Date: 3/6/2010 9:13:36 PM
Author: henearly89
Date: 3/6/2010 9:00:48 PM
Author: Gypsy
Okay. So let me get this straight. You are talking to WALLYS WACKY WORLD OF DIAMONDS (completely fictional store... I *hope*) , a BIG Lazare dealer, and you ask Wally to source you a non-Lazare stone. Now, you are on PS, so you obviously know how to use the web and on their website in their policies section it says that LAZARE stones qualify for X and Y, and that others are on a case by case basis. You are not buying an Lazare stone, and it is somehow the VENDOR''S fault that it doesn''t occur to you to ask what the specific polices are pertaining to your stone?Date: 3/6/2010 8:48:08 PM
Author: henearly89
If the vendor is willing to source a stone that they themselves do not see fit to bring in house, how about making that clear to the consumer. Too often they do not. I can speak from first hand experience with 2 of the bigger vendors on PS. One made that clear, one did not.
How is that the vendor''s fault? YOU didn''t ask. They aren''t telepathic and frankly, some people don''t care about trade in or buy back policies (case in point all of Blue Nile''s customers) how are they supposed to know A) what information you have read, or not read on their websites and B) what questions you have about that information... or in general or whether you are planning to have the purchase appraised, or just plan to let the ring sit in your dresser drawer for 6 months waiting for aquairus rising and pluto to be in a specific orbit when you propose because Madame Zelda told you that you shouldn''t propose until these astrological conditions have been met.
Sorry... I''m not buying that any vendor, PS or otherwise, is to blame because you can''t read policies or ask questions, or *gasp* get things in writing. IF YOU care whether a stone is used or not, it''s your responsibility to understand that A) the industry does not track this B) MANY stones are ''used and C) that there are only certain specific vendors and certain specific stones that will meet your needs and YOU need to ask on a case by case basis if this is the case.
Conduct a basic poll of consumers on the issue of whether or not they care about whether the stone they are buying is used. Not Pricescope consumers. All consumers. Me thinks that if this information was easy to verify and available to consumers, that fact would be the MOST important factor in purchase decisions. More important than carat weight, cut, color, or clarity. The fact is, the industry does not track this BECAUSE it is in their benefit to keep this factor from becoming commonplace. Most consumers do not even realize that the stone they are wearing on their finger may have previously been worn by a couple who got divorced.
As per your earlier comment, this is very easy to do as a consumer. You go to a PS vendor asking about stone x, which qualfies for all of their return polcies. You go to another vendor and find stone Y. You tell the original vendor who says they will source stone Y for you. You had already looked at return policies, and do not realize that stone Y will not qualify for the same polciesi as stone X because the vendor isn''t upfront about it. Happens all the time. Not everyone is diligent enough to check again for fine print with regard to the change. Not everyone knows how the industry works enough to realize that the second stone is consider a sourced stone. Just because YOU are aware of the distinction, doesn''t mean Jane Smith is. Jane Smith can be an educated, active consumer and not realize she is going to get inferior return policies on the second stone. Jane Smith could easily be you when it comes to an industry you are not familiar with.
what?
