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Newegg Apologises for Well-documented Customer Service Fail, Says It Has Enacted Better Policies (pcgamer.com) 132

Newegg has apologised for dealing poorly with returns and open-box product sales, in the wake of a recent video from Gamers Nexus documenting its own terrible returns experience. From a report: The online retailer has now said it has now put in place new policies to ensure a hassle-free return experience on open-box products for motherboards and CPUs, though is light on the details. There's no doubt that the statement tweeted out by the company comes as a response to Gamers Nexus' recent videos outlining the channel's return experience for a Gigabyte Aorus Xtreme Z490 motherboard, which when combined total nearly two million views. It goes something like this: The hardware YouTube channel bought a motherboard via Newegg for testing, though shortly thereafter decided it was no longer required. It then sought to return the motherboard under Newegg's returns policy and shipped the product back to the retailer.
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Newegg Apologises for Well-documented Customer Service Fail, Says It Has Enacted Better Policies

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  • by trparky ( 846769 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @02:47PM (#62270015) Homepage
    They shouldn't have done what they did in the first place. I'm grateful I live in a city where there's a Microcenter half an hour away from me. Needless to say, I do all my major computer parts shopping there.
    • They have had terrible return policy for years. I ordered electronics exclusively from them until about 10 years ago when I received a defective motherboard.

      They charged me shipping to return it and a restocking fee and refused to budge on it. That was without checking if it was defective. I never purchased another product from them.

      I get all my stuff locally or from Amazon. Amazon can be hit or miss with quality but their return process is second to none.

      • by Dadoo ( 899435 )

        Amazon can be hit or miss with quality but their return process is second to none.

        Ugghh. But Amazon's search is just awful. I can never find exactly what I want.

        • A friend clued me in that it's easier to use Google-Fu to search Amazon than to use Amazon to search Amazon.

          This paid off when I was searching for a simple kitchen sink drain stopper. Lowest priced one via Amazon was almost $6. A quick Google search of Amazon netted me one for just over $3.

          Sometimes their searching works if you're not sure what you're looking for, like a "chair pillow" to give my old chair a bit of new life in the seat. But once you've found what you're looking for, or know when you start
        • I will often use new egg to search for components by specific specs then go and buy them from Amazon, works out well if a very tiny hassle.
      • Almost identical story here except for $6000 network gear IIRC. Multiply by 15% and it ate a huge chunk of my revenue for the project.

    • I wish there was a microcenter near me. You are one fortunate individual
    • Microcenter is my Happy Place
  • once hero now zero (Score:4, Interesting)

    by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @02:55PM (#62270041)

    NewEgg was a hero when it took on patent trolls. They had a great service and good pricing. At some point NewEgg became more of a store for resellers and that is the point at which it became worthless. I will no longer use NewEgg, so avoid the kinds of issues on display here and others like it.

    I'll pay more to avoid NewEgg.

    • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @02:59PM (#62270071)

      newegg got taken over by Chinese for profit people that pushed paying for good CS out.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Oh? Wikipedia doesn't mention it. It says it was founded by Fred Chang and has remained headed up by Taiwanese Americans ever since. Is that not the case?

        • by klui ( 457783 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2022 @04:46AM (#62272029)

          ???

          The first paragraph lays it all out.

          In 2016, Liaison Interactive (SZSE: 002280), a Chinese technology company, acquired a majority stake in Newegg in an investment deal. In 2020, Newegg entered into a merger agreement with Lianlou Smart Limited (NASDAQ: LLIT) wherein Newegg stockholders became majority owners of LLIT. Following the consummation of the merger, Newegg listed as a publicly traded company on Nasdaq (NASDAQ: NEGG) in May 2021 as Newegg Commerce, Inc.

    • I'm not gonna burn the "never settle" t-shirt I have tucked away as a collector item, but I might not buy anything from NewEgg again.

      Although I was already looking around at my options because when I click "Sold by NewEgg" there were less and less computer components listed. As a marketplace they just suck, they're like a swap meet, nothing like Amazon. Which is already lower quality than brick-and-mortar.

      I might end up having to go back to buying online from an over-priced brick and mortar just to get part

    • I used to buy from them all the time. Then I had a bad experience with their CS when FedEx failed to deliver a cheap part, and I just gave up. Didn't even file a charge back, just stopped buying from them. I lost five bucks, but they're out thousands in the long haul.
  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @02:55PM (#62270043)

    openbox should have an pic of the pins taken before shipping

  • by GoRK ( 10018 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @03:07PM (#62270105) Homepage Journal

    Newegg lost my $100k+/yr business account 10 years ago after they refused to offer a return on a CPU when they had sent the incorrect sku. They made false statements and presented false records to AmEx when I disputed the charge. I have not purchased a single item from them since, and I post this cautionary tale every single chance I get.

    No matter what the problem, NewEgg will eventually make a mistake on one of your orders and when they do, they will fuck you. Do not do business with them. Everything they sell is available from an alternate and more ethical alternative, many times at a lower price.

    • I used to buy from m-wave, but they went out of business. Then NewEgg proved themselves to be smarmy.

      Is there a good alternative for the discerning nerd, or am I stuck just buying wherever? What is an ethical alternative?

      • Another satisfied m-wave customer here. I used to order from them M-Wave in the 2000, switched to Newegg in 2012, and then switched to Amazon (for computers) in ~2019. I never had any problems with Newegg but a friend of mine did and swore to never to do business with them ever again.

        > What is an ethical alternative?

        Maybe B&H Photo Video [bhphotovideo.com] ?? I ordered a Threadripper 3960X back in 2019. It took them a month but they DID deliver it.

        Also, check out Now In Stock [nowinstock.net]

        I hate "Worse Buy" but IF they have EXAC

        • B&H is awesome, they remind me sort of of the olden days of Newegg.
          • Yeah, B&H is very solid. I pretty much buy all my electronics through B&H, Microcenter, or Amazon anymore (with the occasional Best Buy if they happen to have what I am looking for in stock, which is almost never the case).
      • by G00F ( 241765 )

        ah, mwave, I had forgotten all about them. My last order from them was in 2007, looks like I use to use them and newegg for while, then only newegg and I try hard not to buy everything from amazon.

    • by tazan ( 652775 )
      I too used to buy a lot from them. It started seeming like all the refurbished items were just open box and all the open box where just DOA. After paying shipping to return DOA stuff a few times I dropped them completely. I'd forgotten they even existed.
    • After hearing yours and other stories here, I've now removed them consideration in the settings of the website I use when sourcing parts, so that's another customer they've lost. Granted, I've never bought regularly from them, but my purchases tended to run into the thousands when they did happen, so it's something.

    • They went downhill when they wanted to become Amazon and started becoming a storefront for sellers outside of Newegg's control.

      You're almost better off buying stuff from eBay anymore.

  • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @03:14PM (#62270137)

    Gamers Nexus [youtube.com] bought a $500 Gigabyte motherboard that was "Open Box" meaning it was not brand new. Some of their criticisms was that it was not as clear as in the past that it was an open box until after they bought it. Gamer's Nexus then claims by the time they received the board they did not need it and did not even open the shipping box before returning it. They returned the box unopened for a refund. From their viewpoint it would have been fair for Newegg to charge them a restocking fee.

    However, Newegg declined the refund citing damage to the board and refused to discuss with Gamers Nexus further. However Gamers Nexus had been contact with other customers of Newegg who allege that Newegg did the same thing to them: refusing refunds and leaving them no recourse. That is how the saga began. The main problem with denying Gamers Nexus is that they have 1.6M YouTube subscribers and were able to publish their spat with Newegg. After some bad publicity, Newegg reversed course and granted them the refund and said they shipped the part back to them.

    In a followup [youtube.com] to the video, when Gamers Nexus received the part back, they finally opened the box and found that the motherboard had already been through a returns process with Gigabyte. Based on their conversations with a Gigabyte rep, it appears Newegg sent the motherboard already back to Gigabyte. Gigabyte confirmed damage to the board and quoted Newegg $100 fee to repair it. Newegg declined the repair and had the board sent back to them. It appears Newegg then turned around and sold the board to Gamers Nexus without any repair and fully knowing it was damaged only to deny refunds if it every came back to them.

    • One of the doctors I advise on computer matters bought 4 enterprise HDDs from Newegg to upgrade the capacity of his RAID array. The drives arrived and he opened the box to confirm they were what we ordered, so I could make the trip to install them for him the next day. They were wrapped and taped in bubble wrap, which isn't all that unusual for enterprise HDDs. But before I got there, his RAID server completely died. We reconstructed the server from backups onto duplicate hardware he kept just in case of an
  • by Shaiku ( 1045292 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @03:16PM (#62270149)

    15-20 years ago I used to happily pay a little more to buy parts from NewEgg because they had consistent quality at reasonable prices and generally trustworthy reviews. Then they tried to become a marketplace and made it difficult to discern the orders fulfilled by scammers from the orders fulfilled by NewEgg. Now I'm not sure there even is a difference as the entire site is a crapshoot in terms of price, quality, legitimacy, return policy, and even whether the item sold as new is actually new. In every way they have become inferior versions of eBay and Amazon.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      Yea they went down hill after they were taken over by Liaison Interactive in 2016. My order volume with them over the years fell off a cliff around then when they used to be my #1 go-to when buying parts. These days I'd put them right next to Tiger Direct for companies I'd buy from, which is to say basically my tier of last resort. Luckily I have a Microcenter not too far away if I need parts.
    • I'm just glad than when I ordered from them and they screwed it up, it was in my favor and they sent me the same part twice! I could just as easily not received it at all.

    • by G00F ( 241765 )

      I still try to continue to buy from them, because who else is there?

      (obviously avoiding amazon)

      Not even amazon gives users easy way to find parts and compare them. most people I know just pcpartpicker and buy where ever it points them at.

  • Not the same company (Score:5, Informative)

    by aerogems ( 339274 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @03:56PM (#62270275)

    The NewEgg of today isn't the NewEgg a lot of people may remember. Like a lot of browser extensions, someone bought them and then used the good will associated with the brand to start screwing people over.

    Some years back I briefly worked for an OEM trying to resolve issues customers had that were a bit outside the usual CS job description. I would constantly see complaints about NewEgg refusing to accept mobo returns because of bent/broken pins when everything was in working order when it went back. These were from hardware enthusiast sites, so I'm inclined to think they knew what they were doing.

  • I was an avid supporter and purchaser from Newegg. They experimented with resellers and started to see Nintendo Wii systems being sold for $300-$400 over MSRP. This quickly became the norm for them. I thought it was odd, but ignored it because I didn't ever buy from resellers. I noticed shortly thereafter that their customer service kind of disappeared. It felt like almost overnight they were a different company. Discovered that they had been bought out. Not sure if that was the entire problem or not, but t
  • by oh_my_080980980 ( 773867 ) on Tuesday February 15, 2022 @04:24PM (#62270381)
    That's all you need to know.
    • No it isn't. There's a direct financial benefit to having happy customers and plenty of publicly traded companies don't piss on their customers.

  • ... when Newegg started sending me mechanical hard drives loose in boxes. No padding except for one or two of those inflatable plastic pillows. Of course drives arrived damaged and Newegg would not deal with it properly. I was forced to RMA with Western Digital and wait weeks for replacements, most likely refurbs as well. That was around 2016. They took a nose dive around that time and I moved on. That reseller push was hideous too. I used to buy exclusively from Newegg but screw me more than once and I can
    • I stopped buying from them around the same time; I received scratched/open products that were labeled and priced as new when I purchased them. I had to resort to having my credit card company deal with getting my money back. While it took months I did prevail.

  • Newegg stopped caring about their catalog and service when they opened the "Newegg marketplace." They tried to be the next Amazon: an open marketplace, rather than a company that cared about quality distribution.

    I ordered multiple of an item on the "Newegg marketplace" from Hong Kong that had a >45 day lead time. Shipping time was totally acceptable in this case. When I only received 1, I tried to post a review, but Newegg won't allow a review outside of 30 days. Surely their system just didn't think ab

    • I never had a good experience with Marketplace. The prices seemed way too high and if you do not read the fine print, you might miss that a lot of parts were being shipped from overseas. Even then there was some shadiness. One time I bought some case fans. The manufacturer had a 45 day wait and this one marketplace seller was the only one that had them for a noticeable mark up. They were case fans; what's the worst that could happen I said. I checked and nothing said it was coming from overseas.

      A few days l

  • I haven't bought from them in the past 10 years. Looking at their stock, looks like no one else does either.
    • That is pretty much the only place people recommend for being able to actually get a GC, by using one of their bundles.

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