|
|
|
|
|
by crimsontech
1107 days ago
|
|
Not just this, but you couldn't see the product. In a store you can look at the product, see how it feels, try it on, test it out, etc. Early online shopping was a big gamble with different stores having different rules. It was often a frustrating experience. Distance selling regulations helped with it a lot. I can buy a product online and if I'm not happy with it, for any reason, I can send it back for a refund. This just isn't the case with shopping in a store. I learned this the hard way twice buying in store from Argos in the UK, only to get home and find I had bought a used product which someone else had returned already. Argos refused to refund or replace the items because they are used. I looked this up at the time and it seemed to be a common occurrence, I can only assume people returned items they bought online and Argos just put them back on the shelves. Had I bought it online and had it delivered to my house I could have returned it. I buy online wherever possible now. Interestingly "click-and-collect" services are not covered by distance selling regulations which is how I got burned twice by Argos. |
|
This is why I still buy clothes, shoes and sport gears at stores. Returning products takes time and you still don't have what you wanted to buy.
If I buy a new item of the very same model I bought before, that's OK to buy online. Unfortunately companies keep changing models every year.