OT: awful experience with a computer salesman

Chienworks wrote on 12/7/2005, 11:36 AM
I had a very bad experience yesterday. My boss came into my office with the new catalog from a larger computer manufacturer and showed me the $399 special. He wanted me to call and verify the price, make sure there were no "gotchas", and if so order 4 of them. We've had good experience with this company recently, having bought 7 systems from them over the past month. This is a better deal though so we wanted to take advantage of it.

I get a salesman on the line and verify everything and am all set to order, then he asks "what are we going to add to this?" I said that they were just fine the way they were because our application was very undemanding and the low price was the most imporant factor. He then told me that it had to have more RAM because 256MB wasn't enough since Windows uses 240 and there wouldn't be enough left for programs to run. I assured him it would be fine, and that i was running both XP Home and Pro on many systems with only 256. His response to that was that these units had the latest service pack which required much more memory. I asked him the price, and it was rather reasonable at only $40 for an extra 256. Not great, but not bad either.

He assured me that these systems simply would not run as configured and that the upgrade was absolutely necessary. Trying to assume that he was on the level, i asked why they would list a product so prominently on their catalog that was non-functional. His response was that this was a base configuration that they wouldn't sell without adding extras. I found that insulting because there was no mention of that on the catalog. Their website lists the same unit for the same price and even has a "buy this system" button that is clickable without adding extras.

I then said i would have to discuss that with my boss before ordering. Or at least i tried to say that. I got as far as the word "boss" and he hung up on me! Unbelievable. He mumbled "ok then," and *click*.

I found that all rather surpisingly poor salesmanship. I checked a few of the other machines we had bought recently, all with 256MB, and all with the applications we'd be running open on them. They all were up to date with the latest service packs, and not one of them was using more than 95MB.

We're chalking this up hopefully to merely getting a bad salesdroid on a bad day. We placed an order this morning from the website, at $399 without the extra RAM. Still, it was a pretty bad experience. I would imagine that those who aren't as knowledgeable probably get suckered in by this sort of thing very easily. Maybe while i had him on the phone i should have explained that i knew more about Windows and system requirements than he did. ;)

Comments

Jay Gladwell wrote on 12/7/2005, 12:31 PM

If that were my employee, I'd want to know about it. That way, I could let him go do something he'd rather be doing somewhere else, rather than jerking my customers around!


fldave wrote on 12/7/2005, 1:02 PM
Unfortunately, his boss is probably encouraging it.
GlennChan wrote on 12/7/2005, 2:07 PM
What fldave said. At $399, they probably aren't making much/any profit at all (especially if it comes with Windows). They are likely trying to make their profit off the upgrades, which would a similar strategy to Dell. You can check for yourself by looking at the cost of parts on newegg.com... they're probably making about $20 (50%) off the $40 upgrade.

Jay Gladwell wrote on 12/7/2005, 2:10 PM

Glenn, that was his choice. No one forced him to make such an offer. When you advertise X for Y, then you'd better be prepared to provide it... as advertised! No hassles!


Chienworks wrote on 12/7/2005, 3:30 PM
The term, "bait'n'switch" comes to mind.
riredale wrote on 12/7/2005, 4:36 PM
I was in computer sales (to the Fortune 500 in LA) for years for HP and later Apple. Be assured that even if the guy's boss wouldn't be that concerned, the senior management would be VERY concerned, because keeping a positive profile for the public is what keeps them up at night sometimes.

Of course the guy was a sleaze.

It's too bad you placed the order, because some of your leverage has now been lost. But I would immediately send a strongly-worded letter about "shattered confidence" to not only the guy's boss, but the boss above him AND a cc to the corporate office. Nothing gets a manager's attention faster than an accurate hate letter to management 5 layers above him.

You could also mention in the letter that you are planning a major purchase of hardware in FY 2006 (you are, aren't you?). They might respond with some extra ram gratis just to make this ugly incident go away.

It's one thing to get the hard sell from the junk Internet vendors; in fact, it can be kind of fun--haven't you ever haggled with someone at the Mercado in any major Mexican city? But to get this kind of junk from a major PC vendor is way out of bounds. Complain.