>Update on "RitzCamera – OH SNAP!"

>In my earlier post I detailed my trials & tribulations with Ritz Camera. I just got an email from them. It goes as follows:

We are sorry to inform that we tried to get an RMA number for the return of the item. However, as per the updates which we received, you will have to contact the manufacturer regarding this.

We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause to you.

Please feel free to get back to us for further assistance.

Sincerely,
Grace
Customer Service

I will try the manufacturer, but I must say Ritz Camera is crossed off my list of shopping destinations. This is, in part, because I don’t care if they can get an RMA number or not. After what I have gone through they should just take back the item, refund my money, make me happy, and then they can figure out what they want to do – i.e. chalk it up as a minor financial loss ($135) for the sake of a happy customer to whom they made promises that, because of some arbitrary “official” policies, they could not keep.

>Bluegrass time capsule

>This is a clip from a film on American bluegrass culture – its music, its dance, and the people who created it. I love being able to find gems like this.

Here is the blurb about this piece:

Way back in 1964, New York filmmaker, David Hoffman was headed down with his new 16mm hand help camera (weight 49 lbs!) to spend three weeks driving the backcountry around Madison County, North Carolina, in the center of Appalachia, with the 82 year old founder of the pioneer Asheville Mountain Music and Dance Festival, Bascom Lamar Lunsford. The resulting film, “Bluegrass Roots” lets you hear and experience the hard scrabbling, dirt road real people sounds that dominated the back country of the southern mountains 40 years ago. It presents a string of the most extraordinary singers, players and dancers the BlueGrass Mountains had to offer. Many later became famous. Some were never heard from again. Most of the songs are classics, including Lunsford’s own tune, “Mountain Dew.” This scene was filmed at Bascom’s home with a local dance group came to dance in Bascom’s living room.

When this film aired on Public Television in 1965, TV Guide gave it a full-page positive review, because Americans had never seen a documentary on the roots of Bluegrass and Country music. Today, the dirt roads and the moonshine counties are largely modernized, and Bluegrass Roots, stands as a record of a uniquely talented group of people at a time just before the coming of television, changed them.

More can be found at the film’s official web site.

>skiing the steeps

>

I can only dream of doing that kind of skiing, but I do dream.

>RitzCamera – OH SNAP!

>Call me crotchety in my old age, but I’m a stickler for good customer service. Consequently I will NOT be making any more purchases from RitzCamera, a.k.a. Wolf Camera.

Below is an email I sent yesterday to customer service for RitzCamera and to Andre Brysha, Senior Vice President & Chief Marketing Officer of Ritz Interactive (the holding company for RitzCamera).

I am a very frustrated consumer. Before I tell you about my experience, please consider this quote from your President and CEO Fred H. Lerner:

“From the very start, we have been committed to providing our customers with a world-class online shopping experience. That means consistently delivering on our promises – all the way through the selection, purchasing and fulfillment processes. Sure we benefit from our well-known, trusted brands, but it’s the ease of use, savings, and superior service that keeps customers coming back to our sites.” 5/13/2009 [I have added the underlines for emphasis.]

I personally purchased a blu-ray disc player from RitzCamera on 2/21 (order # XXXXXXX). The player does not work properly. I called customer service in order to return the player. The friendly customer service rep told me there would be no problem in returning the product, that in 24 hours I would receive an email with an RMA #, and then in 3-5 business days I would receive pre-paid mailing information to ship the player back to RitzCamera. I hung up happy that, at least, I would be able to return the faulty product RitzCamera sold me.

MORE than two weeks went by and I received nothing.

I called again on 3/19 and spoke to another customer service rep who informed me that I could not return the product to RitzCamera because it is a non-returnable item. This was completely different information than that given to me previously by RitzCamera. At no time during the period since I was told returning the player was “no problem” did I receive either an email or phone call informing me the information I was given by the first customer service rep was erroneous. No correction, no new information, no apology, nothing.

I then asked for a supervisor. I was told by the supervisor that maybe there was something that can be done – he would make no promises except to get back to me. He told me I would have to wait up to 48 hours to receive an email with the answer. Although more waiting was more trouble for me I had no choice.

FIVE DAYS expired and I did not receive that email. Nothing.

Today I called AGAIN and was told there is nothing RitzCamera can do, but that I can call a corporate number to hear the company policy again. Again, no apology for anything up to this point. In today’s highly competitive world what does this say about RitzCamera’s policies? While many other companies are striving to deliver exceptional customer service where truly is RitzCamera?

As a consumer of electronics, a student of business, and as someone who knows what good and bad customer service is, there is no doubt that RitzCamera’s fundamental company policy is not dissimilar from taking customer’s money, not standing behind the products they sell, and treating their customers poorly.

Consider me not only an upset FORMER CUSTOMER of RitzCamera, but also a passionate advocate of looking elsewhere. There are many other vendors besides RitzCamera.

Consider as well the cost to me of a mere $135 blu-ray player (which I have already replaced via Costco – which I confirmed will take it back anytime, no questions asked, and give me cash if I request) compared to the cost to RitzCamera of a poorly treated customer. It would appear that, at least in my experience, customer service from RitzCamera takes all too lightly the quote above from Mr. Lerner.

I merely wanted was to return a defective product back to RitzCamera and get a refund. I was told this was possible and easy to do. That turned out to be a lie. If only I had been contacted within a couple of days of that first phone call and told that a mistake had been made and that I would have to return the item to the manufacturer, but that a refund was not a problem I would still have been mostly happy. As it stands now, however, I want RitzCamera to send me the free mailing label and refund my money.

Conflicting information, broken promises, and lack of basic respect for your customer has driven me away.

Yes, I tend to be wordy, but I would rather have it all out there in an email as a record of the saga. As of this posting I have noticed only one attempt to contact me via phone – I googled the number and it came from RitzCamera – but no message was left. Andre Brysha has not bothered to make sure someone got a hold of me, nor has he decided to contact me himself. In all it is the same story, and hence a continuation of the same experience for me. But at least I can let you know a little something about RitzCamera.

Finally I got a kind of update from RitzCamera late 3/25 in the form of an email:

Thank you for providing an opportunity to be of assistance.

This is with reference to your order number XXXXXXX.

We express our profound apology for the complexity you have experienced during the purchase process from our online store. We are sorry; it was purely unintended.

We would like to inform that we have already forwarded a request to our shipping and handling department to have a check in this issue. We will get back to you as soon as we receive an update from them.

Please feel free to get back to us for further assistance.

We’ll see where this leads.

>Steve Prefontaine, 1973 indoor mile

>

Some people create with words, or with music, or with a brush and paints. I like to make something beautiful when I run. I like to make people stop and say, “I’ve never seen anyone run like that before.” It’s more then just a race, it’s a style. It’s doing something better then anyone else. It’s being creative.

~ Steve Prefontaine

Outdoor track season is upon us. The University of Oregon women and men just wrapped up the NCAA Indoor Championship with 1st and 2nd places respectively. Here is Steve Prefontaine (former UofO track team member) in top form against a great group of runners, including Marty Liquori, in an indoor mile. I love the British announcers commentary, and the interview at the end is great too.

I remember seeing Prefontaine run when I was a kid. A gutsy runner if there ever was one.

Here’s Liquori beating Jim Ryun in 1971 in the “Dream Mile”:

>my hands are full…

>…literally.

Posting has come slow lately due to a new arrival in our family which has rearranged some priorities. Atticus Roux was born on February 15th, bright eyed and bushy tailed. We are overjoyed and a little tired. Our girls are smitten. Finally I am not the only male (excluding the dog) in the fam any more.

>The Education of a Reluctant Businessman with Yvon Chouinard

>This is one of the best talks about business I have heard. Patagonia is, hands down, one of my favorite companies. Yvon Chouinard is a rather remarkable businessman with a philosophy that is, unfortunately, rare in the world of business.

This video was found here.

>Chomsky on the roots of libertarian socialism in the U.S.

>

Although I have yet to research the history that Chomsky talks about, it seems to make sense, and it highlights how much things change over time and how much we tend to lose touch with our past. I find this fascinating.

>John Zerzan: On Modernity & the Technosphere*

>John Zerzan lives in Eugene, Oregon. He is an author, speaker, and the host of AnarchyRadio. I have only recent discovered Zerzan, but I like a lot of where he is coming from.

Here is a lecture from Binghamton University on April 2, 2008.

* Grabbed from Essential Dissent. Discovered by way of Jesus Radicals.