping there.[/quote]

No. I toss the cards after I leave the store and stash the coupon in my wallet.[/quote]

Real smart, considering you are going to have to spend money anyway on the game or accessory. So in fact you are wasting that 1 cent. Smart, why didn't I think of wasting that money? Brilliant!!!![/quote]

You're an idiot and a jackass. Not that I'm not - but welcome to the club.
 
Here's the AP article on "Demon Customers":

(07-05) 16:36 PDT MINNEAPOLIS (AP) --

So much for the customer always being right.

Some retailers are deciding that the customer can be very, very wrong -- as in unprofitable. And some, including Best Buy Co. Inc., are discriminating between profitable customers and shoppers they lose money on.

Like a customer who ties up a salesworker but never buys anything, or who buys only during big sales. Or one who files for a rebate, then returns the item.

"That would be directly equivalent to somebody going to an ATM and getting money out without putting any in," Brad Anderson, Best Buy's chief executive, said in a recent interview. "Those customers, they're smart, and they're costing us money."

Anderson said Best Buy was tightening its rebate policies in the case of customers who abuse the privilege, but declined to say what else his company was doing to discourage its most costly customers.

"What we're trying to do is not eliminate those customers, but just diminish the number of offers we make to them," Anderson said.

Larry Selden calls them "demon customers."

Selden, a consultant who works for Best Buy, co-wrote "Angel Customers & Demon Customers." In his book, he said that while retailers "probably can't hire a bouncer to stand at the door and identify the value destroyer," they're not powerless.

Selden, a business professor emeritus at Columbia University, said an investment firm found that one customer with a portfolio of $500,000 was tying up three financial advisers almost full-time with requests for help and information. "Eventually, reluctantly, and very politely, in this one case the company asked him to go elsewhere," Selden said.

Selden worked as a consultant for Royal Bank of Canada, which at one time traced checks faster for its most profitable customers, while other customers waited up to five days, he wrote. While that's a bit out of date, the bank now has other ways of prioritizing customers.

Laura Gainey, vice president of client segment strategies, said the bank's phone system sends certain customers to the front of the line, where they get the most experienced customer service representatives, depending on criteria that includes their account size.

"I don't really believe that any customer at Royal Bank is a demon customer," she said, "but there's no doubt that there are different ways of approaching different customers, which will allow us to better serve their needs, and allow us to serve the bank and our shareholder's needs."

Sometimes it's the retailer's fault that a customer is unprofitable, Selden said. He cited an upscale retailer in New York that lost sales because its changing rooms were dirty and in bad repair. Women who had probably taken up a salesperson's time were declining to change in those rooms, and declining to buy, he said.

"Then there are those customers that are just evil customers ... fundamentally they're out to cheat us," Selden said in a telephone interview. "It's not a large number of customers, but they can have a material impact on a business."

Once in a while, stores need to "fire" their worst customers, Selden said. Filene's banned two sisters from all 21 of its stores last year after the clothing chain's corporate parent decided they had returned too many items and complained too often about service.

The sisters claimed they had been loyal customers for years.

Best Buy executive vice president Philip Schoonover said the idea of "firing" some customers is one place where Best Buy disagrees with Selden. The company will try to find ways to make money-losing customers profitable, he said.

Retail consultant Karl Bjornson of Kurt Salmon Associates said the idea of discouraging bad customers can work if a company is careful about it. He said it generally works better to, say, offer fewer sales rather than discouraging individual customers who shop aggressively on price.

Every store has customers it doesn't like, he said.

"The question is, how public do you go with it, and how big a deal do you make out of it? There are ways of discouraging people from shopping in your store without point-blank telling them you don't want them in your store."

Best Buy customer Steve McCuskey pondered the company's efforts with a set of computer speakers in his hand. McCuskey, an industrial chemical salesman, said he shares Best Buy's frustration with "extreme price shoppers" who are so low-cost oriented that it's tough to make money off of them. He said he recently paid extra to buy a better portable compact disc player for his son after the first one lasted just four months.

"I'm definitely looking for the best price, but I'm also tired of cheap stuff that's going to break right away," he said.

As long as you play and pay within Best Buy's rules, I don't think one should be labeled as such. That would be like EBgames.com complaining about customers who *only* take advantage of their temporary price drops and then never come back to pay full price for a game on their site. Don't cry if you offer a deal and a customer purchases it on the up and up. Smart shoppers should be labeled differently than fraudulent ones (rebate scammers and the like).
 
Someone mentioned Walmart forcing debit use eariler in the thread. Around here, I was told that took effect February 1st (of this year). Cashiers were very aggressively telling customers to expect it all through January. I think they tried to enforce it for about a week or two. I stopped shopping there except for my prescriptions when they started and came back after a friend working there said they stopped. I don't know if it was customer complaints, or a law suit or what, but they don't try to force debit anymore.
 
these companies shouldn't complain about "demon customers"

its not fair at all that i have to search for deals on everything out there because most jobs ive had refuse to give me more then 15 hours a week, "part time.", and minimuim wage, and somehow find a reason to get rid of you after your second pay raise.

its not my fault i need to work 3 jobs to make enough bank, and i still cant 20k a year to live somewhere more then an apartment.

so what, i cant buy a few games to keep my life intresting while i work my ass off , literally, to just make enough money to live on? so according to best buy, im a demon customer because i simply cant afford to pay 49.99 for burnout 3, when i can get it for 29.99 (which i did from best buy) to help me out a little in life?

I realize they have bottomlines to meet too, but gezz, that article was so offensive it makes me feel bad that someone in a suit actually can sit back and write that garbage. If the economy wasnt so poor (best buy) maybe youd get more money. That starts with giving employees more hours and to stop moving jobs to china for one cent an hour labor.(all of americas industries fault.)
.
whats the point of living if companies like best buy are gonna force us "demons" out and stop some of us from enjoying life at all? i respect they need money, but why dont they just all buy us guns so we can kill ourselves? its bullcrap tagging they do to make good people (and most of us cagers are good people, we were built on the premise of helping each other for goodness sakes...) look horrifically bad, while they sit back and count their millions they make every year.

its easy for those "suits" to sit up there and look down upon us, while they get healthcare, large checks, live in great houses, and forget to see the middle class in america is disappearing and some of us are sinking lower to keep up with the standards out there. I know im one of those people.

its getting to the point now where if i wanna buy one video game a week i have to live off ramen for the week!
 
[quote name='sying'][quote name='int80h']I've always walked out of the store with multiple GGC's without putting any money on any of them, and just use the coupons. Nobody at BB ever seemed to care.[/quote]

Somehow I think that is called theft.[/quote]

Theft of a $0 dollar item. They can't prosecute that.
 
[quote name='eldad9']There is absolutely no point putting less that $14.99(+tax) on the card because that's how much you need to take advantage of it.[/quote]

Excuse me, but yes ... yes, there is.

I haven't read the whole thread so I don't know if this has been pointed out, but you can use the coupon at Circuit City.

I've gone through 5 coupons, at least, and not on have I used at Best Buy. In your scenario, I'd be left with upwards of $75 dollars on various BB cards that I'd have to wait for a deal to come along with ... as opposed to 5 cents worth of credit that I'd probably just trash.
 
Wow that demon customers was pretty offensive. I think stores are often forgetting the value of service and its relation to profit. By taking away convenience you send shoppers elsewhere even the ones they don't make money on. Most of us here at CAG would probably fit into that category.
 
[quote name='snipegod'][quote name='eldad9']There is absolutely no point putting less that $14.99(+tax) on the card because that's how much you need to take advantage of it.[/quote]

Excuse me, but yes ... yes, there is.

I haven't read the whole thread so I don't know if this has been pointed out, but you can use the coupon at Circuit City.
[/quote]

This is ass if you ask me! I'm all for getting the best deal, but use the damn coupon where is was intended to be used. It's crap like this that get deals like this axed!
 
[quote name='989boi']Does Best Buy still allow you to trade in a new sealed games for in store credit?[/quote]

They never have. ](*,)
 
[quote name='chickenhawk'][quote name='snipegod'][quote name='eldad9']There is absolutely no point putting less that $14.99(+tax) on the card because that's how much you need to take advantage of it.[/quote]

Excuse me, but yes ... yes, there is.

I haven't read the whole thread so I don't know if this has been pointed out, but you can use the coupon at Circuit City.
[/quote]

This is ass if you ask me! I'm all for getting the best deal, but use the damn coupon where is was intended to be used. It's crap like this that get deals like this axed![/quote]

How is that "ass," idiot? Firstly, what's with the name calling? And secondly, there's nothing wrong with that. It's Circuit City policy to accept competitor's coupons ... the GGC is a competitor's coupon, therefore there is no problem. If anything, Best Buy would have a gripe with CC, not me.
 
its not fair at all that i have to search for deals on everything out there because most jobs ive had refuse to give me more then 15 hours a week, "part time.", and minimuim wage, and somehow find a reason to get rid of you after your second pay raise

Get an education you lazy ass. Nobody owes you anything. If you can't get anything other than a minimum wage job, you should be buying books instead of video games.
 
[quote name='msdmoney']Wow that demon customers was pretty offensive. I think stores are often forgetting the value of service and its relation to profit..[/quote]

That term had practically nothing to do with Best Buy. It's amazing that you people always confuset this issue just because Larry Selden did consulting work for BB, and another BB employee was interviewed for an article about the book.
 
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