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15 votes
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Boston authorities shut down GameStop and stores close statewide
8 votes -
What everyone’s getting wrong about the toilet paper shortage
11 votes -
Inside the story of how H-E-B planned for the pandemic
8 votes -
Norway's hazmat booksellers – two Oslo bookshop owners deliver books wearing full hazmat suits and gas masks in order to raise local awareness
4 votes -
Whole Foods employees are staging a nationwide "sick-out"
16 votes -
Walmart amps up its virus response for workers
3 votes -
My family owns a grocery store. The supply chain is a real problem
11 votes -
Amazon workers to strike at New York site on virus concerns
9 votes -
Don’t panic about shopping, getting delivery or accepting packages
9 votes -
Home bakers have created an international yeast shortage. Shelves are empty, but stores say it’s temporary
11 votes -
Costco will not allow returns on high-demand items like toilet paper, water and more
19 votes -
The great toilet paper scare of 1973
6 votes -
Best Buy, GameStop limit stores to curbside pickup
5 votes -
Amazon Prime delivery delays are now as long as a month
11 votes -
Why we buy weird things in times of crisis
10 votes -
Amazon raises overtime pay for warehouse workers
3 votes -
How Mrs. Meyer’s took over the hand soap aisle
7 votes -
'Buy as much as possible' - Taiwan sees boon to panic buying
4 votes -
Video game retail chain GameStop classifies itself as "essential retail" to justify its stores staying open despite lockdowns
14 votes -
Need to stock your pantry? These LA restaurants are temporarily flipping to corner stores.
4 votes -
The nation is shutting down. For Walmart, it’s time to step up
5 votes -
Dollar General cuts store hours, dedicates hour to senior shoppers during coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
Amazon suspends all warehouse shipments except medical supplies and ‘high-demand’ products until April 5th
14 votes -
San Francisco mayor calls for calm — panic at grocery stores and pot dispensaries ensues
6 votes -
Amazon is suspending all shipments other than medical supplies and household staples to its warehouses
8 votes -
Amazon ramps hiring, opening 100,000 new roles to support people relying on Amazon’s service
7 votes -
Amazon glitch stymies Whole Foods, fresh grocery deliveries
7 votes -
Drive-through nation
@skybrian: You know what we need right now? Drive-through nation. Imagine @Walmart and Costco converting to drive-through only. You put in your order somehow and wait in the car. Workers wearing masks and gloves take stuff off shelves. It would actually create jobs.
4 votes -
The companies that feed America brace for labor shortages and worry about restocking stores as coronavirus pandemic intensifies
9 votes -
Walmart sets emergency leave policy for 1.4M hourly workers
14 votes -
As coronavirus spreads, some Beijing bookstores have partnered with a food delivery service to get books to readers
6 votes -
Australian supermarkets can’t get loo rolls on shelves fast enough - and yet even toilet paper hoarders can’t fully explain why they are doing it
8 votes -
How precious metals sellers psychologically manipulate elderly conservatives
10 votes -
Why Amazon knows so much about you
18 votes -
Walmart employees say they’re preparing for job cuts as retailer rolls out its ‘Great Workplace’ program
9 votes -
Local bookstores have a new weapon in the fight with Amazon
22 votes -
Brandless shuts down operations, becoming SoftBank Vision Fund's first failure
8 votes -
Costco capitalism
9 votes -
Breach in payment-processing systems at Wawa convenience stores may have compromised over thirty million cards
5 votes -
How IKEA became Sweden's national brand
5 votes -
Don't trust online reviews (personal anecdote)
I recently bought a product online. I wasn't able to find it in a bricks-and-mortar shop, so I had to buy it online to even see it, let alone try it. I received it, and it wasn't right for me. I...
I recently bought a product online. I wasn't able to find it in a bricks-and-mortar shop, so I had to buy it online to even see it, let alone try it. I received it, and it wasn't right for me. I was able to exchange it for a different version, but even the different version wasn't right. So I returned the product and got a refund. All along, the customer service was excellent, but the product itself turned out not to be what I wanted.
The way the product failed for me was connected to the "headline" description of the product. It wasn't a minor failure. It did something that they explicitly said it wouldn't do, which was one of the main selling features of the product.
After the dust settled, I wrote a review of the product. I don't normally do this: I neither write nor read reviews. However, I know that other people do rely on reviews and, seeing as this product is only available online, and its failure was linked to a major selling feature of the product, I felt duty-bound to inform other prospective buyers that it might not suit some people. I gave it a 2-star (out of 5) rating, as well as writing up why it didn't suit me (while allowing that it might still suit other people).
Since I submitted the review, I have checked the website (I'm an egotist: I wanted to see my words being published!). Other reviews with more recent timestamps have appeared, but my review has not appeared. I've now noticed that the lowest rating in their reviews is a single 3-star rating, with some 4-star reviews and lots of 5-star reviews. There are no 2-star or 1-star reviews. My only conclusion is that the company selects which reviews to publish - and which ones not to publish.
I've always wondered if companies would post negative reviews of their own products. Now I know for sure that at least one company does not.
18 votes -
People in Canada’s remote Arctic capital are obsessed with Amazon Prime
6 votes -
'We thought it was a prank': Girl, six, finds China prisoner plea in Tesco charity card
14 votes -
Running the numbers to figure out Amazon's market share: it has about 35% of US ecommerce, but closer to 6% of addressable retail overall
5 votes -
A German woman sued a stinky cheese shop. A court ruled that she could continue to express her distaste with the odor vocally, but could no longer display complaint signs.
8 votes -
40,000 festive shoppers to hit Swedish superstore – shoppers travel from afar to Gekås Ullared mega-mall, an institution that has its own reality TV show
4 votes -
How millions of French shoppers are rejecting cut-price capitalism
18 votes -
Amazon doesn’t report its warehouse injury rates — but we have an inside look
13 votes -
IKEA's profits have fallen nearly 10% as the world's largest furniture retailer stepped up its spending on renewable energy and its growing online operation
14 votes