i hate best buy and their rip off squad, im their ultimate showroomer. however this week they have pny flash drives on sale (8 gig=$3.99, 16 gig=6.99) so i bought 20 of each. if you need flash drives and youre near a best buy thats a pretty good deal
pretty sweet, but what's to stop one of those 19 from totally price bombing best buy? I assume Best Buy has to have some safeguards, like "site must have item in stock"
When I lived in San Jose, CA, I had a Fry's Electronics 5 minutes from me. A Microcenter was 10 minutes away in a pinch. As well as the usual big box stores.
Having moved to a place where there the nearest Fry's is 265 miles away, I rely on fast Newegg and Amazon shipping, and when I just need to have it "now!"... Best Buy, which is always more expensive and usually a hassle.
I needed a natural keyboard for work and a new Blu Ray player, so went to Best Buy to showroom. I asked if they price matched and they said yes, even to online stores.
So at the register, I showed them Amazon.com on my iPhone, where the kb was $20 cheaper, and the Blu Ray player was $60 cheaper, and a manager came over, punched in their code and was checked out in a few minutes.
Basically, now that they pricematch, if Best Buy has what I need, I'll run down the street and pick it up there.
So what do you do exactly, just simply tell the cashier that Amazon has this item for ** price? Or do you have to actually show them something?
So what do you do exactly, just simply tell the cashier that Amazon has this item for ** price? Or do you have to actually show them something?
So what do you do exactly, just simply tell the cashier that Amazon has this item for ** price? Or do you have to actually show them something?
That would get me to buy there but can they survive on the lower revenue?