My husband and oldest son ate their fill of Turkey and cranberries last Thursday on Thanksgiving and left out the door to go stand in line outside of Best Buy to purchase one of their Black Friday deals. The deal in question, if any of you are wondering, was a Toshiba Laptop. The laptop was a door buster special at $ 249. Meaning you cannot buy it except for when the doors open at 5:00 am. It is a first come first serve deal. It only makes sense that those who stand outside the longest would get the best deals, right?
When they got there at 6:00 pm Thursday evening there were 14 people in front of my husband. Not everyone in front of him was buying that particular laptop, they were there for other deals; my husband felt assured he would be getting one of the laptops. This made him feel better, since he had 10 hours left to stand out in the cold. Also, this particular laptop deal was ONLY ADVERTISED ONLINE and not everyone in line even knew about this phenomena l deal. I spent $ 599 for the exact same laptop four months ago.
By 10:00 pm families with small children begin arriving and the line was extending way to the back of the parking lot. People were putting up tents preparing for the long night. By 3:00 am, more and more people begin to horde themselves into the line. People begin cutting in front of other people. The line was not so nice anymore. The manager of Best Buy came out telling people that they were not allowed to cut in front of people and that he was calling the sheriff. People cut anyway.
By 4:00 am, the manager came out with flyers of all the great deals they had. On this flyer was the $ 249 Laptop. When people saw this particular laptop deal they started calling up their friends and family on their cell phones. Mobs and mobs of people starting coming, cutting in front of the line where their friends and family had stood all night long.
Around 4:30 am, Best Buy employees begin asking each pers on in line what they were there to buy. And then he would hand them a ticket for that item. By the time the manager got to my husband and asked him what he was there for, they had no laptops left because now there were 60 or more people (cutters) in front of him!
My husband and son stood outside in the cold for ten hours waiting for the doors to open, inhaling second hand secret smoke all night long, in 30ish degree temps most of the night. He simply turned around and left the line, amazed at what just happened. By the time he got home, he was still stunned.
What did my husband learn from this experience? Here is what he told me: Unless you are the first FEW people in line, the Black Friday door buster deals are a scam; almost a bait and switch practice. Only the people who cut in line got the deals. The principle of the whole thing was, the cutters who came at the last minute for the laptops did not stand in line all night long. No. They stood in line for 1 hou r at the most! And they are the ones who got the laptops!
Later that day, I got online and did some research of my own, and found out that the experience they went through is the same one EVERYONE who stands in line goes through. Last minute buyers show up and cut in the line. Black Friday is not for honest working folks who can't afford to buy a new laptop. Black Friday is for the mob mentality, greedy and dishonest people who cut in line.
Here is my suggestion to retailers: They should give out the tickets for the items the minute people arrive to stand in line. That way it ensures the first come, first serve policy and also ensures that principles and business ethics stay in line with righteous standards. But I don't think the latter is going to happen.
My husband also said, Black Friday lines are only for the mob mentality. He hates crowds but he got tightfisted wanting a pretty good computer for an exceptional price. He told me to tell all you honest a nd upright folks out there that standing in line all night hoping upon a deal is not worth it because you will get scammed in the end. Save your money and wait for a genuine sale when they come out.
Find More A Black Friday "Standing In Line" Experience ArticlesQuestion by Brandon T: Haggling computer prices? I want to purchase a new laptop. Can I haggle at Circuit City or Best Buy? If so, how? Will they honor a sale price they had a few weeks ago if I'm persistent? If I buy one tomorrow, will BB or CC match a price drop offered on Black Friday? Where can I find the cheapest laptop--I intend to buy a Vaio FJ. Thank you!! Best answer for Haggling computer prices?:
Answer by Kevin C
depends if the laptop is in the jurisdiction of their price match, if it doesnt meet the standards they ask for, than oyu wont get it. haggling with them is useless. its not a personally owned store, its company wide so they will not lower prices for you.
Answer by ou812srf
call they and ask or check there site for policies for matched prices and sales.
Answer by YoungShooter94
get an hp
Answer by Paul
If you want to Haggle for price, go to a swapmeet, but if you want a better deal, check the adds, or open box computer people return or display.
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