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- 31 May 2006
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Something might have kicked in when they got one order for 65.This makes me think there's a fairly serious quality control problem in their product management process.
I would have thought that customers with a receipt are therefore in luck but the above laywer then goes on to say,Amanda Bodger, a consumer protection lawyer with Mallesons Stephen Jaques, said it was unlikely customers could force JB Hi-Fi to honour the original price through the courts.
She explained that, under contract law, when a product is advertised with a certain price tag, this is simply an invitation to the customer, who can then choose whether to make an offer to buy the product from the retailer.
The retailer must then accept the offer in order for a contractual obligation to apply.
The acceptance could come in the form of the retailer billing the customer's credit card or giving the customer a receipt.
Terms and conditions listed on the retailer's website say it reserves the right to cancel any order without notice for any reason.
"In a situation like this, customers would face an uphill battle to bring a legitimate claim," Bodger said.
You call them customers, I call them something I scrape off the bottom of my shoe. These people knew exactly what they were doing, and took a shot at a company to try and get an almost-free tv. Says a lot about their character in my opinion.
They have offered a $500 discount to the actual purchase price to people who were caught up in the error, I think that's kind enough.
I do. A $2000+ tv for $15? Please. Yes businesses can use these as marketing tools, but in no way should someone who paid $15 be entitled to a tv worth 100-200x that amount. It is as ridiculous as the typical claims of compensation we so often see these days.
This happened a while back this year with the ipod touch. The 16GB was advertised for $268 where the 8GB was $305... I couldn't get it at JB but I brought the catalog to BigW and they priced matched
aah - now there's an interesting ploy - for all those stores that say they'll match the competitors advertised price. The competitor can just advertise at whatever price they want and pull the actual orders. Thats gonna cause Dan Murphy's and Bunnings some grief I'm sure.
They should cough up the tellies. Since when do you advertise something, take people's money, give them a receipt and be allowed to not deliver on what you sold?
The current JB Hi-Fi Ticket price for this TV is $3,487.00
JB Hifi considers the $15.00 sell price to be an honest and obvious pricing error and as such, cannot honour this price.
The website pricing for this TV has now been corrected to the "15% Off" promotional price of $2,963.95
For your inconvenience, JB Hifi will be happy to offer you a further discount and a special price of $2,500.00 plus freight, should you still want to proceed with the purchase.
Cool I'll start a business tomorrow ... never been heard of ... I'll name it "Aussie Silly Discount TV Deals". I'll put an advertisement up on the web for a $20 flat screen TV. I won't bother putting any fine print about how this only applies to the first 20 customers because I don't need to since its just a mistake. I'll get a few million bucks of free advertising when every news program and newspaper in the country announces how I stuffed up. Then I will get a few million more of free advertising when the same news programs announce how generous I was to GIVE AWAY TV's to all the people that got caught out by mistake. (all 20 of them because I had my lackie pull the advert and cut off the ordering system as soon as 20 punter's had hit it).
Won;t surprise me if somebody is getting their @rse kicked big time.
looks like they're not gonna honor the mistake
http://www.smarthouse.com.au/TVs_And_Large_Display/LED/K7H6X7W3
JB Hifi is looking like an absolute goose as a result of all this.
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