Quizzes & Puzzles0 min ago
An Interesting Conversation In M&S.
72 Answers
On Wednesday, I bought, amongst other things, a £4.00 punnet of Strawberries. On getting them out of the fridge, yesterday, I noticed that the 'best before' date was 29/07/20. Some of the strawberries were beginning to 'turn' a bit but I did manage to serve up two very nice dishes.
Today, I took back the empty punnet and receipt and spoke to a customer service assistant, explaining that they had sold 'best before' produce on the actual day.
Him. 'Best before' means you can sell them on that date.
Me. No it doesn't. It means they should not have been sold.
Him. Sorry, darlin' you are wrong. The law says that 'best before 'is ok on the best before date.7
Me. I am not your darlin'. Why wasn't this a reduce product?
Him. Because we don't reduce them until much later in the day. All the shops do the same thing, Sainsbury's, Tesco...
Me. No, they don't. If you find a product that should have been taken of the shelf the day before, they will reduce it.
Anyway on and on we went in the same vein. I eventually left with another punnet of strawberries and phoned customer services when I got home. They agreed with me and have now sent me an e-voucher for £4.00.
The next time I go to that branch, I shall ask to speak to the manager and suggest that some of the staff need further training. I know that M&S customer service have opened a case on this, so the manager should be aware of what I'm talking about.
There you go. My Friday tale.
Today, I took back the empty punnet and receipt and spoke to a customer service assistant, explaining that they had sold 'best before' produce on the actual day.
Him. 'Best before' means you can sell them on that date.
Me. No it doesn't. It means they should not have been sold.
Him. Sorry, darlin' you are wrong. The law says that 'best before 'is ok on the best before date.7
Me. I am not your darlin'. Why wasn't this a reduce product?
Him. Because we don't reduce them until much later in the day. All the shops do the same thing, Sainsbury's, Tesco...
Me. No, they don't. If you find a product that should have been taken of the shelf the day before, they will reduce it.
Anyway on and on we went in the same vein. I eventually left with another punnet of strawberries and phoned customer services when I got home. They agreed with me and have now sent me an e-voucher for £4.00.
The next time I go to that branch, I shall ask to speak to the manager and suggest that some of the staff need further training. I know that M&S customer service have opened a case on this, so the manager should be aware of what I'm talking about.
There you go. My Friday tale.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Tilly2. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."Whether we ate them or not is irrelevant, Arrods. They were past their best and should not have been sold at full price."
They were edible still and that is relevant.
Not long ago you were telling them the law says they should not have been on say but you're arguing still they should have been reduced.
Stores don't HAVE to reduce prices and I cannot see why you're arguing the point.
They were edible still and that is relevant.
Not long ago you were telling them the law says they should not have been on say but you're arguing still they should have been reduced.
Stores don't HAVE to reduce prices and I cannot see why you're arguing the point.
I'm not arguing anything, Corbyloon. I am maintaining that they should have been reduced and the reduction made visible.
Yes, Lankeela. There are two side to every story. Although I don't know where you get the idea that I gave the impression that I knew more than him. My 'victory' was getting an agreement from customer service and a refund. So perhaps I did know better.
Yes, Lankeela. There are two side to every story. Although I don't know where you get the idea that I gave the impression that I knew more than him. My 'victory' was getting an agreement from customer service and a refund. So perhaps I did know better.
When you go into shops as much as I used to pre-lockdown, you get to know when shops reduce items. Both the city centre Sainsbury's and M and S will reduce things from about 2:30-3pm. I've not been aware of reduced food items before then, and the date...use by or bb will be that days date. Not the next day.