Employees of major electronics retailers are almost always required to hit certain benchmarks in selling extended warranties and add-on products. This forces them to use hard-sell techniques and be really pushy and as persuasive as can be in order to get you out the door with an extended warranty, otherwise they could potentially lose their jobs.
Extended warranties almost never work out to be financially beneficial for the consumer. When you buy an extended warranty, you are not only paying the cost of insuring the product, but also all of the fees that it took to market the program, all of the profit that the company makes and all of the commissions that go to the salespersons and their managers. In the end you'll only get about 15 cents back for every dollar that you put toward an extended warranty.
Extended warranties are some of the most profitable items sold in major retail stores today. Many have stated that the only way Circuit City stays in business is through their extended warranty plans. More than half of Best Buy's 1.38 billion in profits came from extended warranty sales. The only people making money off extended warranty are the companies selling them and the commissioned sales person pitching them.
A good alternative to getting extended warranties is putting the amount of money that you would put towards an extended warranty in a savings account whenever you buy a new gadget or appliance. If the device were to break, you could then use the money inside the savings account to replace whatever gadget or appliance broke. This way the money's yours if never have to replace anything and there's still money available in the event that your regular warranty expires.
With an extended warranty, you almost never come out ahead when buying one. Next time you're out in a major retailer buying something and are pitched an extended warranty, just say no.
Published by Matthew Paulson
I am a very busy undergraduate, I'm involved with nine different campus organizations and work five different jobs. Most notably, I am the editor-in-chief of DSU's Trojan Times. View profile
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2 Comments
Post a Commenti cant get any answers for my marketing project
so it's not a certainty that I wont need it, and the extended warranty that costs $100 would replace my $900+ "gadget" that I'm buying. But instead of buying the $100 extended warranty - I should put that $100 in my savings account, and use that $100 to rebuy my $900+ "Gadget" should my $900+ "Gadget" ever fail..... does that NOT seem simple minded to you?