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Yes I agree I just want a little extra time.There seems to be alot of completely invalid arguments here that assume that people who have a problem with a 2 hour DOA policy want extended guaranties. That’s not the argument being made so please stop exaggerating. A 4 to 6 hour time frame would be perfectly reasonable
It almost seems like you’re flat out calling anyone with this policy a scammer and insulting most millennials. Which would be absurd so I’m sure that’s not the case right?We definitely live in a different age. There used to be a time when scammers and con artists were looked at as crooked, nowadays its treated as a profession and its the buyers fault for being scammed. I hate millennial thinking.
It almost seems like you’re flat out calling anyone with this policy a scammer and insulting most millennials. Which would be absurd so I’m sure that’s not the case right?
I agree with most of what you said.It costs $0.25 to replace a frag, a 2hr DOA policy is a slap in a buyers face.
24 hours is more acceptable, it atleast gives the coral a chance to show if it arrived good or not. Any healthy coral thats properly packed and properly shipped will live the 24hrs.
What I am seeing these days is basically a chop shop. Corals cut today, shipped tomorrow and if the coral dies its the buyers fault. I remember a time SPS wouldn't be shipped until it encrusted over the glue and onto the plug, Zoas were cut off rocks not peeled, cut and glued, ontop of that they weren't sold until new growth was shown.
Now you see the exact opposite and its pretty disgusting. Ontop of that people are falsely advertising corals with Blue LED and filters. Buyers should do their research and ask themselves why a seller is more money than another. Frankly I will pay more for large frags, that are properly healed before shipping, a good DOA policy and the seller is credible.
For myself, my policy is shipping is not covered, thats on the buyer. Coral is guaranteed for 7 days with a single 1 time replacement. You can take it now or when you figured out what went wrong and corrected it. My thought is $0.25 in glue and a frag plug is worth less that a replacement and customer for life.
So let's add the $5 in 2 part then to grow the coral. Shipping is on the buyer like I said above. But we aren't talking market value. We are talking what it costed you to grow the 1" of coral frag for the replacement. Now there are some variants such as euphyllia that take longer to grow.I agree with most of what you said.
But, i am failing to understand how replacing a coral.....say valued @ $250....and re-shipping a box that cost $60-100 in postage let alone the price of the foam core box itself($10 easy) equates to $0.25.....
Now if the buyer wants to cover postage again, the value of the coral im sure can be disputed
I like your DOA though....
The market isnt based on how much it cost me to grow what i sell....So let's add the $5 in 2 part then to grow the coral. Shipping is on the buyer like I said above. But we aren't talking market value. We are talking what it costed you to grow the 1" of coral frag for the replacement. Now there are some variants such as euphyllia that take longer to grow.
But don't tell me the frag costed you $250 to grow.
Hello,
I’ve read through a majority of the responses here and just wanted to add a sellers point of view.
We have the standard 2 hour DOA, however if something arrives questionable, we extend. Anything beyond that does put the seller at risk because so much can occur outside of the sellers control.
Now if we get a message 6 hours later and the coral is not showing signs of opening up, we will do what’s right for the customer and extend the coverage. The key is contact and communication.
I think the bigger issue is sellers who don’t cover their pieces if there is a delay by UPS or FedEx which happens now more than ever with the volume of shipping being done in this Covid environment. Most sellers will not cover and state on their website or DOA policy that they won’t.
I see lots of people on here who say they don’t want to risk buying online,
however if you find the right vendor who has experience packing and shipping and holds corals before selling to ensure a 100% healthy coral, you will find there is no risk.
To replace a coral we aren't talking about the market value. But even IF we were. A $250 frag is less money to keep a customer happy than it is to pass the blame. PLUS they are probably going to order more off me for 2 reasonsThe market isnt based on how much it cost me to grow what i sell....
Its based on supply and demand.
If it wasnt, there would be NO market.
My point being is i cant see how replacing a coral shipment equates to 0.25 cents lol.To replace a coral we aren't talking about the market value. But even IF we were. A $250 frag is less money to keep a customer happy than it is to pass the blame. PLUS they are probably going to order more off me for 2 reasons
#1 they are paying shipping and they will want to make the shipping worth while.
#2 and the most important one. They feel comfortable spending more money with me because they know if anything goes wrong I am going to take care of it. How do they know? Because there is a replacement in the box.
If you don't want to conduct business this way, that's on you. But being in the sales and customer service industry, I know how expensive bad publicity is and how much cheaper it can be to just make it right.
You seem to not understand how business works.To replace a coral we aren't talking about the market value. But even IF we were. A $250 frag is less money to keep a customer happy than it is to pass the blame. PLUS they are probably going to order more off me for 2 reasons
#1 they are paying shipping and they will want to make the shipping worth while.
#2 and the most important one. They feel comfortable spending more money with me because they know if anything goes wrong I am going to take care of it. How do they know? Because there is a replacement in the box.
If you don't want to conduct business this way, that's on you. But being in the sales and customer service industry, I know how expensive bad publicity is and how much cheaper it can be to just make it right.
DOAs are in place to help protect the seller.
Not the seller ripping off the buyer.
And even then, theres plenty of loopholes for the buyer to come out on top with their money and a healthy coral.
If the seller doesnt work with you even when their DOA says 2 hours or cant cover carrier delays, then i agree thats a bad seller.
I always refund less shipping and packaging or replace but i need good proof you arent trying to rip ME off
The way corals are grown and sold your right it isn't instant. Most people are fragging frags to make smaller frags. What most consider colonies we used to call chunky frags.You seem to not understand how business works.
In talking about replacements, we are ABSOLUTELY talking about market value. If the business did not have to send that frag, they could have sold it to someone else. That is lost stock and lost sales. Additionally, corals are not an 'instant replacement' item. To grow a coral I need to maintain a tank, pay myself or someone else to look after it, trim it back, place it on a frag plug, and let it heal. In all cases that equates to time and money to produce a frag. Not to mention, if it's a high-dollar coral, it may have cost a not-insignificant amount to purchase to begin with. These are all expenses that must be accounted for, and all of them will total to WELL above $0.25/coral.
Having said that - the choice to offer a replacement or not is a difficult one, and any vendor has to balance the value of an extended DOA policy vs. the expense of sending replacements. You also have to factor in the % of consumers who will 'doctor' a loss in order to extract free merchandise. It's not always a straightforward question, and a business very well may decide that they would rather lose customers who won't buy from them without a more generous policy. That's their right, just as it's your right to not buy from them.
For myself? Well, I'm not in the business of buying and selling corals, but I am in the business of selling other products. With the products I sell, I absolutely agree with you that I would rather send the customer replacements for damaged merchandise. Most of the time I don't even ask for photographic evidence, but I have the advantage of largely working with the same people (I sell B2B), so I can take them on trust. The value of keeping that customer happy is worth far more to me than the cost of sending those replacement products.
But - that's a calculus that was arrived at within the constraints of selling dishtowels, soaps, scarves, cooking gadgets and other housewares. The cost and profit functions are far different with our products than they would be with corals, and I don't have to worry about a dishtowel dying in transit, nor do I need to ship a bar of soap submerged in water via next-day air to ensure it arrives in good condition. My company might arrive at a different conclusion as to when a more generous policy is worth it compared to a coral vendor.