Blazing Evil: Best Buy forced to confirm secret intranet website

mshan

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2004
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http://www.courant.com/news/local/hc-wa...0,5198012.column?coll=hc-utility-local


Best Buy Confirms It Has Secret Website
March 2, 2007

Under pressure from state investigators, Best Buy is now confirming my reporting that its stores have a secret intranet site that has been used to block some consumers from getting cheaper prices advertised on BestBuy.com.

Company spokesman Justin Barber, who in early February denied the existence of the internal website that could be accessed only by employees, says his company is "cooperating fully" with the state attorney general's investigation.

Barber insists that the company never intended to mislead customers.

State Attorney General Richard Blumenthal ordered the investigation into Best Buy's practices on Feb. 9 after my column disclosed the website and showed how employees at two Connecticut stores used it to deny customers a $150 discount on a computer advertised on BestBuy.com.

Blumenthal said Wednesday that Best Buy has also confirmed to his office the existence of the intranet site, but has so far failed to give clear answers about its purpose and use.

"Their responses seem to raise as many questions as they answer," Blumenthal said in an interview. "Their answers are less than crystal clear."

Based on what his office has learned, Blumenthal said, it appears the consumer has the burden of informing Best Buy sales people of the cheaper price listed on its Internet site, which he said "is troubling."

What is more troubling to me, and to some Best Buy customers, is that even when one informs a salesperson of the Internet price, customers have been shown the intranet site, which looks identical to the Internet site, but does not always show the lowest price.

Blumenthal said that because of the fuzzy responses from Best Buy, he has yet to figure out the real motivation behind the intranet site and whether sales people are encouraged to use it to cheat customers.

Although Best Buy also refused to talk with me on specifics of the intranet site or its use, it insisted that its policy is to give customers the best price.

"Our intention is to provide the best price to our customers which is why we have a price-match policy in place," the company said in a written statement to me. "As prices and offers may vary between retail and online, our stores will certainly match BestBuy.com pricing as long as it qualifies under the terms and conditions of the price match policy."

"As a company, everything we do revolves around our customers' needs and desires. It is never our intent to mislead them as their loyalty is incredibly important to us," the statement said.

Then they threw in this interesting line: "Although we have an intra-store web site in place to support store operations (including products and pricing), we are reminding our employees how to access the external BestBuy.com web site to ensure customers are receiving the best possible product price."

That last sentence seems to indicate that Best Buy, which is supposed to be staffed by tech-savvy employees, is putting the blame on memory lapses: that employees have somehow forgotten how to access BestBuy.com from the store.

Having been to many Best Buy stores where some helpful employees showed me how they access the intranet and Internet, I can assure Best Buy officials that the re-education process will probably not be lengthy.

After making sure the computer is turned on, employees should click twice on the Yahoo Internet icon and then type in BestBuy.com.

This is not the first time the giant electronic retailer has gotten into trouble misleading customers. The firm, based in Minneapolis, operates more than 1,100 electronic retail stores in the U.S., Canada and China. It has more than 125,000 full-time employees.

Attorneys general in New Jersey and Ohio have accused Best Buy of deceptive sales practices, repackaging used merchandise and selling it as new, and failing to pay rebates and refunds. It paid $135,000 in New Jersey three years ago to settle that state's suit, which was based on hundreds of consumer complaints. The Ohio case is ongoing.

(credit to Tech Bargains for the link, because that's where I found it)
 

tracerbullet

Golden Member
Feb 22, 2001
1,661
19
81
Yeah, thanks.

I'm sure a few people will chime in that this is O/T and not a hot deal, but really where else will the right people see it?

I've never had any suspissions, if I see an internet price I buy online and pick up. Does sound evil though, will be interested to know what comes of this.
 

mshan

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2004
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71
If you read through the comments after the article, you can see some former Best Buy employees commenting that they were never told it was a separate website.

Makes sense because any employee that never bothered to check the external site can honestly play dumb to a customer.

Company Line:
"Although we have an intra-store web site in place to support store operations (including products and pricing), we are reminding (yeah, right!) our employees how to access the external BestBuy.com web site to ensure customers are receiving the best possible product price."
 

MustangSVT

Lifer
Oct 7, 2000
11,554
12
81
all the more reason to rip them off as much as we can!.

time for more 300 trailers!
 

WingZero94

Golden Member
Mar 20, 2002
1,130
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Best Buy is a crooked company. I used to work for them and they'd pull crap like this all the time.
 

QueBert

Lifer
Jan 6, 2002
22,895
1,091
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Circuit City & Pc Club do this, and I'm sure others do too. I don't see what the deal with making Best Buy out to be the most evil company ever is. At least Best Buy typically has the best prices on what I need, without tons of stupid rebates.

Knowing how stupid their "Geek Squad" in store techs are they probably have an intranet only site because they're not smart enough to have the internet and know how to block people from going to other sites besides BB's :)
 

nyker96

Diamond Member
Apr 19, 2005
5,630
2
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this is unbelievable, always thought BB is best local store here. This is shocking from what I always thought of them. Is this from the top or just a few renegade store managers doing this?
 

EKKC

Diamond Member
May 31, 2005
5,895
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holy crap. the sad thing is that this will end in some class action suit and cost almost nothing to best buy. we need to publicize this!!!

just awful how low they resort to just to earn a few more bucks. almost childish.
 

IEC

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Jun 10, 2004
14,573
5,971
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Sounds about right for Best Buy. I stopped buying from them a while ago... online shopping FTW.
 

BladeVenom

Lifer
Jun 2, 2005
13,365
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Best Buy sucks, and they're evil. Of course I've known this for a long time. I only buy their loss leaders, and only with their printed advertisement in hand.
 

LumbergTech

Diamond Member
Sep 15, 2005
3,622
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take in a laptop with wireless internet or cell phone to prove it to them lol..amazing what best buy will do
 

GagHalfrunt

Lifer
Apr 19, 2001
25,284
1,997
126
That's the #1 benefit of living in Connecticut. Our AG is such a publicity hound that he'll tackle any cause that gets his name in the paper. If anyone was going to go after Best Buy on this it would be him.
 

Fayd

Diamond Member
Jun 28, 2001
7,970
2
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www.manwhoring.com
register a domain similar to bestbuy.com, fill it with very similar items at low prices, and pricematch bestbuy to that. make sure you type in the web adress :p
 

SemperFi

Platinum Member
Apr 5, 2000
2,002
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I haven't even walked into a worst buy since the article a year or so ago about the people who come in and buy the loss leaders and leave. The one calling those customers devil buyers. I wouldn't give a quart of pi$$ for anything in their store. I am not going to take a chance that they make a dime off of me.