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Office Depot complaints 357

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2:02 pm EST
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Office Depot worthless warranty

I purchased an Ativa Camcorder which worked great for 5 days, however after that the battery would no longer charge? I could power the unit off the A/C adapter, but that's it. I have a friend who purchased the same unit, so we swapped batteries to see if it was just the battery and guess what...you guessed it, it still did not work with his battery...Tried calling customer service at both Office Depot and Ativa and they both offered a gift card exchange rather than simply exchange the unit for another one. Idiots said that was all they could do, even though I had bought a replacement service plan. When I asked the customer service rep at Ativa about getting a refund for the service plan I purchased he said to keep it and use it for whatever I bought with the gift card. I sarcastically said what if I buy nothing but zerox paper, are you going to give me a 2 year warranty for that? Idiot...

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rector
Oklahoma City, US
Oct 02, 2013 4:09 pm EDT

The shredder green light comes on but will not shred. Also there is a red on a small symbol nest to the on light.

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6:59 pm EST
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Office Depot false advertising

Officemax advertises a low price guarantee. In fact, its website has specific instructions on how to have something price matched. When you go to get the low price guarantee, they tell you that it does not include sales at other stores (Office Depot, Staples, Target etc) because these are special events. This is a total rip-off and false advertising!

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Office Depot service contract

On June 11, 2008 I purchased an HP Laptop at the Office Depot Store in Houma, La. (all of this is supported by documentation) . At the time of purchase I also purchased a service contract. That contact kicked in November when the laptop developed a problem with the cd/dvd drive recognizing cd's, dvd's data, music what ever. Also two USB ports failed to recognize anything plugged into them. I called Office Deport, stayed on the phone approximately 2 hours, finally they decided the lap top needed to go to repair. They notified their repair center and I was provided a return box: So far so good - did not last long... Prior to shipping to Office Depot repair center I was able to get onto the internet with my cable ethernet (this is important as you will see in a moment); in addition the laptop came with a pre-factory installed recovery partition and no recovery cd's, this is also important. Approximately one week later I received the laptop back from Teleplan, the repair service for Office Depot. I tried to get online, could not, I called Teleplan Repair, after 45 minutes they said I had to call the warranty company. I called HP thinking maybe they could help, stayed on the phone one hour; They believe Teleplan screwed up the bios in the computer. I called Office Depot stayed on the phone for 1.5 hours, they decided to send it back to Teleplan. Got it back today in the same condition; even had to purchase a Recovery CD from HP and pay for it, even though it was Teleplan who deleted the partition. Now they say it's a software issue and the warranty does not cover it! what is a computer without the operating system? A piece of boards, chips, etc., basically "junk". Yes they are responsible because they were the ones who screwed the system up. The original problem was fixed, however they created other issues and failed to fix those. Now they refuse to honor my replacement contract! the moral to this story - I will never purchase another item from Office Depot, especially a service contract. It's not worth the paper it's printed on... I'm waiting on a reply to my letter to them; next I will file a suit in small claims court. Might not be able to get action, however I'll have a judgement!

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Andrew from CA
San Carlos, US
Feb 06, 2011 1:05 am EST

So I bought a laptop from Office Depot in December of 2009. I decided that because it was a laptop and I would be dragging everywhere with me, I'd buy the extended service plan which allows you to basically send the thing in if anything breaks. Well, back in December, my built in wireless card stopped working. So I sent it in. Well I get the thing back and they not only erased my hard drive and put a note in the box saying that they couldn't re-install the operating system because my windows label on the bottom of the laptop was illegible, but I came to find out (once I reinstalled the operating system myself), they didn't even fix the wireless card.  So I called the repair center and left them a voicemail stating that they didn't fix the problem.  I never received a call back.  Right after the holidays, I called them back and told them that the wireless card was still broken and asked them to send me another box so I could send it in again.  Now the first box showed up in about 3 days.  A week later, the box hadnt shown up.  Then, about two weeks ago, the laptop took a small spill off my ottoman and the damn screen cracked (which is actually covered in this plan).  So I called them again and asked them to send me a box so I could send it in for repair.  Once again, the box never showed up.  Then I called them a week ago, really pissed, and I was assured that the box would arrive and would be sent 2-day air.  That was Monday of this week.  It's now Friday night and nothing has shown up.  I paid $250 for that damn extended warranty.  What a rip off.

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DJ what?
Oakland, US
Sep 26, 2010 10:02 pm EDT

Having issues too with teleplan and office depot. Initially decent service until I got my laptop back for 3 minor problems I sent it in for a few days prior to warranty expiring. I paid for the warranty so I figured I should get it fixed. It came back and they fixed 1 of the 3 problems and didn't even acknowledge the other 2 issues (wish I had it in writing, it was over the phone and the guy taking the info wasn't really paying attention).

It came back and the keyboard was not working. They had replaced the processor fan, and I suspect they forgot to plug the keyboard back in.

I called teleplan according to the instructions on the sheet they sent and they sent me from one agent to another who told me to call a different number. That person told me I have to call the warranty company.

Called office depot warranty and again got sent from one person to call another number.
Then they said it's out of warranty after I explained everything. After explaining again that they broke the keyboard (was perfectly fine when I sent it in), he said he sent an email to teleplan to send a new box to ship it back.

No box for over a week. I called again and got a really nice lady who researched it and saw that teleplan emailed them back saying it was not sent in for the keyboard. She emailed them back again claiming the keyboard was fine when sent in, and gave me a new service request number.

2 weeks have past and no box or reply. They have my phone number and email.

Let's see what happens next.

I sent in a working laptop with minor problemsand got it back broken.
They sent it back packed very badly too. the keyboard issue may have come up in return shipping. They send boxes with breakout foam and instructions to break off just enough. They returned it in a box that had foam broken out for a much bigger laptop so it had room to bang around.

I was afraid to send it in to begin with. Shoulda followed my gut.

No more office depot or anyone who uses teleplan.

I now have a refurbished asus laptop with windows 7, btw, and don't care about that old hp with vista. The whole combinatione of HP, Vista, Office Depot, Teleplan was wrong.

I'm happy with my asus from geeks dot com and a square trade warranty (although haven't used the warranty) with windows 7 for less than I paid for the HP from office depot.

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8:09 am EST
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Office Depot Rude and bad attitude

Take your business elsewhere. This company goes out of its way to make things difficult for its customers. Their products are poor quality, break easily, and are usually over-priced. Check-out lines are unreasonably long. Simple problems are difficult to resolve. Corporate policies are rigid.

It's almost impossible to return or exchange defective merchandise. They give you the run around. It took numerous trips and phone calls to the daytime store manager and corporate headquarters to get simple matters resolved! In one case, OM told me to contact the vendor, who in turn informed me OM signed a contract to warrant the products. The vendor stopped doing business with OM because of similar problems.

Store personnel and manager treated me like a criminal for once trying to return Office Max merchandise without a receipt. I am a well-known and frequent customer.

I've called to ask whether product is available in the store, been told the store will hold it for me, then find out it's not there after making the long trip.

The 'manager' who works evenings and weekends has no authority to make the simplest decision. He's really little more than a shift manager, not a store manager. Yet, he makes statements about Office Max policy. For example, he claims it's at the manager's discretion whether the store honors a competitor's advertised priced. Made similar claims about returning defective merchandise. He's rude, makes nasty comments, and gives himself airs.

I just bought an electronic item for a X-mas gift. The cashier said it had a 14 day return. I asked whether there was a special extended returns policy for the holiday. She asked this evening 'manager' whether he would 'allow' me to return it after 14 days! Mr. Arrogance thinks this policy is at his discretion, too! I'm taking it back. I'll buy gifts that aren't tainted by a poisonous attitude. Fortunately, I can get these items for a good price via many outlets.

The ink re-cycling program is supposed to build good-will and customer loyalty. This store 'manager' dislikes customers who recycle cartridges and use these coupons/credits. He complains often. Why should customers have to listen to this? Office Max sells the refilled cartridges for a hefty profit.

Cashiers made mistakes accrediting my cartridges. The Office Max customer service center staff yelled at me! for the cashiers mistakes! Like I was a naughty child. They told me they would adjust it 'one time only.' I expect accounting errors to be corrected each and anytime they occur. I contacted corporate headquarters. I now have the secret telephone number to the Caspar, Wyoming office in charge of this program.

I try to steer my company's business away from Office Max.

It shouldn't be this difficult. This company does not like its customers. The company's rigid policies hamstrings its store managers and makes a mockery out of the phrase 'customer service'. Office Max's poor attitude explains why this company is in the toilet.

The good news - Office Max makes Staples look good! After numerous terrible experiences with Office Max, I'm far more appreciative of Staples, the flexibility given to their store manager, and their corporate teamwork. I want Staples to have Big Box competition, but I only wish Office Max to R.I.P.

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mismngmntiswhy
Atlanta, US
Apr 28, 2012 5:44 am EDT

all true

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Snowball4
Philadelphia, US
Jan 19, 2010 3:35 pm EST

The 800 number service is worse than the face-to-face.

Supervisor Nicole (?) was rude and nasty and hung on me when I asked to speak to her supervisor. Trying to upgrade a computer...very very nasty.

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5:25 am EST
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Office Depot Unethical business practices

"Aboslutely unprofessional and worst online ordering system that I have seen...ordered online toshiba hdd and swissgear backpack...the order got automatically cancelled after a weeks waiting...would never buy anything from officemax...they should be sued for their unethical business practice"

"Aboslutely unprofessional and worst online ordering system that I have seen...ordered online toshiba hdd and swissgear backpack...the order got automatically cancelled after a weeks waiting...would never buy anything from officemax...they should be sued for their unethical business practice"

"Aboslutely unprofessional and worst online ordering system that I have seen...ordered online toshiba hdd and swissgear backpack...the order got automatically cancelled after a weeks waiting...would never buy anything from officemax...they should be sued for their unethical business practice"

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qscott86
, US
Nov 27, 2009 6:36 am EST

Um why are you repeating yourself?

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Office Depot Misleading online pricing - order cancellation

Over the weekend, I purchased an external hard drives which I thought it was a pre-black Friday bargain. I even ordered some additional things in order to receive free shipping. After several days, I have received an order cancellation notice even though I received an order confirmation notice when I placed the order online. Apparently, OfficeMax.com had made an error which resulted in the lower pricing; therefore, I was informed that the entire order has been cancelled. They also claim that they have the disclaimer somewhere during the purchase to cover situations like this.

My problems is that OfficeMax waited several days before they cancelled and I did miss out on several deals from Dell.com and Newegg.com. I was surprised that such a "reputable" retailer take such action to fix their mistake by simply cancelling the order without offering any other offers. Many online retailers in the past have honored the orders if the fault is at their end. I guess I will think twice before any good offers show up on OfficeMax.com website. More likely, I will not even bother to visit the site anymore and let others know as well.

I strongly feel that OfficeMax.com should honor all purchases made before they discovered their mistake.

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Officemaxcomplaint
Hartfo, US
Oct 26, 2010 1:05 am EDT

It happened to me in the similar way.I agree the cancellation if they cancelled immediately but they cancelled my order after 1 week stating that price mismatch.

Item purchased on Saturday
As per order it should come within 3 working days
I called them on Thursday
Received confirmation from them that it will shipped by Friday
But Friday received an cancellation email from officemax

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Damsel in distress
Chicago, US
Jan 01, 2010 7:10 pm EST

Office Max online ordering is terrible, and I would not advise purchasing anything from them online. I ordered a 1T external drive for my son for Christmas, the UPS driver left the parcel on the porch of my apartment complex. Well needless to say someone stole it. OK so Office Max has informed me if I want to get another one soon, that I would have to pay for another one until UPS credits Office Max back. Please understand that I have been waiting almost three weeks for this issue to get rectified already. I guess Office Max do not care about their customers nor do they have partners that care about handling negative matters in a timely fashion.

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Shamo
Palm Beach, US
Dec 02, 2009 2:53 pm EST

Do Office Max have Conditions of sale on their online store that cover this type of situation ?

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Office Depot Horrible service

I purchased a new laptop from Office Depot on 8/12/2009. With the purchase I bought an extended warranty for which I completed an online registration. The salesman and information included promised a free windows 7 upgrade once available. When the time came 3 months later I visited the windows site to discover a photocopy of the sales receipt was required, but I no longer had it in my possession due to the fact it was needed for a mail in rebate. I visited the store from which the purchase was made and spoke with the manager on duty. He told me that he could not find a copy of the receipt and that it was my responsibility not his. He also incorrectly informed me that the free upgrade had ended. He gave me the 800 number to office depot to request a copy of the receipt. I called the number and gave the total amount, date of purchase, and card number (all recorded from my bank statements). I was again informed that they could not provide me with a proof of purchase of any kind. Back to the uncaring manager, he said there is still nothing that can be done for a computer less than 3 months old with an extended warranty. I asked that because the plan included accidental damage that I could just drop the computer and force him to replace it with the new system. He agreed that this is what would happen. I cannot understand how poor the customer service could be on such a large business. I will not purposefully break the computer because after no help, I am concerned the there will be another loophole the will not allow me to have the computer fixed or replaced.

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peace love
Kevil, US
Jan 01, 2010 11:35 pm EST

So you don't keep a copy of your receipt when you mailed in your rebate? OHHHH... and that's Office Depot's fault?~!?!?

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Kristomania
, US
Nov 25, 2009 10:40 pm EST

Don't cry because things don't go your way. Don't wait three months to figure out if you can get upgrade.

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Office Depot False advertising

I had a coupon for $10.00 off at Office Depot. The closest Office Depot to us is about 2.5 hours away. I researched Office Max and they state they accept competitors coupons. I tried to use the coupon and was told they actually don't accept competitors coupons. So I wrote to customer service via their website.

This is what I wrote: This is regarding a coupon for $10.00 off a qualifying purchase of $30.00 or more. I took this Office Depot coupon to our local Office Max because your company states "We accept competitor coupons: Bring in another retailer's coupons, and we'll honor it*. Well, in Elko Nevada that is far from the case. I was told I could not use it there because it was not an Office Max coupon.

And this is what their rep, Chris Mobily OfficeMax Customer Service Direct/Dotcom/Retail Rep, had to say about my inquiry: "We do apologize, but OfficeMax does not match competitor's coupons. Please sign up for our MaxPerks loyalty program to receive future OfficeMax savings and coupons. To sign up for our program please visit http://www.officemaxperks.com".

Ironically, I am a member of the Max perks program and have been trying to get my points/credits straightened out for about 6 months now.

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JGooch
Spring Creek, US
Oct 27, 2009 5:36 pm EDT

I had a coupon for $10.00 off at Office Depot. The closest Office Depot to us is about 2.5 hours away. I researched Office Max and they state they accept competitors coupons. I tried to use the coupon and was told they actually don't accept competitors coupons. So I wrote to customer service via their website.

This is what I wrote: This is regarding a coupon for $10.00 off a qualifying purchase of $30.00 or more. I took this Office Depot coupon to our local Office Max because your company states "We accept competitor coupons: Bring in another retailer's coupons, and we'll honor it*. Well, in Elko Nevada that is far from the case. I was told I could not use it there because it was not an Office Max coupon.

And this is what their rep, Chris Mobily OfficeMax Customer Service Direct/Dotcom/Retail Rep, had to say about my inquiry: "We do apologize, but OfficeMax does not match competitor's coupons. Please sign up for our MaxPerks loyalty program to receive future OfficeMax savings and coupons. To sign up for our program please visit http://www.officemaxperks.com".

Ironically, I am a member of the Max perks program and have been trying to get my points/credits straightened out for about 6 months now. That issue is for another post.

As of today, 10/27/09, their website still states:" We accept competitor coupons: Bring in another retailer's coupons, and we'll honor it*. *See your local OfficeMax store associate for details". This is from the Office Max website page addressing "Every Day Values" http://www.officemax.com/home/custom.jsp?id=m3230047

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Noncomplainer
gadsden, US
Jan 05, 2010 10:45 pm EST

Office Max does not offer to match competors coupons, nor is it avertised on their website or instore anywhere.

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Office Depot Closing acct raising interest rate

back in feb they closed about 5000 account holders for various inane reasons. since then they have raised our interest rate from 20.80 to 29.99 - within 8 months on a closed account. they refuse to make adjustments and lower the rate.

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Office Depot Printer cartridge recycle program

After getting laid off during the economic downturn, my son worked for Office Max for 9 months as a bridge to returning to Grad School. He had to move to another city to attend grad school so he transferred from one Office Max to another after 8 months of employment as an assistant manager.

While working at the first Office Max, he inquired with his manager if he could partake in the Printer Cartridge recycling program which paid $3.00 per cartridge (max 10/week) for all working and empty printer cartridges. His manager didn't know and told him to call Loss Prevention to inquire. Loss prevention indicated that employees were encouraged to recycle and that he could recycle up to 10 cartridges per week, just like a customer.

My son then purchased 100 used cartridges for $1.00 each from a seller on EBay who did not live close enough to an Office Max store to take adavantage of the program and turned in 10 per week per the programs guidelines. When he completed his recycling, he used the gift card to purchase office supplies and a new laptop for school (over $600.00 worth of product) and paid the balance from his own funds.

Upon transferring to the new Office Max, he worked for a month before he received a better job offer through the University with better hours and working in an office as opposed to a retail environment. When he turned in his 2 weeks notice, he immediately began receiving harrasment from his management team telling him that he'd better fininsh his scheduled shifts (20 hours/week which he intended to complete) and not burn his bridges (which he did not intended to do). 7 days after turning in his notice, he was pulled into the office and questioned by the manager and the same loss prevention person he had spoken to earlier about his fraudulent use of the printer cartridge recycling program, basically telling him that they thought he was stealing printer cartridges that had already been turned in and then recycling them again. The questioned him for half an hour and asked him to write a statement. When he completed his statement, they wouldn't let him leave the office until he added some other comments to his statements basically stating that he would pay back the entire $300 he had earned if Loss Prevention found him guilty and requested repayment. They then handed him a form that told him that he had admitted to fraudulent behavior and that the lawyers would be investigating him and he could face termination (ha, he had already resigned). He was then told he was being suspended indefinitely while Loss Prevention and the Lawyers investigated his activity (not very likely that they would bring lawyers in at thier bill rate to investigate a potential $300.00 fraud case but a nice scare tactic to try and get someone to just admit fraud and pay back the money).

He was told he had to call back in 5 days to find out what would happen and that if he didn't he would be immediately terminated (7 days from this date was his last scheduled work day so he was done either way). When he called back on day 5 he was told that the person that he needed to talk to was on vacation and wouldn't be back for a week and that he should call back then. Later that day he received a phone call from loss prevention thanking him for his cooperation and telling him that he had been found to have not broken any laws or Office Max policies (thankfully, he kept all of his receipts from EBay and from when he recycled the cartridges) and that they now considered the matter closed. He then asked if he should show up for his shift that evening and was told that no, his shift had been covered and that he did not need to report to work that day or the next (his last day was the following day). He then asked if he would be paid for the 27 hours that he had been scheduled to work but had been suspended due to the investigation which found him without fault and they laughed at him.

What a great company, an employee betters himself and finds a job that he doesn't have to work weekends and nights and gets to work in an office using skills from his degree and gives 2 weeks notice and they retaliate by accusing him of fraudulent behavior and suspend him without pay with absolutely no proof. It would have been better for him to just resign and walk away with no notice but he has way too much integrity for that.

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Office Depot Overcharged

I just returned from our local Office Depot store where we have been a customer for over 7 years. We printed two 18x24 posters today (which we print often) and the total came to $127 after our 2 for 1 discount! The regular price is only $44 each, but today's price is over $60 each. When I inquired as to why, I was told the discount was for the print only - not the laminating and mounting. Okay - but why then are two posters costing me $127 instead of the normal $96 WITHOUT the coupon? I should not have asked - the look and attitiude I got from the rep and the asst manager was enough to make me realize that our relationship with Office Depot was over. They ended up giving me the two posters for $48 like the coupon offered, but I had to ask myself why? If you are going to treat me like *+%# and therefore lose my future business, why give me the discount? You still let me leave without an apology for trying to stick me for $80. Although our local Staples store is a further drive, I'd rather give our business to someone who at least appears to care that we chose them as a vendor. Don't waste your money or company resources on vendors with poor customer service - it is killing small business in America.

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leonislamination
, CN
Nov 24, 2009 9:44 pm EST

As far as I know, office depot is a large company...If anyone who would likt to import laminating pouches and rolls, kindly contact us.
www.leonislamination.com
Leonislamination Co., Ltd
dennis@leonislamination.com

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This review was chosen algorithmically as the most valued customer feedback.

It may look weird for some to review a place like Officemax but I had to let everyone know about them. For some reason what ever it may be this store is always empty and by empty I mean that there are only employees and no customers.And even though there are no customers at all and there are a lot of employees I get help every here after great difficulty...

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Office Depot Double charged

I placed an order on officedepot.com. They charged for the entire order the day I place the order. The day the order was supposed to be delivered, they recharged for part of the order. When I called the customer service number, they told me that I had called and placed the order that morning. I told them I had not called them nor had I duplicated my own order. They informed me that they did not make mistakes like that and that I had obviously given my credit card information to someone. When I asked who could give me the name of the person that took the order, I was told no one had that information. When I asked to speak to a supervisor, I was told there was no one higher in the South America Office and that they could not help me. I had placed the order and would have to wait for it to be delivered and return it then. Meanwhile they have double charged me for my order and refused to refund my money.

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Office Depot False advertising

Went to the store today to make some purchases. My daughter a customer was with me and she wanted to purchase some of the same items and she had her own money. The store had an ad running for back to school items and said PER CUSTOMER and when we got to check out they refused her sale saying she had to pay full price. Saying that its per household. I argued with the employees and showed them the ad and it CLEARLY says PER CUSTOMER not PER HOUSEHOLD. If they want it to be per household they need to print it per household. There is a big difference between customer and household. Especially if each is paying seperatly! This is false advertising and should be put to a STOP! We left with only my purchases and now am some pretty ticked off customers with a BAD TASTE in our mouths of OFFICE DEPOT!

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Office Depot Unauthorized billing

On 3/9/2009, I called the Office Depot toll free number to place an order. The male operator began making rude female jesters. I requested a different individual to handle the call. He laughed and in a sexual manner stated there's no one here but me. I said, "no thanks" and immediately ended the call. Within minutes, I called the same toll free number and spoke to a different operator at Office Depot. The order was placed, then I requested to have a coupon added to my order. I was told the order was already processed, and it was too late to add a coupon. I wasn't aware that I had to mention a mailed coupon before giving my credit card information. Before the call ended, a group of males in the background began making loud references to the call I had made earlier. Overly attempting to annoy me, the male operator's voice gave an impression of rudeness in his call completion statement. I did not make a comment, but I called back in twenty minutes and cancelled my order.

Office Depot charged my credit card $83.12 on March 9, 2009; and, after eleven polite requests to refund my account, they have not given credit for the cancelled order. I was given an order number: [protected]-001. Office Depot operator Nesia said she sent the request to resolution, but I have spoken to their resolution department. On 3/25/2009, my credit was approved. Kurt said, "The request was forwarded a third time. There was a note for approval. His supervisor was notified, and he alerted the billing department."
I have also tried online to receive credit. The only response has been a conversation with an Office Depot operator.

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Office Depot Customer service

Worst customer service ever received. I see this company going out of business. Will never buy anything from there again and would not recommend anyone else to go there.

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Meg
Wayzata, US
Jun 03, 2009 5:23 pm EDT

I purchased a $100.00 piece of software from an Office Depot. It did not work. I spent hours with tech support for Intuit because the license did not work. They had me take things off my computer, put things on my computer, call back, call again, and finally said they did not know what was wrong. Sound irritating? It was lovely compared to how Office Depot treated me.

1. I tried to take it back, but their position is that they do not take back opened software. But how could I know they had sold me a defective product otherwise?

2. They told me to talk to Intuit again. After two hours of holding I was given to someone in the Phillipines, I believe. Neither of us understood a word the other spoke.

3. Next, I called the store again and spoke to "John" the manager. He said he would make an exception but that I had to call Office Depot to get a duplicate receipt even though I had put it on my Office Depot Credit card.

4. It took over two hours to finally reach the duplicate receipt department. The person I spoke with told me he would email me a duplicate receipt within 24 hours.

5. Two days later, after calling GoOfficeDepot.com three time and being placed on hold for a total of over 5 hours, finally being put on hold and then hung up on, I called John at the store again.

6. John was not available. Instead "Steve" got on the phone. He told me he didn't care what John said they never take software back because I had probably loaded it up and used the license and was now trying to bring it back. I kept trying to tell me what had happened but he kept interrupting me. I asked him to quit interrupting me, but he said I was interrupting him. I asked him to have John call me but he didn't think John would have time before he went home.

The product cost $99. I have likely put over $300 of my time into this.

Truly - don't buy from Office Depot. Run, run while you still can!

D
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Deborah Noel
Santa Rosa, US
Jan 23, 2011 11:17 pm EST

Hi Jarrod Janosa,

I understand that you are the "store manager". I was given your card (when I requested it) by the nice sales clerk and manger, when I was in your store TO EXCHANGE product, at 5pm, Saturday, January 22, 2011... (and as usual, I would probably end up buying a LOT MORE product in the process)

I am REALLY UPSET with the LACK of "Customer Service" in your store. From the young hispanic guy who had such a (shall we say...) "shy" (giving him the benefit of the doubt) ... or probably more like "disinterested attitude" toward helping your customers, to the very nice but "programed" sales girl and manager who were "UNABLE to ASIST ME, (one of your GOOD customers) because of Store or Office Depot "POLICY"... Although they both claimed to sympathize, ultimately the manager made no effort toward pleasing her customer! (using the "PROGRAMED" line... "I'm sorry but I can't do anything for you because that's Office Depot's "POLICY".) They both said that they could NOT "scan in" the purchase I made online to give me credit to exchange for the "correct" product in your store, because you do NOT carry the same products that Office Depot carries online! What a scam!

I had called your store and explained what had happened to two different people over the phone, (before I went to the trouble to come down there) and the latter of the two very nicely told me to just bring it into the store for an exchange. (knowing the product number after we had both looked online to see the MISINFORMATION on Office Depot's website)

The reason I ORDER "ONLINE" is BECAUSE I AM DISABLED!#$%9/=789/=&*789/= !@#$%^&*()_! My situation, I realize, is not your problem... But, It is VERY PHYSICALLY DIFFICULT for me to come into the store. And because of the inadequate information on your website, ultimately I had to come into the store anyway! On top of all of that... ALL I "GOT" was "VERY UP SET" with a Head Ache and an Upset Stomach by the time I left. (with and paying for an additional purchase of the product I originally thought I was ordering online!) So now your company has EXTORTED even MORE of my MONEY, because TIME was of the essence NOW, and I needed the correct product to complete the job that COULD NOT be done because of all of the B.S. I have had to go through with you guys on SATURDAY, along with the WASTED MONEY I payed for my attendant/assistant's help!

Company products are company products! All of this Unnecessary MESS happens just because of your "store/company policy" that is set up to NOT be WILLING to give your customers any SERVICE... JUST ABUSE! (and keep their MONEY!)

"GREED" with "NO CUSTOMER SERVICE" seems to be the ULTIMATE "COMPANY POLICY"! Once you misinform us (YOUR CUSTOMERS) on your website and get our MONEY, (WHCH IS THE "BOTTOM LINE" as we all have come to know...) You make it VERY UNPLEASANT or VIRTUALLY IMPOSSIBLE for us to try and exchange the products you mislead or misinformed us about! (and to add insult to injury, WE (YOUR CUSTOMERS) have to PAY TO RETURN IT!@#$%^&*()_+!

I for one will NEVER shop in your store (or online at Office Depot) again, and I will be VERY HONEST with anyone I ever talk to about Office Depot... I will let them know precisely WHY I WILL NOT be SHOPPING at YOUR STORE (or online at Office Depot.com) EVER AGAIN! There are way too many OTHER STORES who have GREAT CUSTOMER SERVICE, and EASY RETURNS. (ONLINE AND AT THEIR STORES) I am at a point in my life where being abused by corporate greed does not serve me well.

I am Wondering WHY I even took the Whole Weekend to Research and type this letter... (with no fingers on either hand, which is just PART of the disabilities I get to live with in this lifetime) I have no expectations of a response from you, or a resolution of any kind, with the kind of "Company Policy" Office Depot has... (Other than the boring old "PROGRAMMED" response of... "I'm sorry, I can't do anything for you, because that's "COMPANY POLICY".)

My friend, who came with me, and witnessed everything, from website to the phone call from my home, to the upset and abuse in the store, was NOT very IMPRESSED either!

What a pity to lose so much business over such a small purchase because of "CORPORATE GREED" AND CHEATING YOUR CUSTOMERS!

PLEASE SEE ATTACHMENT BELOW, WHICH IS JUST ONE OF SOOOOOOOOOO MANY TESTIMONIES, ON THE WEB, ABOUT OFFICE DEPOT'S "TWISTED" and "GREADY" BUSINESS PRACTICES!@#$%^&*()_+!@#$%^&!

Sincerely, Deborah Noel

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More Office Depot Employees Report Lying to Customers, Changing Price Tags
March 16th, 2009 by Avram Piltch
Since we published our article about Office Depot associates lying to customers last week, the company has issued an internal memo “reminding” employees not to lie to customers about notebook stock. We’ve also heard from and interviewed a number of additional Office Depot employees from different stores in completely different parts of the country who corroborated our primary source Rich’s account and added more detail, including new allegations that some associates alter the price of clearance items to include the cost of Product Protection Plans or Tech Depot Services.

In addition to the myriad e-mail tips and blog comments from different sources claiming to be Office Depot employees, we’ve now interviewed five people (four current and one former employee) from five different states and have been able to verify the employment for four out of those five (the fifth gave us his name and region but said he was too concerned about losing his job to provide a paystub or let us contact him at work). This leads us to believe that the practice of deceiving customers has been common, widespread, and not just limited to one rogue store or region.

(Update: After speaking with a senior official from the Federal Trade Commission, we can also confirm that Office Depot is violating federal law.)

“I can personally attest that everything in this article is 100 percent true, ” posted a reader who asked to be called Mike. “I have had various managers (including my store manager) insinuate, if not flat-out tell me, not to sell items to customers if they aren’t going to get any attachments … The managers would much rather us sell 3 laptops, a PPP, TDS, and case than a hundred laptops with nothing.” Though Mike’s comment was posted anonymously on our blog, we subsequently conducted a phone interview with him and verified that he currently works at an Office Depot in the Western U.S.

Alex (assumed name), an Office Depot employee from another state, told us that lying about notebook stock was common not only in his store but also in at least a dozen other stores in his area:

One scenario in the tech department: I’m putting signs up … and a customer comes in and says ‘I just came from another store. They said you have this [notebook] in stock.’ So I’ll go and check it real quick and sometimes I will have it in stock, sometimes I won’t—and that is actual information. Sometimes I just don’t have it in stock and the other store lied to them. I’ll ask them first: ‘Where did you come from?’ And they’ll say what street or what part of town they came from, and I know all the store numbers so I pull it up and I can check their inventory in real-time and see that they have them [the notebooks] on hand and then I’ll ask them [the customer] did they talk to you about extended warranties or services and they’ll say ‘Yeah, yeah. I don’t need any of that. I just need a laptop.’ Then I know that’s what they did …

The other store will have it in stock, but send the customer to us, just to get them out of the store like they’re doing them a service. [They'll say something] like ‘Hey, I don’t have it, but they do and I really want you to get this laptop, ’ so they can save their own store’s numbers.”

Price Altering

Alex claimed that, at his store and others in his area, it’s common for sales associates to add the cost of a Product Protection Plan (PPP) or Tech Depot Service (TDS) into the price of clearance items, without telling the customer. “The out-of-stock thing—that’s small beans compared to the other stuff that happens with the customers as far as price altering, ” he said. He added:

We have clearance machines that we still have in a box. They’ve gone clearance. Let’s say the original price was $599. However, the clearance price has now knocked it down to $499. When you print the price up, it’s only going to print the price that’s in our system, which would be the $499.91 or something like that. A tech service is $100. A warranty is going to be a little more expensive, like in the $150 range, so they’re not going to mess with the price that much.

[Rather than post that price, ] What we’ll do is that I’ll go to the copy and print center, get into Photoshop, take one price tag that was $599 from another item in the store, cut out that area of $599 and position it exactly where the $499 price is in the current tag and then run that price through some card stock and cut the paper out in the same exact size as what’s called a ‘fact tag’ in our stores. And now that’s the price. It’s legit.

Alex said sales associates at his store are instructed to pitch tech services and warranties with these marked-up clearance notebooks, and that if the customers refuse to bite, they should say their manager is letting them “throw it in” for a current so-called promotion. The customer doesn’t know that they are actually paying the $100 for that service, because they think it’s part of the notebook’s price. What if a customer buys one of these marked-up notebooks and says yes to a service plan? They pay the same $599, but it’s itemized as $499 for the notebook plus $100 for the service plan. “Then we’d say the price [on the notebook] must have dropped, it just went clearance right there at the register, ” Alex said.

Though Alex said he did the Photoshop work himself, he told us that his boss encouraged him and praised the results:

My manager comes to me and says, ‘You need to do whatever possible. We have a lot of clearance machines. You need to get that price figured in with the clearance models so that’s what they’re gonna get.’ If you buy a clearance laptop that’s on display, you get 10 percent off of whatever the lowest price is that’s on there. On clearance laptops, a warranty is only $80. So if a laptop is $799 and it’s clearance, obviously 10 percent is going to be $80 so they’re going to get a warranty with it. We won’t tell them about the price change. We’ll just say ‘Hey, a warranty comes free with this, because it is clearance.’

Now my boss says, ‘You have to do whatever it takes to get this price in it.’ I go to Photoshop, do it—he comes in and says ‘That’s beautiful. I love it. Do it to all the other ones.’ He then goes to another store manager that he can confide in and says ‘This is what we’ve been doing. This is helping us a lot.’ That store then goes to do it.

Alex said that his store never marks the price up higher than it was before clearance. If the cost of a warranty of tech service they want to pitch is greater than the difference between original and clearance prices, they will pitch the customer that service at a reduced price. So, if a $500 laptop is on clearance for $450 and the store wants to sell the customer an $80 PPP, they will tell the customer that the laptop is $500 and try to sell the PPP for $30.

He noted that, while his store and the other stores in his area that learned from them are the only ones he knows of that Photoshops price tags, he believes that it’s common practice to give customers a higher price on clearance items so a warranty or tech service can be included. “So many people do that, ” Alex said. “If it’s clearance, then they’re adding something to the price and you don’t know it. Always.”

How to See the Right Price

Alex suggested that shoppers can use the in-store kiosks to type in the SKU of a notebook they’re interested in and get pricing (but added that customers may only have access to the current price, not the lowest-possible-price information). “In most cases … if I Photoshop the price $100 more and they key that SKU into the system, they’re gonna see it’s $100 less.”

The kiosks are not always labeled properly or available, Alex warned. “All the little kiosks in the store are supposed to have a sign around the monitor that says ‘check inventory here’ or ‘shop online here.’ Our store is told not to put that signage up, that it’s just for employees.”

Office Depot’s Internal Reminder: Will It Work?

On Thursday, March 12, two days after we published our original report, Office Depot issued an internal memo to its employees, telling them not to lie to customers about stock. Labeled as a “Sales Practices Reminder, ” the memo informs employees that “under no circumstances should a Sales Associate refuse to sell any product because the customer is not interested in purchasing a PPP for that product” and warned that termination or other disciplinary action could result from a failure to follow the reminder.

According to Mike, the memo appeared on the homepage of the internal “store portal” Intranet, but didn’t get much attention at his store. “It only stayed on the front page for about 24 hours or so, ” he said. “If I didn’t check the store portal daily (which isn’t usually necessary for nonmanager associates), I would have never known about it. I don’t think any other associates knew it was there since its not really necessary to check there, again the managers were supposed to go over it with us personally, as you can see, but no one had mentioned it to me.”

There’s no word yet from our other sources about whether the memo is having an impact or not.

Comments (44 Responses)
Tags: Office Depot, Buyer Beware, notebooks, News
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44 Responses to “More Office Depot Employees Report Lying to Customers, Changing Price Tags”
Robert Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 5:47 am
This problem of commissions on services was the subject of an article by Joel Spolsky :

http://www.inc.com/magazine/20081001/how-hard-could-it-be-sins-of-commissions.html

tndal Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 7:51 am
I see nothing illegal here. If a buyer is willing to buy a PC for $599 without realizing that there is an included service plan charge, then he must believe it is a good deal. Of course, $519 (the original price minus $80 service plan) would be a _better_ deal, but the original deal is a good one.

So a deal is made, some profit is made, the user buys an unnecessary service plan but nonetheless is very happy with the price. Aren’t we getting a little Victorian about the profit motive here? After all, the goal of business is to profit and survive, not to give up all your profits in service to the customer. That’s the road to bankruptcy.

joelmax Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 9:41 am
Well, it is illegal as it is an deliberate misrepresentation of what is actually being offered (Which is still not a deal, the item is on clearance as they want it out, so by jacking the price back up, even though a ppp or tdp is being added and misrepresenting HOW the price is broken down. If they were to do this and say the laptop is on clearance right now, but it comes bundled with a PPP or TDP, then it would be fine as they aren’t misrepresenting the cost, they are just informing about what is included in the package. (IANAL)

khz Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 10:06 am
To ‘tndal’

Saying ‘we’re out of stock’ when you are not *is* illegal. But barring that, why not just have everything out in the open: say “we won’t sell laptops without the service plan” and let the customer decide.

It’s like the old mail-order camera stores in New York. Super sleazy. They advertise a low price in the magazines and when you call they ask give you the run-around. Effectively they won’t sell you at the advertised price unless you buy extras (film, tripod, bag, etc). It’s easier to lie over the phone.

Paul Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 10:14 am
tndal: You’ve got to be kidding me! You’re saying, then, that it is completely appropriate for a business to flat out lie to a customer? Do you own a business yourself? If so, what’s the name so that I will never do business with you in the future!

The shenanigans that Office Depot has been participating in is enough to make me think twice before giving them my business for anything but the most trivial “commodity” items. Personally, if I want a computer, I just want the machine. I’m a software engineer and don’t want or need to spend the money for any sort of “protection plan”.

sys admin Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 10:49 am
The same thing happened to me at a Best Buy in Canada. I had checked the inventory online and tried to buy a 25″ monitor on sale for $450. The tech told me that they were out of stock. I then decided to buy another unit for $50 more, the box was right there on the shelf behind the display unit. They tried to give me a story. I told them I was going to call their head office. They took my money and got me out of the store as soon as possible.

What we need to do is to prosecute a few random employees at these stores. When the word gets out that you risk your liberty by following shady orders, the managers and execs won’t be able to convince their staff to lie.

Sam Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 1:34 pm
Wow. We would go to jail for doing this in a car dealership.

Insider Guy Says:
March 17th, 2009 at 7:52 pm
Glad this is finally getting attention, but for those in the retail trenches this is hardly new news. Daily occurrence, has been for past 8 years, ever since margins went to zero. If they would make it a competitive package, all inclusive pricing, tossing in some extra deals, you could possibly make it work. But they aren’t that creative, shoving it all after purchase, and resorting to lying and trickery. Staples is actually worse than Depot.

Even I got stung…Best Buy had the advertised WDTV on sale for $99, but the clerk, incredulously, tried to get me to buy a $70 protection plan something, obviously I said no, he then said out of stock. Yet after wandering around, set of 5, on a bottom shelf with Video cards and TV cards in front. Bad placement for sure, but either the inventory system sucks or I was lied to.

Staples, Depot and Max make these dicey games their lifeblood, mainly with big ticket electronics. Best Buy is less pressure, just shop, and avoid clerks, you will get the push back at checkout, but easy overcome there. Walmart/Sams, Target and Costco work best, but limited selections. Fry’s is just hunt and peck, avoid all clerks, all the time, more clueless than worth.

But the Netbook trend is gonna kill laptop purchases more than the usual shell games from Big Boxers. No more “in addition to” more like “instead of”.

But rule of thumb, avoid Retail, Overstockers and esp. Office suppliers, go Warehouse/Discount/Memberships. If you want cutting-edge laptops, click over brick.

Aaron Hill Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 5:36 am
I am glad that The Depot is shaking in thier boots, sending out an internal memo to store portal, too bad no one reads that damn thing.

to:sys admin
As a former employee, lets please try to avoid arresting the little people. I am not going into your work and arresting the coffee runners. Arrest the executives, dont make an example of people the company can replace. We are dispensable.

Former Office Depot Employee Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 8:46 am
I use to work for Office Depot and I can’t speak for all locations but I worked in one in michigan for about 2 years. Let me clear things up:

1) Lying about stock:

I have never witnessed this myself but this is what I have witnessed. My location would be out of stock for a certain item, so we would check nearby locations to see if they have the item in stock. And if they had it is stock then we would tell the customer and THEN call that store to verify that they actually DO have the item in stock then tell that store that we have a customer coming to get it and give them the customers name to hold the item under. I can say that I was at a decently managed store so everyone pretty much would call to verify before telling the customer to go to the other store. Furthermore the inventory system is NOT always right and any employee at office depot should know that. The problem is you get some lazy-### employees who don’t want to call and check or some lazy-### managers who do not want to teach the employees the proper way to call another location for an item.

2) Tech services and Warranties with Clearance Notebooks

This is true to a certain extent. The example that was explained where the clearance price is $499 but then marked up back to the original $599 with a PPP included, never happened at my location BUT this is what happened:

Say there is a laptop on clearance for $499 (original $599), they would tell us to offer it to the customer for $499 with a PPP. Meaning that would actually lower the price to $399 and then add the PPP to make it $499. And we would have to TELL the customer, we were told to try to encourage the customer to get the PPP with the laptop but never did we offer it like a deal or no deal type thing. This did not happen too often and it only happened when an item had been on clearance for a LONG period of time. And it was usually items that were on clearance but not an advertised clearance. Some people took the deal and some did not. I have never seen nor heard of the case where a clearance item would get marked up to MORE than the clearance price. Again though I can see this happening at a poorly managed place, plus with the pressure of selling PPP and the rough times that office depot is experiencing I wouldn’t put it past them.

3) Other stuff

This is one thing that DID happen at my store, sometimes things would be in clearance so long that the price would drop to unbelievable levels. For example a $199 digital camera gone down to $34.00…I have seen it happen lol, plus I purchased it at the price. In Office Depot’s inventory system in a certain screen you can see at what date the price of an item will fall all you have to do is wait and hope there is still stock left when it reaches that date. I am pretty sure though that there were employees who would hide stock until that date and them mysteriously find it on that day and try to purchase it. Now before you go try to run into office depot and ask them to check how the prices drop…you won’t be able to, it is not the same app that is running on the customer kiosk so for get about it. You would have to personally know someone that worked there or get in real good with someone that works there.

Now here is a real shocker if an item is left around and not pulled for clearance then the price can drop to even lower levels like 0.01 I am dead SERIOUS, I have seen it. But they would tell us to not ring it up at 0.01 though to change it to like 4 or 10 dollars or something. And yes this was completely wrong and yes I changed it before and sometimes I left it at 0.01 cent just for the sheer fact that it RANG up for 0.01 cent! This hasn’t really been noticed problem because when it happens most customers assume that the system is messed up, I mean when they see 0.01 they are not going to assume that it is actually scanning at that price, they are going to think that it is some glitch when in fact it is not. SO….if you can catch this try to fight and get that item for 0.01 it is only right, plus there is some type of scanner law that you only have to pay what it scans up as and they are not supposed to change it.

4) Final Thoughts lol

Office Depot is a big company…well little now LOL, everyone at the store is NOT always out to get you. The employees are just like you, trying to keep their job, doing what they are told TO keep that job. No one is going to be captain crusader and try to fix all the companies problems nor is it their responsibility. While there are some ###-wholes at Office Depot stores the best thing to do when dealing with a employee is to be nice to them, being an ###-whole and a jerk gets you no where. Unless you are 100% sure that if you be an ###-whole you will get what you want, but that is rarely the case. Just be smart about it! Know when to be an ###-whole to get what you want and when not to be! One thing I realized that people seem to think that they are going to get their way if they are rude to an employee, it doesn’t work like that. I personally would not go out of my way to let a customer know of deals if they were extremely rude to me OR other customers. Plus I was not required to tell customers of deals that were not readily posted in the weekly sales paper.

IM OUT!

Neil Ellington Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 9:12 am
before Christmas last year I went to an Office Depot in a town 20 miles from my local one, because I was early to a meeting, so I just stopped to look around. They had an Acer One Netbook that was being sold at my Office Depot and online for $349 selling for $449! When I asked, I was told it was because the town “was more expensive to live in, and taxes were higher!” Needless to say, I haven’t been back to that OD.

Tim Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 10:02 am
@Former OD Employee

.01 pricing means the item is about to be donated to charity, as the tax write-off is higher than the next lowest clearance price. If a customer wants the item, that’s great but a store manager is not going to take a bottom-line cut by essentially donating it the customer who is willing to buy it. Instead he tells you to sell it at whatever clearance price should be expected. Other than that, that’s one of the better responses I’ve read on this subject.

Former Office Depot Employee Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 12:00 pm
Man I didn’t realize how shallow that first response was….

tndal quotes:
March 17th, 2009 at 7:51 am

“If a buyer is willing to buy a PC for $599 without realizing that there is an included service plan charge, then he must believe it is a good deal.”

I like your choice of words here….realizing, actually I like how you spun it, you are basically saying that if the customer isn’t smart enough to realize that he is being lied to then it is some how okay?

“So a deal is made, some profit is made, the user buys an unnecessary service plan but nonetheless is very happy with the price.”

So you are saying when it comes to buying things you would not mind being lied to as long as you got a good deal. Really though WHO is getting the good deal YOU or the COMPANY.

“After all, the goal of business is to profit and survive, not to give up all your profits in service to the customer. That’s the road to bankruptcy.”

I guess when you look at the bottom line and want to say the ends justify the means then okay. I would say the goal of a business is to serve some type of service for those profits.

tndal….Are you really Piyush “Bobby” Jindal in secret? JK

LOL

Josh Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 12:36 pm
When I worked at OD, I knew some good, honest store managers. They didn’t last too long though, after 2005. The company started saying they wanted more and more profits. I knew managers that would tell people to disregard memos from corporate saying to mark something at a specific price point. This was widespread in both the Illinois/Wisconsin area and Florida. The bottom line was getting hit, the store managers weren’t making their bonuses, so they lied and stuff to get their money, even if it meant screwing the regular employee’s bonus which was based off of something else.

Also, the .01 items, I knew multiple people who were fired for selling them at .01 without upping the charge. Managers would just tell people “When it comes up as .01 it’s being donated to needy children” so they would feel bad if they tried to buy it.

Alan Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 3:41 pm
As far as the penny items go, it is illegal to sell them because once they show up as that they have been written off as non-taxable donations. It’s not some obscure law or something, it’s simple ethics. You don’t sell things marked as donations.

In response to this article, I’m somewhat annoyed that you declare the problem to be widespread without citing the locations of the four confirmed sources you spoke with, and only mentioning “Alex’s” cluster of rogue stores until later on in the article. There will always be good stores and bad stores; by lumping them together like this you are only further demonizing the stores with associates and managers who are willing to bear Corporate’s (greatly increasing) pressure to add those asinine attachments in favor of honesty and customer service.

Jabba The Hutt Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 3:42 pm
Haha @ Office [censored]pot! Shop Amazon or Newegg!

DT Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 3:57 pm
I worked at Office Depot from [protected], helping to build and open a store back when Mark Begelman was president and COO (up through `95). Back then it was a good, fair, and honest place to work, with only the occasional bad-apple manager or employee, and Mark genuinely cared about the employees under him down to your basic red-shirts.

Times have really changed. Retail had its ups and downs then; it has gone steadily down. The base help gets whipped on by management (sometimes to the point of unethical behavior) to make goals This is because the store management really wants to be district management, and district management wants to be regional management, and the best way to do that is not by showing how well you treat employees, or even how well you run a store, but by numbers alone –how much you grossed, and how much you profited in a given month, and its a repetitive cycle, month after month. Managers who get poor results will eventually be canned as well, so the pressure is on them too. It’s cold, unfeeling, and you are no longer supposed to care about the customer or customer service; you are only supposed to APPEAR to care.

I was the first employee to earn a Diamond Customer Courtesy award pin at my store (the top honor before you started earning cash, based on customer mail telling the company what a helpful experience you provided) and I earned it in under eight months. That didn’t make a dime’s worth of difference to the store manager who canned me; he didn’t like employees with opinions, he wanted yes-men/women. Only job I’ve ever lost that way (and later, the manager was demoted to another store as a result of similar actions with others). I’m glad to be out of retail, and doing a job that I’m genuinely appreciated for. And I’m glad Begelman went on to other things, since if he were still the COO, my respect for him would now be shame.

dick Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 4:07 pm
i would like to know why is laptopmag.com so focused on this b**sh**t? I have been in retail for 20 years and i can tell you that what happens in retail has not changed in 20 years and it will never change. I have been employed by office depot for over nine years and i can tell that this practice IS limited to a few stores and that it IS NOT policy to do this crap that these managers are doing. I have a love hate relationship for the company i work for but I can tell you that this pisses me off when employees go behind the back of the company that provides them with a job go and spread ### lies…does it make you feel better that you might loose your job over running your mouth? Those store managers that pulled this little stunt should be fired and the employees that helped them do it no matter if they did it being told or not should also get fired. I cant stand thieves nor can i stand people who lie just to make a buck. No, we dont make money off the sale of the laptop, yes we do make money on the add ons and thats it….yes we ask the customer if they want a bag, printer, warranty thats our jobs. If you dont by the laptop and leave thats fine…if a year goes by and it breaks the manufacture wont cover we get [censor]ed at and yelled at because we wont fix it or return it either….but if we offer them then we get [censor]ed at because we did….damned if you do, damned if you dont….So if you dont want to buy the warranty then dont, go to another place and buy it…but stop complaining that we offer them because we offer them on printers, laptops, phones, freaking anything that takes power or batteries…so get over it….and I will say this much…to all those that say I hope depot goes just like cc….kiss my ### this is my job and my life, i do what i have too…yeah i can go someplace else and work but i have invested alot of years here and i enjoy what i do…therefore i stay and work hard…

Matt Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 4:53 pm
I’ve not personally witnessed such a thing. But I can attest to how hard other retailers push service plans.

Some are VERY aggressive. They’ll still sell you the product w/o it, but they’ll push it till you basically fall over dead.

The company calls them good salesmen.

As far as Office Depot and its business practices go. I’m not surprised really. I’ve been in the local one a few times, and its dead, dead as in, no customers. Kinda like a car dealership these days. You wonder how they can even justify keeping the lights on.

New Office Depot sales idea: Shut the lights off, give the customer a flashlight, and tell them to scope out a good deal, its like a shopping recon mission. One item in the store is marked at an abusrdly huge loss. And in the process, they tag a PPP to it for X dollars.

My god, that might work

Aaron Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 6:14 pm
I am an associate of Office Depot. Yes… we do change the prices of clearance items because we add on the protection plans to them…. we take the normal price, knock it down 10% or whatever the difference is becase IT IS CLEARANCE…. if it doesn’t work we’re the ones taking care of the customer by telling them IT COMES WITH IT INCLUDED IN THE PRICE… is that lying… absolutely not. if it doesnt work the plan covers it! wtf is wrong with that?! your paying the same amount for the product and getting a little incentive… thats about all we do. we don’t jack up prices…. we just make it simpler and give out a better deal so you don’t have to pay extra.

Aaron Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 6:16 pm
Also we don’t deny a customer if they don’t buy a PPP or a TDS service but i’ll tell you straight up.. i bought a PPP accidental plan on my laptop and cracked over my knee just to see if it worked… and it did i got 2 the next week for the same price i paid for that 1. why? cuz i felt like it. the Tech services work too. My sony vaio was slow … it spend it up simple as that.. you come to me asking if someones ever complained and i’ll tell you no… why? because we don’t deny the customer of the truth. ### the other stores.

Aaron Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 6:20 pm
if u go to an office depot and it shows up at $0.01 it means it is an item that is required to be sent back to the manufacturer. they use the products and they do give it to charities and people who can’t afford them. I called a few manufacturers to make sure of this. I’m a good christian and I believe in work ethics 100%

ralphg Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 7:44 pm
Linen’n Things is no longer around, but during their closing out sale they were claiming 20%, 40% and 50% off. Imagine our surprise when we discovered double price tags on items. Peeling one back, we found that the prices on some items were increased 25% before being marked “20%” off.

Chris Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 7:59 pm
I’ve been working at Staples for almost 2 years. I’m in no way saying I’m more experienced in retail than most, but I have worked retail for 8 years now.

I don’t know what Insider Guy is talking about, as far as Staples being worse than OD or OM. I know for a fact that when a customer complained about price adjustment or lying about stock. Regional HR was contacted and a full investigation done. Took 2 weeks, and they ended up firing 4 – 5 managers for doing such things. A memo was put out immediately and every store in the region had to have a store meeting about it. If we were caught ever doing this, we could be instantly terminated.

As far as package deals, they are just put there if you want them, you don’t have to buy them. The sale price is still there. If you just want the computer at sale price with nothing else, just buy the computer. We offer these for people looking to get better deals on other things they might need later. Like software, peripherals and such.

OD Tech Sales Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 9:26 pm
@ Aaron

This may not be a problem at your store but it is at others. I can personally attest to including a warranty within the price of a clearance machine, and that is fine. Its the associates that tell customers that they are out of stock on a non clearance item if they are not getting the warranty.

The $.01 items get either sent back to the manufacturers OR they get donated to charity. its not one or the other, its both depending on the item.

I agree with you that the warranties are a good idea. They work and provide a good service to the customer. However if the customer wishes not to get it or cannot afford it, that is no reason to not sell them the item. It is just straight up unethical.

ex-Compusa Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 9:41 pm
yo this is amazingly……….. old school.

this kind of stuff has been going on for years. when i worked the floor, i wouldnt even wait for clearance items, i would just go to sales circular and see which laptops were cheaper than ours and then start building in services from there.

but i digress, though the practice is wrong… its like gambling – you win some you lose some, and most the time i won.

Former Commission Salesman Says:
March 18th, 2009 at 10:40 pm
Stores like Office Depot and Guitar Center has been doing stuff like this for years. I was the victim of this at a local car dealership. When I started working for commission, I realized that the sales industry is what’s wrong with sales, not any specific store. We (in the business sense) are taught that it’s ok, or that we’re providing some extra value.

This is seriously nothing new.

Matt Says:
March 19th, 2009 at 8:06 am
@sam,
dealerships may be shady and pressure-filled. However, they lay out absolutely everything in the contract. People just aren’t smart enough to read it over. They don’t however, include services you don’t ask for.

They’re not supposed to charge you $1000 extra for the chrome rims that you never got, because if they do that, it is illegal (and quite a few are greedy enough to do it anyway).

Jon Says:
March 21st, 2009 at 7:18 pm
I don’t Wanna sound like a goody twoshoes but honestly I’ve worked at office depot for over a year and a half and one they printed that notice out and laminated it for all of use to see right there in the employee breakroom and no one I work with in the tech area is even smart enough to use photoshop let alone do all that [censored]

former office depot and office max employee Says:
March 28th, 2009 at 2:30 pm
The sad part in all of this is there are Office Depot stores who operate above the board – yes they offered product protection plants and tech services, but in no way were any customers mislead. I was fortunate enough to have worked for one of them.

Customers have every right to be concerned about purchasing extended protection plans. But I have seen too many examples where customers who didn’t purchase one suffered in the process.

They are good investments, But there are better ways to do it. Please don’t let stories liek this make everyone think ALL Office Depot stores are acting like this, because they just aren’t.

Freddy Says:
April 14th, 2009 at 7:46 pm
I am a former OD employee, I can say different things happen at different stores each district always has some store or stores whose manager tells them to lie to customers and alter prices of items. The stores are usually always caught and offending employee’s or management are always let go. They do have signs to print up for clearance laptops and PC’s which mention said warrenty that is offered which are worthless and shouldn’t be purchased unless you like to throw your money out .01 items as said are not suppose to be sold to anyone they are suppose to be held to the side and donated to a charity that comes around once a month. As for different types of lying in the company depends what corporate is trying to push when they were worried about Market Basket or selling any attachment you could with said printer or laptop the store manager’s would inform you to do and say whatever you had to to get them to purchase attachments even been told by managers that they will “work with the price” if you go with some attachments. Now the company is more focused on pushing there TDS services or there Tech Bench services what a joke there. Trying to convince customers anyway possible that they need there new pc serviced before they even purchase it cause it will “optimize and make there pc faster” Or people coming in for the free pc check and being told them need ten thousand different things done to there pc to fix it. Office Depots motto should be we lie, we cheat, we steal

got it for 0.01 (off topic kinda) Says:
June 17th, 2009 at 6:14 am
listen folks! this might be off topic but i must say this. A while back when i was at autozone. i grab a few item oil/filter and a car repair manual book etc… After i got the stuff i headed to the register clerk, once he scan the item i thought it was just another day of paying and leaving but not so fast, the repair manual came up to be $0.01 (usd) i was like “WOW!” the clerk told me to hold while he call his manager. a few second later his manager came and said this isn’t right he scan the book a few time it still came up $0.01 (usd) he told to me to wait while he check out the main computer(in the back). a few minute later he came and said yup that book is 1 cent (it was the last book) UNBELIEVABLE paid for my stuff and bone out…my lucky day or what? save me a more than just a few bucks!

back on topic,
note:i do not work for O.D

i’ve seen lots of this behavior from time to time. it will never end.

Long Dong Silver Says:
July 2nd, 2009 at 2:02 am
I work at office depot and i say this is bologna!

Chris Says:
July 22nd, 2009 at 5:30 pm
I also work at Office Depot. This is assumptive as hell. Nobody at our store lies to customers or does ### like this. We’re pretty f**ing honest, no matter how it affects a sale.

OD Tech Associate Says:
August 10th, 2009 at 2:31 pm
I’m an employee at an Office Depot, and it’s really messed up how some stores do that. At my store, we don’t Photoshop anything. If a laptop first comes out at $749.99, it will usually clearance between $449, and $549.99.

What we do is set that price tag out, with a Clearance tag next to it which shows the laptops original price and the Product Protection Plan’s original price. On a $749 laptop, a 2yr plan that covers everything but lost and stolen (including battery, power chord, screen cracks, water spills, etc.) will rund around $280. So, the tag next to the $549 price shows that you can get the computer with the 2yr plan for $673. (That’s 10% off the $549 laptop, new in a box, and the newly priced plan that’s $179 for laptops in the 400-499 price range.) So, you can buy the laptop at $549 and get just the laptop, or spend an extra $124 (comes out to $5.16 a month) to cover accidental damage.

That’s actually a pretty good deal. I know a lot of customers who will wait for a deal like that, then a year and a half later when nothing’s happened to the laptop, they’ll purposefully break the screen and get their $549 back to buy a new laptop. Customer gets a deal, associate gets comish, and store gets numbers. Everything works out.

OD Tech Associate Says:
August 10th, 2009 at 2:48 pm
I’d like to add one more thing, for the author of the article. I think you should say which states these stores are in. Instead of “Office Depot” in general, you should clarify “an Office Depot store in [insert state here]“. When you simply use the corporation’s name, it kinda seems like you’re accusing EVERYONE. Especially when you only have five stores- four that are verified. I mean, there’s like 20 stores in my district. And each store has different selling strategies. It really depends on the store’s GM and Tech Associates. The regional and district managers usually don’t give a rats ### how it’s done. And the GMs usually ask the techs what they think. So if the individual store has a shady GM, then it’s likely they’ll be doing some of the stuff you’ve mentioned. But if they’ve got strict managers who care more about mystery shops (that’s how the GMs get their bonuses, not through sales), then it’s probably not so at that store.

od associate Says:
May 11th, 2010 at 12:34 am
i work in od
to keep my anonymity excuse my punctuation
the way people write is very unique
i would hate to be fired over something so trivial
i have worked at od several times over the past four years
before i would hear over our walkies random murmur about sales ppps what have you
finally when no package or addons was added my manager would and still does say to tell them we are out of stock
takes no genius to enter the sku to see we really do have the product in stock
it wasnt until recently i started looking into this
it is scary that they are able to get away with such matters
we go through employees like nothing
when our employees have a bad week with ppps
they are out the door
if we dont get our signups we are out the door
our tech team is shady
im not saying all stores are this way on all i have listed
but believe me
ours is
and its getting worse

od associate Says:
May 11th, 2010 at 12:36 am
in response to my first post
we actually have someone who uses a phone book
for signups

Ali Yar Says:
May 16th, 2010 at 12:15 am
Even though i hate that dame company and i hope it goes out of business soon or just burns the ### down because the way they treated me when i got hurt at work.

I worked for office depot for about 3 years and yes we did the same thing. There is nothing wrong with that practice. The way it worked was we would have a laptop for $899 it goes to clearance to $799 that’s all that the customer gets. The District manager would then give the Store managers the option to mark down the laptop further on the store managers Discretion or sell it at the current clearance price. So what the managers would do to make their store ppp or Product Protection Plan goals is to make a bundle price for a Laptop A PPP Plan and A Bag the manger would then markdown the price of the laptop and add the PPP and bag to bring the price back to $799 which is a great deal for customers other wise they had to pay the full price anyway now they get a replacement plan and a bag for the same price. Its not rocket science its just common sense and basic math plus the customer has the option to return the PPP back to another store or same store. I dont know what the hell is Alex taking about we never used Photo shop or any of that ### each item is ringed up separate so you can return any one of those items.

Big Boi Says:
July 20th, 2010 at 8:43 pm
I work at OD, i buy PPP’s on everything i buy…….and yeah…….its whatever.

Mike Ogrodnik Says:
August 26th, 2010 at 10:05 am
My names mike ogrodik
I worked at office depot for 3 years. [protected]
I used to live in Delray beach now i live in Boca Raton.
The main companies headquarters are being built in boca raton and the companies “flag ship stores” all were located in this area.
I worked at the store off Atlantic and military.. one of the merchandising or some crap stores that created layouts in which the entire company would follow.
So being in this location was big as you got to see the company expand and evolve.

why i’m here. down to business lol.
about the lying, it’s all true.
I changed prices and added ppp’s to merchandise that was marked lower.
I lied to customers, told them that we don’t have the laptop and never will get it, as it’s sold out, even though it’s a brand new item, – just because they were old and stupid and didn’t wanna buy a ppp.
I would constantly throw in ink and toner, hell didn’t ring people up for stuff just to get the company numbers.
Selling computers and laptops with no attachments was 10000000X worse then having missing products.
managers would literally pull the computer staff in the sales room yell at you how much you suck at selling, yet when merchandise is stolen it’s oh crap not again and thats it.
so eventually my store and the stores in the area, just started ripping the company off and giving outrageous deals to customers to bribe them into buying ppp’s and accessories and all sorts of stuff and the managers eventually got off our back and worried more about theft. you had to do this or you wouldn’t keep your job.. the sales goals were just out of this world ###ed to get.. and in some locations they had stores with no customers just for the fact that it’s near corporate and that no competition would be able to compete because thats to close to “home” . Home being the main office depot central where all the fat big wigs are.
back to theft. boy it was great. i remember a manager (in which of my 3 year period changed 6 times) told me it costs 40k per store to run surveillance ( aka install cameras and higher some one to watch like bestbuy). so each store has a given amount of product ALLOWEd to be stolen. they actually include it in there budget. which is completely common for retail but od’s was real high as they don’t try to prevent it at all.
kinda funny though, that my store abused it, hah, some people i know still work there, still stealing anything they want. ( not my friends, hope they get under fire lol, anyone still there is a complete ###)
OH my favorite, a lady in copy and print center, brought in big copy jobs that costed 300 to 1000′s of dollars and do the job.. if the customer wasn’t satisfied you have to return the cash.. well lets just say she did a great job, but somehow all the jobs she did were refunded to her pocket… pro tip to the copy and center people who wanna make some real cash. well she got caught afte rshe stole thousands from od and i think her daughter now is stripping. go figure, but these are things that went on . .regularly. people constantly getting hired and fired cause half the staff is ###ed, and thats the idea.. office depot wants stupid people to control and yell at so that the managers feel good. for me to survive 3 years in that company was outright insane when i look back on it. hell the only reason i stayed and people i know stayed for long is that there was so much free crap. hell the whole store was yours for the taking. to much about the internal stuff i guess. but yeah i screwed some customers, hell i was so good i got promoted like 5 times and still my pay was like 9.50 . ahhh…, it was a joke to work there.
i remember some assistant managers snorting coke off there desk in the main office when the main manager wasn’t around. those were good ol days to lol. things i had to keep my mouth shut to keep my job. i would be here all day the more i think about it.
but yeah, stealing all day.. lying all day. i don’t know how anyone else managed to make a living there without doing it. company would say ok, focus on customers in a meeting, we get on the floor. WTF YOU DOING SELL SELL SELL, Our numbers look like crap. last year was a Great year you suck right now. blah blah blah. back to stealing and lying. every day… every day …
oh, some one calls out, who ever is working needs to CALL all the people that work with them and finds some one else to cover the floor cause god knows a manager would not come out and sell. it was just terrible. always under fire, always dealing with bs.
stupid manager chris off of linton and federal, she was a trip. lady been divorced 5 times cause she sucks and ****’s everythign she see’s to get promoted. she would come to the floor scream put this box up do this do that.. Customers need help, what you doing ! all in the same sentence while you got a box and a box cutter in your hand doing something. so you go do it.. she comes back out wtf u didn’t do anything … meanwhile you been with customers for a few hours and no stock was put away cause the other employee’s are worthless as sheit. so you get the box’s in top stock another manager comes by tells you bring them down wtf u doing thats all for a display i making.. so i bring them back down, and she (chris) comes and goes wtf again and i bring them back up. this was regular business in the company. even if you told them whats up. they were just stupid as hell.
Stupid as f*** more like it. trust me i dropped some f bombs on the whole staff when i quit, but when i look at it the od giant as it is an’t coming down. they’ll just fire and hire till all they got is down syndrome people working for them and THEN . just then they might start making their company as a whole better. until the down syndrome people realize they can walk out the building with what ever they want and not get in trouble. that box cutter each employee gets is like a free ticket to whats in the boxes… not to open bigger boxes and put stuff on the shelf. i swear it was like Christmas every day. and this is office depot. the company this is how an employee thinks. this is why od is such a bad company. all the yelling all the stress, all the money money money.. CEO taking money for his 5 6 7 million + home after the 9-11 crash.. just banking on cash.. everyone forgot that he is only 5 foot tall that short ###. wife looks like a dog to, so im happy im not him.
oh the training thats funny also. we had to watch stupid videos of people interacting, basically.. and subliminally showed you how to ripoff and sell the customer at the same time. they sure did suck at it, but my point is usually you go on the computer and train in the back room, no you gotta sell to customers as your watching the video cause you don’t get break time… even though a letter went out saying you gotta be in the break room. yeah right . and when you don’t complete the videos .. guess what manager gonna come and say .. get to it or get yelled at for hours and hours on how much your team sucks ect.. funny i think the staff of my store was like 20 people tops, but in the coarse of 3 years i remember about 70- 80 people as so many were hired and fired. i only know of like 2 people who quit the rest all fired . 40 50 of them hahah for stupid crap to. mean while me and my crew just banking, off the place. it really is al lthe motivation to work there is to get free crap cause after all the abuse you get, you might as well. i remember having clsoign shifts one day then openign shifts the next.. but since the store was in such thrash i would be there till 12 at night and back there at 6:30 in the morning.. man thats not even a good sleep man, while i didn’t have dinner or breakfast cause thats unhealthy as sheit to be eating so late. thinks like that wearing you down. some weeks you get scheduled for like 50 hours others u get like 15. part time was torture, u just couldn’t survive on it. OH MY favorite.. you get called in to work . they ALWAYS make you feel like your doing the company bad even though the other a hole called out.. thats my favorite..
back to the lying hhaha, yeah i sent people to other stores which had no stock, just to get them out of mine. like every day… daily.. didnt’ wanna sell my sheit cause i needed numbers to get. i needed the cheap laptops in my store so i could sell ppp’s. and dood the ratio of laptop sales to ppp’s was stupid .. it was percentage based. so like they would print out a report.. i sold 2 laptops 1 with ppp another with not . so we 50 % ppp for that day .. holy crap thats awesome… meanwhile antoher store sold like 10 laptops and 1 pp so they are 10 % ppp ratio .. all the employees are currently getting yelled at … pushed around on the floor by managers. thats is EXACTLY whats going on .. we all know it.
customers would come to our store to return product from another.. know what we said.. sorry we can’t take it.. go to that store.. cause it would hurt our numbers of coarse. or i would lie and make up a deal and tell them to go to another store as they have something that we do not. like an exchange.. it was great.. it basically came down to who we can out screw the most.. almost like a game of tag but the customers are doing our running.. sheit was fun. man i can go on for days, oh stolen products missing products.. just throw the wrapper behind the shelf.. let inventory take the blame for miscounting. lets see, the stupid sensor things for the alarm… tell yall what. the key for their alarm system is generic.. buy on ebay and get anything you want.. or hell the access code is enter store number enter and look here, it’s disarmed .. there even is a admin function if u google the unit how to reset the password to 1234 enter to disarm… so all those laptops and cameras and ipods.. are free. we had so many people identified for theft that i swear it was internal employee’s running the theft sting around the country.. or its that od is just that stupid. the onyl reason they bank is the mark-up on all there stock is like some times in the 1000′s of %. i seen desks that cost the store 35 bucks being sold for [protected] . it’s stupid. and the 10% employee discount is a slap to the face. Best buy is 5% above cost, happier employees = better business, no od’s moto is steal from the people steal form the employees.. ### slap everyone .. get money.. ( except the people who are saying it are the “jaba the hut” (head up people) who control the districts of the company) i remember one of the managers for a whole year.. longest alsting one that i saw . literally never came out of his office but only for meetings.. in a building with less then 20 employee’s total, how the hell does that work. the assistant managers did all the employee relations when customers are mad, and screamed orders to everyone. lunch breaks are fun.. sitting next to your managers.. hey lets talk about work and what u gotta get done.. how about lets kill you, nope you had to talk back to them . stupid crap like that.. constant under pressure the entire time.. managers would stand right behind your back and watch yo usell and have a smile.. when u didn’t sell, they come at you with .. your approach was bad.. Man the mofo’r came in with 500 dolla and the laptop is 450 .. what am i supposed to upsale, a friggen pencil. they so broke they been declined 5 times on the od credit card and they even told you they going for bankruptcy and you yelling at my sale approach.. THAT kinda sheit.. is why YOU will have the worst sale experience in office depot.. cause t

binder
binder
, US
Jun 17, 2009 8:24 pm EDT

By all means, don't go into specifics or anything.

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Office Depot Unfair, underhanded & technology return policy

Me and My fiance recently purchased a Monitor from office depot on memorial day. We had read on the boards that a number of people suggested a certain monitor for graphic arts majors.

When we went into the store everyone was helpful in making sure we got out the door with the monitor...not a single person explained that:
1 there is a 14 day return policy
2 Oh and by the way, if its a "technology item", your screwed, we don't give your money back under any circumstance.
2 days after purchase we realized the monitor had some bad pixels on the screen and the back light for the monitor was terrible. Thinking that like almost any other company they would let us return it for a refund (or at the very least a in store credit, we took the monitor back...
The store tells us its a store policy of no refunds. So, we call customer service, they tell us, "no, you can refund it, we'll send a pick up driver to the store to pick up the item! and then send you a refund check in the mail"
We go back to the store the next day and get told "No, we don't allow that, they have to go to your house!" and then proceed to setup a house pickup with Customer service to get the driver to come to our house.
We then get a call a day later (now 2 days of back and forth driving) from the dispatch saying "nope, we wont go to your house, you have to go to the store!"
We get a number for their corporate office and they tell us "Nope! we are not giving you back anything, you can exchange it, that's it!"
Absolutely disgusting. Horrible Service and Underhanded policies. I could understand if they had made it very clear there was no refunds or credit given (we would have left it at the store and bought somewhere where they actually WANT repeat service)
This is your warning. DO NOT buy from office depot. EVER. They will not refund your money for any "technology item" (like 90% of the things your going to buy in a store like this)

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As an employee of Office Depot (I'm only 19 so you can hear me out or not it's up to you), I frequent these sites because I'm curious to see what bothers our customers the most. I'm not doing this to protect the company name, I'm simply doing this because as a cashier I see many loyal customers at our store and I don't want people who live near OUR store to...

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I purchased a new shredder from Office Max and even purchased thier additional warranty that was supposed to be hassle free for two years if any problems should occur. I brought the shredder home and used it maybe a dozen times and suddenly it stopped working. I contacted the customer service representative through the warranty plan and was told that...

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Featured review
This review was chosen algorithmically as the most valued customer feedback.

I have just experienced the worst customer service experience ever with Max Assurance (National Electronic), Office Max’s partner which is supposed to process their service contracts. We purchased our $470 Brother printer from an Office Max store in Boulder, Colorado in December of 2007. The printer is having problems and we really need it working properly...

Read full review of Office Depot and 10 comments

About Office Depot

Office Depot provides a wide range of office supplies, furniture, and technology products. They offer printing and document services, as well as facilities products. Customers can shop online or at various retail locations. Business solutions for companies of all sizes are available.

Office Depot Customer Reviews Overview

Office Depot is a retailer specializing in office supplies, technology, furniture, and various services catering to the needs of businesses and individuals. Their product range includes stationery, printers, computers, and office essentials. Additionally, Office Depot offers copy and print services, as well as tech support and office space solutions. Customers can shop online or at numerous brick-and-mortar locations. The company aims to provide a comprehensive selection of products and services for workplace efficiency.
How to file a complaint about Office Depot?

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1. Log in or create an account:
- If you already have an account on ComplaintsBoard.com, log in using your credentials. If not, create a new account to proceed.

2. Navigating to the complaint form:
- Locate and click on the 'File a Complaint' button on the ComplaintsBoard.com website. You can find this button at the top right corner of the website.

3. Writing the title:
- Summarize the main issue you have with Office Depot in the 'Complaint Title' section.

4. Detailing the experience:
- Provide detailed information about your experience with Office Depot. Mention key areas of concern, any transactions with the company, steps taken to resolve the issue, the company's response, and the personal impact of the issue.

5. Attaching supporting documents:
- Attach any relevant supporting documents to strengthen your complaint. Avoid including sensitive personal data in these documents.

6. Filing optional fields:
- Use the 'Claimed Loss' field to state any financial losses incurred and the 'Desired Outcome' field to specify the resolution you are seeking.

7. Review before submission:
- Review your complaint for clarity, accuracy, and completeness before submitting it to ensure all necessary details are included.

8. Submission process:
- Click the 'Submit' button to submit your complaint to ComplaintsBoard.com.

9. Post-Submission Actions:
- Regularly check for responses or updates related to your complaint on ComplaintsBoard.com to stay informed about any developments.

Ensure you follow these steps carefully to effectively file a complaint with Office Depot on ComplaintsBoard.com.

Overview of Office Depot complaint handling

Office Depot reviews first appeared on Complaints Board on Nov 14, 2006. The latest review Great Customer Service was posted on Mar 26, 2024. The latest complaint HP laptop was resolved on Feb 06, 2024. Office Depot has an average consumer rating of 3 stars from 366 reviews. Office Depot has resolved 191 complaints.
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  1. Office Depot contacts

  2. Office Depot phone numbers
    +1 (800) 463-3768
    +1 (800) 463-3768
    Click up if you have successfully reached Office Depot by calling +1 (800) 463-3768 phone number 0 0 users reported that they have successfully reached Office Depot by calling +1 (800) 463-3768 phone number Click up if you have UNsuccessfully reached Office Depot by calling +1 (800) 463-3768 phone number 0 0 users reported that they have UNsuccessfully reached Office Depot by calling +1 (800) 463-3768 phone number
    Customer Service
  3. Office Depot emails
  4. Office Depot headquarters
    6600 N Military Trl, Boca Raton, Virginia, 33496-2434, United States
  5. Office Depot social media
Office Depot Category
Office Depot is related to the Office Space and Supplies category.

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