shuyung wrote:
No it doesn't.
Yes it does. In our litigious society, people will look for someone to place the blame on to win a cash settlement.
shuyung wrote:
That depends entirely on what the expected proficiency level of the purchaser is. If you go to buy a car, the salesman doesn't care if you don't know to get an oil change every so often.
Once again, irrelevant. An oil change is not an absolute requirement of making the car run. If the consumer doesn't know that an oil change is good maintenance, that will not impede their ability to use the car. Right up until the engine seizes.
shuyung wrote:
While that's true to an extent, there's a price point where you are expected to have some idea of what you're doing. Otherwise, you pay extra for a professional to do it.
Having a professional do it wouldn't change a thing if you were originally sold something that isn't going to work. In that case, the professional installer will then inform you that what he is trying to install doesn't fit/meet requirements, etc.
How hard is it to see that a person selling a product that has an absolute requirement ensures that said requirement is met so that the product is useable to the purchaser.
To quote myself in the clearest example I think I can present:
Foamy wrote:
When I sold board games and someone picked up Seafarers of Catan, even though it has a label on it saying "This is not a standalone game. You need to own Settlers of Catan to play this", I was in no way as a salesperson/representative of the store, needed to forewarn them of the fact that they need something else to play the expansion?
As the salesperson who knows the product, why
wouldn't I make sure the customer knows it is an expansion and requires something additional to be played. This isn't just a made up example, I am certain I have had this exchange with people when I used to manage a retail game store.
This isn't about who is to blame or asking a salesperson to have ESP and answer questions I haven't asked. It is about what makes a good salesperson and one who doesn't ensure the product can actually be used by the person purchasing it is not good at their job. Plain and simple, cut and dried.
_________________
This must be
Thursday. I could never get the hang of Thursdays.