Category Archives: Running a Business

A post on post

Royal Mail price risesOur annual moan at Royal Mail follows with a mild sorry to regular readers who’ve been here before.

Royal Mail have put up their stamp prices, just 11 months after the last increase. They now charge £3.00 for a small first class parcel (e.g ten pairs of DreamGirl earplugs), or £2.60 Second Class. It’s a lot, we’re sure you’ll agree.

Once again, Snorestore has been forced to get creative and try to minimise the impact to you.

However, the miserable facts are these: we can’t absorb all the increase and have passed on some of it to you.

Better news: while Royal Mail have whacked their charges up by as much as 17.5% for small parcels and 7.5% for large letters, we’ve kept our price rises to around 5%. Next Working Day delivery costs the same as Royal Mail.

Even better news: we’ve reduced some postal charges by 20%, better to reflect the actual cost. So for example, the cost of posting a ten pair pack of LaserLite earplugs first class used to be £1.25. We’ve brought it down to £1. And of course, if you opt for second class, most items with a value of up to £14.95 have no delivery charges added at all.

Better news still: we’ve extended the cut-off time for dispatching orders the same day from 2pm to 3pm. Order by 3pm and you could still have your earplugs the next morning (if Royal Mail pull their fingers out that is).

One other point: until 2nd April any items posted with a value of up to £46 were automatically covered by Royal Mail’s insurance if they were lost or damaged in transit. Royal Mail have arbitrarily reduced this cover to just £20. Pathetic. As a result, if you order earplugs etc worth more than twenty quid, we could decide to send them to you in two or more packets.

Confused? Email us or see the Shipping page on the Snorestore website.

Just a smidge emotional after reading this awesome email. Thank you, lovely customer :-)

“I would just like to give you some feedback about your service. My order arrived this morning, thank you.
However…I feel that you have made a mistake – surely you should have charged more for such prompt despatch, great packaging and fast postage!!
Keep up the good work and let me know if you are considering branching out into any other online retailing as I would be sure to shop with you.
Best regards -  a very satisfied customer.”

Born yesterday? Er, no.

Two email queries in the in-tray just now:

Name: [withheld]
Email Address: [withheld]@hotmail.com
Message: Hello; I ordered the women’s earplug selection for a total of £16.40 on 30th May 2012 and never received them. Please let me know when you plan to resend as I ordered them over 8 months ago and have now moved!

And:

Name: [withheld]
Email Address: [withheld]@hotmail.com
Message: Hi I have had £4.82 (30:01:2013) taken out of my account for earplugs that I have not received. I had an email from you saying that the order had been cancelled as I had to pay by pay pal not by debit card, I was told in email that the £4.82 would be refunded but has not.
I have now noticed that another £16.00 has been taken from my account. Which seems to be for charges and commission this money was taken 11:02:2013.
I would like this money returned back into my account ASAP Total amount to be refunded £20.82.

Naturally we would be terribly apologetic if these two women had ordered and hadn’t received their goods, or had had money taken from their accounts. It’s not the kind of mistake any business likes to make.

However, our finely-tuned noses and spring-loaded brain cells are wise to such emails and something doesn’t ring true.

Notice how both women are very careful to spell out exactly how much money they think they’re owed. Notice, too, how they give precise dates on which the transactions occurred. Lots of similarities between the two emails.

But where are the order numbers? The transaction references from PayPal? What about the email we’re supposed to have sent cancelling the order and offering a refund? How on earth could we take money from someone’s account when we have no access to anyone’s PayPal or credit cards? Why did the first person leave it 8 months to inform us her order hadn’t arrived? Why does she refer to moving house – as if that’s at all relevant?

They both use untraceable hotmail accounts. Careful searching on Google suggests that one of them appears to have an unused Twitter account and that the other may (or may not) reside in Albania and be active on Skype. We don’t like to speculate what she does on it.

It was important that we checked our files, as we’d hate to have overlooked something. Fortunately our record-keeping is second to none. In fact our accountant is in awe of our ability to keep our books straight. So it was a matter of seconds before we were able to determine for certain (as we already guessed) that neither of them has ever ordered from Snorestore. Not with those names, not with those email addresses. Not on those dates. Not with those amounts. In fact, they’re invisible as far as Snorestore is concerned.

There are three possibilities:

1) they ordered from a different online earplugs store entirely and have got confused;
2) we’ve made a massive mistake and the arrival of those emails back to back is coincidence;
3) well why don’t you make up your own minds? We’re pretty sure we know what’s going on.

We have of course emailed both women and asked for further details – order numbers, transactions references, copies of emails, their addresses. Unsurprisingly, neither of them has replied. If they do, we’ll amend this post accordingly. If they don’t, we’ll amend the post anyway and include their names and email addresses. Just in case they try the same thing on you.

 

Snow snow go away

© Liz West (Muffet)

Just time for a reminder that if it’s snowing where you are, the chances of a postman getting to you are greatly diminshed.

Likewise, if it’s snowing where *we* are*, the chances of Royal Mail being able to process our orders as quickly as they normally do are also greatly diminished. What does this mean in practice?

To state the bleeping obvious, it means that while we will be sending your order to you in the normal way, it might take longer to reach you.

Watchword: PATIENCE.

;-)

*It is indeed snowing where we are.

Early Christmas Present

Oh dear. We said it. The C word.

Never mind – any excuse to plug our latest offering.

Which is:

FREE SHIPPING ON MANY SNORESTORE PRODUCTS.

Is there a catch? Well, a small one maybe.

Free shipping applies to low cost orders sent by Second Class post.

By low cost we mean earplugs like LaserLite, Spark Plugs, Max, Pillow Soft and a host of others.

And other products, like our innovative and top-rated Women’s Earplugs Sample Pack are also cheaper to send than they were this time last week so you’re still winning.

In fact, Snorestore is full of win at the moment, what with our special offers, legendary customer service and the biggest range of earplugs on the web.

You can read more about our shipping options here, or email us with any questions.