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on 31-03-2015 08:01 PM
@horizon1907 wrote:Next thing on their Agenda, What ? To take your 1st born off you. I wouldn't doubt it either 😞
Nah, babies are expensive, but maybe when they're old enough to work.
All their little schemes do is introduce new things for buyers to take advantage of and ultimately increase a seller's costs, thereby increasing prices and payment amounts- it's a self-serving interest on PayPal's part, which is fair enough in some ways, but I'm tired of these things being at the expense of everyone else, and some basic principles that I personally find important in the way I choose to operate my business. If individual sellers and businesses want to provide this service, more power to them, but I don't like incentive schemes that try to make it seem like it's what everyone wants, or the standard. (I bet that percentage would be very different if the question was worded differently, i.e. not "would you be more likely to shop online if the sellers had free return shipping", but "would you pay more for every item you buy so that you, and/or other people, can return purchases for free if it's not wanted anymore?"
The Iconic has free returns (for 100 days, even), and they accept PayPal, but while PayPal probably profits nicely from them, I have been told they make no money themselves, due (at least in part) to their incentives like that - if true (and I have no reason to doubt it) everytime I see another one of these touted incentives, I just think - along with what I mentioned above - bugger that! ![]()
sparklz- PayPal are providing the refunds up until 31st July, but they don't make it clear whether or not the actual scheme will continue beyond that and the seller will then have to fund the payments... At the moment, they're just asking sellers to advertise this offer on their webistes. A buyer has to register for the 'service', and can then claim up to 4 postage refunds up to $45 each time, as long as they meet other eligibility criteria as well (eg the return was made within the seller's return period, so they can't claim if the seller had a 7 day return policy and they sent something back 2 weeks later, some types of items are excluded as well - from memory it's most of the same stuff that doesn't qualify for buyer protection).