Thread regarding Sears layoffs

Transform Holdco & the New Sears - Dissatisfaction Guaranteed and You Won't Get Your Money Back

A broken refrigerator and the store that took too long to make things right

By Sean P. Murphy, Boston Globe

Three months ago, Fran Carleton’s refrigerator stopped cooling. She called Sears, which dispatched a technician who quickly concluded the compressor and other parts needed replacement, at a cost of $635.

Carleton paid on the spot, and the technician ordered the replacement parts.

A couple of days later, another Sears technician arrived at her Canton home and installed the new parts.

The refrigerator cooled overnight but conked out again the next day.

Sears sent another technician a day later. This one pulled apart Carleton’s refrigerator for the third time before deeming it not fixable because of a leak in a location that was impossible to reach.

Carleton, 79, a retired school guidance counselor who raised four children, wasn’t happy about all the disruption, which included storing perishables in a neighbor’s spare refrigerator. But she and her husband, John, assumed that Sears, a longtime major retailer of appliances, knew what it was doing.

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After spending $1,500 on a new refrigerator at Best Buy (“I wasn’t going back to Sears”), Carleton set about getting back the $635 she paid for the repair job that didn’t fix her old refrigerator. What followed were weeks of long waits on the phone, unreturned calls, and, when she actually got to talk to a person, confusing and contradictory directions on how to proceed.

Finally, on May 15, a Sears customer service representative asked “where’s the [broken] refrigerator now?”

“It’s gone,” Carleton said. “It was taken away when the new one was delivered.”

“Well, that’s the problem,” the representative said. “Sears will need the parts returned before we can credit you.”

Was Sears really holding her responsible for the third technician’s failure to remove the new replacement parts? Was it suggesting that she should have gotten down on the floor with her tools and done it herself?

“I was shocked,” Carleton said. “Sears was taking no responsibility. They made it sound like it was my responsibility. That’s what really frosted me.”

Carleton’s demand for a refund had begun six weeks earlier, the moment she was told her four-year-old refrigerator — with its one-year warranty — could not be fixed.

Nobody from Sears had ever said anything about returning the parts.

“I expected Sears to honor the deal it made with me, not charge me for something I didn’t get,” she said during my visit to her home.

Carleton contacted me in frustration. And after I relayed the facts to a Sears manager, the company immediately backed down, processed a credit, and apologized.

How could such a situation happen? The Sears manager I spoke with said there were multiple breakdowns, including the third technician’s failure to process the refund on the spot and a customer service representative’s failure to properly file Carleton’s refund request.

I asked her what consumers should do when they hit a wall trying to get fair treatment. She said it’s important for consumers to get beyond the “frontline” customer service representatives to a supervisor and to provide written accounts of what happened.

Sounds like good advice. But in reality, even the most meticulous of consumers, like Carleton, can get the brush-off.

My advice? Begin documenting everything said between you and the company at the slightest hint of a dispute. Carleton’s contemporaneous notes are a model of clarity and completeness, telling the whole story in chronological order in elegant cursive lettering.

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| 1371 views | | 6 replies (last June 15, 2019) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+ZvgN7ye

6 replies (most recent on top)

Best solution for a situation such as this is just don't do business with them anymore and cut the cord .

She's out $635 but they will never see her again .

Or her family

Or her friends

Or anyone else who reads articles such as this .

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Post ID: @4yxv+ZvgN7ye

Reminds me of the last time I ever called Sears Parts, what used to be in Palatine IL, then in Schaumburg, IL. "We don't have the part" You mean you're out of it? "Its out of stock" Are you going to get more in? "I don't know" Do you have any suggestions where I can get this part? "We can try to order it, but I can't make any guarantees" Thanks, g-bye> I ordered it from another supplier and the part was at my house in a week. Sears...can't live with it and CAN live without it.

I recently replaced all the appliances in our house...purchased years ago at Sears. Spent several thousand dollars at ABT, Glenview IL....absolutely a perfect transaction, including a technician visit to inspect, then totally replace the oven range. Sears was not even considered as a vendor of choice in replacement of these appliances.

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Post ID: @3pwz+ZvgN7ye

This stuff happens in retail all of the time. Hey OP... Murphy has a follow up on a similar situation with Home Depot below his story on Sears. Make sure you post it to the Home Depot Lay-off website, so readers can begin to pile on HD, as well.

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Post ID: @tza+ZvgN7ye

All too common. This same scenario happens frequently.

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Post ID: @ubp+ZvgN7ye

@dne sure, after they went to the Boston Globe, and the Boston Globe asked what the hell was going on, so they finally proceed a credit to avoid yet another PR disaster, but whoops. Anyways, OP is still mistaken, because this would've been under Old Sears, under the horrible policies which were put under the old CEO, Eddie Lampert, and things have totally transformed. . . wait a sec

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Post ID: @wzk+ZvgN7ye

Sears did "process a credit".

The headline is somewhat misleading.

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Post ID: @dne+ZvgN7ye

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