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I bought some boots for my daughter that broke after two weeks, sotook them back to tesco. The boots had been reduced and I didnt have a receipt at the original price. They offered me the reduced price refund which I refused. Along came the store manager who took my loyalty card scanned it and confirmed that I had bought the boots at the original price. Full refund. I was pleased to be vindicated, but shocked at how easy it was to track all my purchases.
"When it sends me my 'loyalty' coupons, why are they for things I never buy, and will never buy?"
One day you will give in and buy them.
One day you will give in and buy them.
One day you will give in and buy them.
One day you will give in and buy them.
The saying goes that analysis showed they were selling Beer and Nappies in combination (wife phones husband, "Get some nappies on the way home") so they moved them to opposite ends of the store
just before christmas i purchased a kettle and toaster,the kettle lid has broken,so i thought no use taking it back as i cannot find the receipt,but after looking at his thread i am thinking may be in with a chance,it was on the same list as some groceries,mmmm,what do you think,what can't speak,can't lie,OR CAN IT.
sigpicAnother nutter ,wife,mother, nan and nanan,love my growing places,seed collection and sharing,also one of these
I was impressed, with the earlier thread, that they offered any refund without a receipt (maybe it was something with Tesco's brazened all over it), and the Loyalty Card trick seems like a good idea if it helps prove that you bought something. I can't see me bothering to keep a receipt for longer than it takes to throw it away.
How many kettles with broken lids can you round up?
Come on guys, we are not there yet nor do I think we ever will. Civil liberties, Asda cannot check my C/card legally for regular purchasing, it is against the law. They do not have a loyalty card scheme, but then I have no problem with Tescos either. I will purchase goods from whoever is the most competitive, but heaven help anyone who misuses my details or tries to sell them on. They are always slightly different with different spellings which allow me to paper trail anyone who steps out of line. I never ever give consent for my details to be used for marketing purposes, and would happily prosecute anyone who chose to.
"They are always slightly different with different spellings which allow me to paper trail anyone who steps out of line."
I have an Email domain which allows me to use [email protected]. I always register with names like [email protected]. If they sell my email details, or get hacked, I will now what the source was. I must be registered in gazzillons of places, it has happened twice - once from a very dubious company, so no surprise. Once from a respectable company and I worked with them to try to find the cause and in the end we couldn't decide if something my end had "harvested" it from my Inbox, or if it was a leak their end. Therefore pretty rare in my experience. (There are outfits on the InterWebThingie which will provide you with a disposable address for registering - if you don't have the option of an [email protected], but like the idea of unique email addresses for each site you register at). They have the benefit that if an address becomes compromised you can change the settings so that all email to that address will no longer be delivered.
Well it must just be me then, I find the 'My Favourites' section of Tesco online very handy for reminding me of stuff I've bought and want to buy again.
If you're that bothered just delete them from your 'Favourites' list.
To see a world in a grain of sand
And a heaven in a wild flower
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