Note to reader: This is kind of long. You might want to just skip it and get on with your day.
“Marketing” is lying writ large. Everything around us is a lie in some form. Nothing is ever really on sale, prices are never really reduced, no matter the amount of advertising used to entice us into buying a product. Ultimately, we are ruled by “word barf” documents that we don’t understand when we buy something. There is no negotiating anywhere – if you want a product you sign their contract.
Perhaps the ultimate expression of this idiocy is the contract we are forced to sign merely to use a motel’s Internet service, or worse yet, Apple’s ITunes agreement, over fifty pages long and frequently updated. We are asked if we have read it and agree to it – of course we don’t read it. The exchange is not worth the effort – a very large amount of time expended for a very small service? They know this. Get real.
(Reminds me – we were in Alaska last summer, and were going to fly a puddle jumper across a bay to see some bears. Before embarking, however, we were told to read and sign a waiver – so I actually read it. It said that if anything happened, even if it was due to the pilot’s negligence, they were not liable. Of course, saying that doesn’t mean anything, as they cannot waive their own liability for negligence. Nonetheless, while the guy was not looking, I drew a line through that clause, and initialed it. Then, before we got on the plane, I called my daughter and told her that if anything happened, that I had altered the waiver.)
We’ve been doing some major purchases now and then for our new home. No matter where we go, merchandise is always on sale!!! We looked at couches and recliners at American Furniture Warehouse last November. They were on sale! We picked out some we like, and my wife suggested that we should go ahead and commit to buy, as the sale would end soon. I suggested that there would be another sale after the current one, and sure enough, the fall clearance was followed by inventory reduction by some other nonsense. Now it’s February, so somehow Abe Lincoln and George Washington are going to inspire them to offer yet another sale!!!
In the meantime, the price of the furniture never changed. Their only object is to give us a reason to buy now instead of later. It’s called “the close” – sales people can push and push and push, but the art of selling is to get us to make that decision to jump. To help us along, they put that feeling in our guts that we might miss out on a deal. It is the universal bait. It’s never true. Nothing is ever on sale. It is always a lie.
I needed a windshield replaced up in Bozeman. One company offered a big magnetic ad on the cover of the phone book that offered $100 off, and another was in the Yellow Pages just offering windshields. I priced them both, and it turned out that the $100 coupon actually meant spending more for a windshield! Get outta here!!!

Some are pushy and annoying – Best Buy is higher in price than anyone around, as we learned – a TV that was $560 at Wal-Mart was $900 at Best Buy, “marked down from $1,300,” and “on sale!” Walking in the door at Best Buy we were immediately accosted by sales staff, wanting to “help” us. We repeatedly turned them down. As we later learned, Best Buy’s business model is one-on-one high pressure sales – that’s how they get away with ridiculous prices. Most people act on impulse and don’t shop around, and Best Buy knows this and so is committed to doing everything they can to pressure us into buying before shopping.
But suppose that you do buy an overpriced item at Best Buy and learn that you paid way too much. You can just return it. Right? Wrong. Best Buy charges a 10% “restocking” fee, which is nothing more than a way to keep their “gotcha!” cemented in place. That’s their true business model – the restocking fee. It’s in the word barf contract, but few people know about it.

The best deal going on right now is called “Craigslist.” We needed a good snow plow to live up here on a mountain. I shopped around, learned about them, found out that there are really only two on the market, one sold by Lowe’s, one by Home Depot, that they are remarkably similar, and oddly enough, remarkably similar in price! I decided on the model we needed, and got on Craiglist, and found one that was one year old and used only to plow a cement driveway. We negotiated – that is, he asked a certain price, I countered with another, and we settled in the middle. We both walked away happy.
If it turned out that I bought a defective product, I have no recourse, but oddly, I’ve learned a great deal about the plow, and now know how to disassemble its parts and put it back together to keep it working. It is, after all, in my own best interest, as with Craiglist I know the seller doesn’t give a shit after he gets my money. Merchants only pretend to care.
Craiglist is polluted, of course, by regular merchants masquerading as real people. Even there you have to watch yourself. One product that we have looked and looked for is a home sound system with with a Blue Ray player that will operate on the wireless system. Information is hard to come by and confusing, and there are quite a few products out there that seem to offer something, but don’t. I went to Craigslist, but it’s not the kind of product that turns up there often. (EBay seems almost entirely merchant-driven now.) But I did find one offered, still in the box, and had some emails back and forth with the “owner.” We were almost ready to bite, and so did the one thing that we are not allowed to do with a merchant – offer less than the ask. He wanted $500 – I offered $400. “He” quickly wrote back and said “sorry – we just sold our last two.”
Two? He didn’t say he had two! He sounded like some guy who was getting rid of something he couldn’t use. Turns out he was a merchant, and this was his business model – to pretend to be a regular person. The system he wanted to sell, which “sells for $799 in stores”, actually sells for $500 in stores. No matter the store, it’s $500. $799 is the “manufacturer’s suggested retail price”, which, like Diogenes’ honest man, is something that does not exist here on terra firma.
Buyer beware, everywhere. Craiglist is our best bet these days, and you must understand that regular merchants are offended by it. Investors have tried to buy it, and are infiltrating it. But for now, prior to it being pirated by Best Buy and the others, it is the best place to go for the exchange of goods and services.
One final note – the “rebate.” The concept came into being in the 1970’s, I think. The idea was that manufacturers wanted to unload merchandise, but did not want to undermine their price structure. So they did two transactions – one, to take your money, the other, to give it back. It worked, in no small part due to the fact that people were buying on credit before credit got so easy, so that the rebate was really a loan at a better rate than credit cards offered.
Now, rebates are everywhere. I bought some antifreeze last week, and the shelf-offer was “buy one get one free”, or what I like to think of as “half price”, meaning that the shelf price is twice what it would sell for if there was really any competition around. But what the hell – it doesn’t hurt to have an extra gallon on hand, so I grabbed two and checked out and the price was $21, and I said “wait – it is buyonegetonefree, and the guy said – oh – that’s a rebate offer. I said “My kid will graduate from high school before I see that rebate,” and gave one back. I paid $11 for a $5 product. But it’s really the only choice out there, you know. There’s no antifreeze on Craiglist.
I had an eye exam, and it took a while to find the right set of contact lenses, and during the exam and trial process the eye doctor put in contacts and took them out and threw them away, and I asked if those things don’t cost a bit of money to toss away like that. He kind of shrugged, as if the lenses were free. We did find the right combination, and I bought a bunch of Coopervision contacts for $160, way too much, but it’s a trip into Littleton for a different deal. And, there was a $40 rebate!
Crap, $40 – why not, so I jumped through the hoops, cut the ends off the little boxes, copied the sales slips, filled out the forms and sent it in. I got an email saying they had received the forms. That was last November. I sort of forgot about it, but then checked back a few days ago in my email, and there was a rebate number to check, and so I went to the web site and plugged in the number, and it said that my rebate had been denied. They said I had not presented them with the date of purchase of the lenses or the date of the eye exam.
That’s bullshit, of course. I gave them both. I kept all my paperwork, as I’m not very trusting. Everything was there, every hoop jumped through. Here’s the business model: Coopervision offers eye doctors a way to generate more business. By offering a rebate, the doctor has room to jack up his price. So ultimately, he is partially the beneficiary of the $40. On their end, Coopervision doesn’t want to mess with fulfillment, and so turns it over to a third party. They don’t actually pay $40 for $40 – it’s something less because Coopervision knows that not everyone who is eligible for a rebate will actually apply for one. And the clearing house knows that if they take a long time to fulfill, that most people will forget. So I would bet that Coopervision is actually paying $10-$20 for each supposed $40 rebate. And this creates an incentive for the fulfillment house to do everything they can to avoid paying the rebate.
So oddly, when I was denied the rebate, they didn’t actually tell me it had been denied, though that would have been extremely easy to do, them having my email address and all. Instead, they put a note on the file, and waited for me to remember that there was some rebate last year, and to check back. It expires here in a week or so, so they are almost home free.
I called the doctor’s office, and told them that there wasn’t any fulfillment going on with the rebate arrangement, and was told that yeah, they get that complaint quite a bit, and tough luck. So next time I go to Littleton, and I hope someday that Eye Consultants of Colorado understand the nature of the annuity – that each customer represents a series of payments over years, and that blowing one customer off is to end that series of payments. A mere $40 claim can cost hundreds of dollars in present value of future cash flows.
Anyway, it was cage rattling time, as I will get my fricking rebate. Here’s the exchange that has ensued:
Me: My rebate (439508933) was rejected even though I carefully jumped through every hoop, so I called my practitioner, and they said many of their customers have this problem, and tough luck. So I told them that they should pay me the $40, and they should deal with you, and that if you make a practice of not honoring rebates, that they should stop dealing with you. I also told them that if they don’t reimburse me the $40, that I am done dealing with them too. See what problems you create? You make people unhappy, and it just spreads around.
Coopervision: Dear Mark Tokarski: Tracking number: 439508933
Mr. Tokarski, we apologize for any bad experience you have with this rebate process. It is not our intension [sic] to make people unhappy. The reason why we have not been able to process your rebate is because our system shows that we did not receive the receipt showing the purchase location, purchase date, eye exam purchase date, and the product(s) purchased.
We are willing to honor your rebate if you could send us a copy of what we are missing. The receipt, along with your name, your complete mailing address, and the Tracking number at the top of this email, may be mailed to:
Rebate Special Services
P.O. Box 540156
El Paso, TX 88554-0156We appreciate your participation in this promotion. If there is anything else we can do to assist you, please contact us at rebates@parago.com. We are always happy to help.
You can also track the status of your rebate, using the Tracking number above, at http://www.coopervisionrebates.com.
Enmanuel
Promotions Customer ServiceMe: I have already jumped through your hoops. I was very careful, copied everything. I know how you operate. Your business model is built on the assumption that people forget. That’s why it takes you months to honor a claim. When someone rattles your cage, you pay. You operate right above the legal line. It’s all highly unethical, but of course legal. Outfits like yours are all over behind the scenes running these little scams. It’s so seedy!
Now pay me the damned rebate and stop prattling about how honorable you are. You’re exposed. Honor the deal and I’ll shut up.
Enmanuel actually read my message, as he used the expression “make people unhappy,” which were my words. But he is just some guy, probably in Mumbai, who is doing his job. The notion that I did not provide them with the information required is what they say to everyone.
It’s only $40, and if I make them mad enough, they might just not pay to be pissy. Because you’ve got to understand that while all of this marketing is going on where we are constantly trying to screw one another, it is very important to be polite.
















