I have no recollection of Staples telling me anything about this, other
than I had a year of parts replacement. Today I went over and looked at
their PCs, and found none mentioned free HP support, but did offer, for
a price, their care. BTW, I did dig out a support phone number (I don't
think they mentioned free) from HP's minimal getting started booklet,
which seems very h/w oriented. HP answered my questions satisfactorily.
So to me this looks like Staples as less than honest about what one gets
with computers bought there.
You went to an office supply store to buy a computer. Despite what
many people treat them like, computers are not office supplies. ;-)
In this case - it is the people doing the purchasing, not the stores at
fault IMHO. The same people probably go to a car dealer for a vehicle
or a realtor when looking for a home and probably do their grocery
shopping (excluding quick needs on occassion) from actual grocery
stores and not the gas station/convenience store. For some reason,
however, it seemed okay to get the computer from the office supply
store.
Big Box stores are good for bulk items. Go with the specialty stores
when the purchase counts and *ask questions*.
--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
Maybe not but then why would folks go at Radio Shack (The Source) or the
local electronic store that primarily sells TVs and other AV equipment?
I think that for a lot of folks places like Staples have what they want
in stock locally and the price is right so they buy from these stores
out of convenience.
John
Nevertheless, I think I know what I'm doing despite overlooking the "one
year support".
Shenan Stanley wrote:
> You went to an office supply store to buy a computer. Despite what
> many people treat them like, computers are not office supplies. ;-)
>
> In this case - it is the people doing the purchasing, not the
> stores at fault IMHO. The same people probably go to a car dealer
> for a vehicle or a realtor when looking for a home and probably do
> their grocery shopping (excluding quick needs on occassion) from
> actual grocery stores and not the gas station/convenience store. For some
> reason, however, it seemed okay to get the computer from
> the office supply store.
>
> Big Box stores are good for bulk items. Go with the specialty
> stores when the purchase counts and *ask questions*.
John John - MVP wrote:
> Maybe not but then why would folks go at Radio Shack (The Source)
> or the local electronic store that primarily sells TVs and other AV
> equipment?
> I think that for a lot of folks places like Staples have what they
> want in stock locally and the price is right so they buy from these
> stores out of convenience.
Which is why you shouldn't have snipped at the first paragraph. ;-)
Convenience is short-lived. Computer usage is not.
Although it certainly would have been a better experience for you had
you talked with a knowlegable salesperson, honesty is not an issue in
this situation. I would say this is more of an issue of competence.
There is an old adage: You get what you pay for. Chances are that
Staples salespeople aren't highly paid. Lower wages and salaries usually
correspond with lower professionalism and expertise. By choosing Staples
and wishing to pay a lower price for your product, you also place
yourself in a situation where the salespeople won't be quite as helpful
as you may hope for.
I would imagine that had you purchased your PC from an actual PC store
(like MicroCenter or a smaller independent PC store), you probably would
have received much more accurate information upfront about warranties,
support, etc.
W. eWatson wrote:
> Thanks, but I have built every computer I have, except for a
> laptop, for the last 15 years. The sales guy hustled me right to
> the Computer Care program and extended warranty, and I told him no.
> He actually pushed it a bit wondering why I would ignore such a
> good offer. I know the guy fairly well. He's the mgr of the store.
> I politely told him to go read Consumer Reports on extended
> coverage. In case, he hadn't I brought a copy of their advice
> back to him. I'm glad I did this, because 1. It reminded that my
> credit card matches the warranty by extending it to match the
> mfger, add in one year, 2. They also advise that if a salesman
> pushes these item, they would be interested in it. I pointed that
> out to him, but said, "No fear. I won't do it to you." I've changed
> my mind on that per what I've posted here. I won't name the local
> store. There may have been a 3, but I've now forgotten it. You
> might try Google to find their advice.
> Nevertheless, I think I know what I'm doing despite overlooking the
> "one year support".
That's good - but your *warning* was incomplete in my opinion - so I added
to it.
I know that in my local big box stores - just because a salesperson pushes
an item - it does not necessarily reflect interest of the type you would
want. The person pushing it often does not know much about the item, may
have not actually ever used it, could have started work yesterday.
My point is still that most people should not buy their computers from big
box stores and should also not take them there for repairs.
Can you honestly expect someone at the store to go into ALL of the details
that you need to know? Do they have a responsibility to explain to you how
Windows Update works? If you buy software, are they responsible for
discussing how to use it? Are they responsible for communicating the most
recent security issues with a particular version of Windows? What about
discussing ergonomics and proper posture when using the machine? For that
matter, the fact that studies have confirmed that computer users blink less
when staring at a computer screen?
In the end it comes down to the simple legal principle of what would a
'reasonable person' expect.
For that matter, did you read the information included in the box when you
first opened it at home?
"W. eWatson" <wolft...@invalid.com> wrote in message
news:hi2cjm$3ab$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
"John John - MVP" <aude...@nbnot.nb.ca> wrote in message
news:OpM2a%23ujKH...@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
So you knew enough to decline the extended warranty, but not enough to ask
about any support from HP or to research the issue of manufacturer support
yourself?
Fundamentally, it comes down to the tried and true philosophy of a person
figuring out what his/she needs are and then buying a product to match the
needs. I've only ever bought direct from HP or DELL, but if for some reason
I had to buy from a retailer I'd still figure out what I needed first. Just
like buying a car, a house or insurance. You don't just walk into a store
and pick a machine like you're picking up a packet of pens.
Like buying a machine from Walmart.
"David C. Holley" <David.C.Holley> wrote in message
news:%23WtSFcv...@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
I have bought directly from Dell online and Circuit City at store. My next
one will be at Costco since they extend the manufacturers warrantee an
additional year.
In that case, the first recommendation I have is to come up with
(borrow/copy/create) a genuine bootable XP installation CD (if your
new system came with XP). You may find that a lot handier later if
your system doesn't boot some day.
Not telling you about something is not the same as not being honest.
There are good bargains to be had at these stores - especially in the
electronics department.
A "trick" for shopping these places (Staples, Office Depot especially)
is to pay special attention to the price. If the price does not end
in .99, that item is discontinued and reduced for quick sale.
Reasonable offers accepted.
If you see a price ending in .97, .92, .68 etc. - make them an offer.
25-50% of the display price (or less) even.
If the sales person doesn't know anything what you are talking about,
speak to the manager. Somebody put that goofy price on there and
knows what it means. They know what you're talking about. If the
manager doesn't know, find the correct manager or call the next day
and talk to them on the phone.
It may be a display item with a few miles on it or be scratched, they
may not have the right box or power cord, but you will get it cheap.
Computer, TVs, printers, cameras, etc. They usually have the same
warranty. It not, you can always walk.
Make an offer!
You don't order fish at a steak house?
"HeyBub" <hey...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:O3eEMUxj...@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
"Jose" <jose...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:c21fd80c-231f-41ba...@21g2000yqj.googlegroups.com...
My argument here is about the observation that they say not one wit on
their sales material about HP free tech support. It doesn't matter what
I did or didn't do. I would be willing to be if I went to Best Buy, they
would have it their sales description. The are 30 miles from here.
Good idea I reckon - all of the HP warranty and service information is
clearly stated in the HP documentation - 24/7, toll free, chat, etc.
I guess you found that okay though.
You can also look up retailer information on the free pages of the
Better Business Bureau (www.bbs.org) and determine if the have earned/
received a BBB accreditation and read an overall grade (A+ - F),
reliability reports and customer experiences even if they are not
accredited.
You can drill down to your particular retailer.
Oops - Staples has no BBS accreditation!
It honestly sounds like you're expecting a sales experience which Staples
doesn't offer. An analogy would be someone wanting the experience of buying
a car from a dealership where the sales person knows and discusses all of
the benefits and features of a car versus buying a car on craigslist.
"W. eWatson" <wolft...@invalid.com> wrote in message
news:hi500n$ei0$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
For that matter he might as well include the fact that Staples never
explicity informed him of the URL to the HP website.