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as promised, Sephora is starting to e-mail these customers with their final offering: a $50 gift code.
A gift code is different from a gift card in that it’s not transferable, and it must be used all at once on an order of $50 or more or the customer will lose the balance of the code. It’s essentially a $50 coupon, issued to anyone who e-mailed about the Epic Rewards. Customers in Canada are receiving codes worth 50 Canadian dollars, or about $37.50. The other catch is that the $50 code means that customers can’t use any other promotional codes, like coupons or any of the rotating weekly samples that require a promo code. Here’s the full letter. Sephora appears to be generating the codes and sending out e-mails in waves, so if you’re expecting one, you should receive it later on.
Many of the customers behind the revolt seem to be satisfied with this resolution, though they aren’t all pleased. Reader Dawn thinks that it’s unfair that everyone receives the same code regardless of how much they’ve spent at the store or how many points they had saved up to “buy” the high-end rewards. “If I had 1000 points, [I should have received] a $50 code; if I had 3000 points, a $150 code,” she wrote to Consumerist. “That would have made me happy. This does NOT in any way make me feel valued as a customer.” Some of the dissatisfied customers have a new form of protest in addition to their mass returns: making the company ship them free samples purchased with rewards points in as many separate boxes as possible. “[T]here are lots of women out there buying a single hair tie or empty Sephora eye compact for $1 and cashing in their [rewards] points 100 at a time, to cost the company money,” Dawn writes. “I am one! I have had 8 boxes thus far this week. I figure – you want to screw us around? That can go two ways.” She plans to donate the items that she collects to a local women’s shelter. Eight UPS packages won’t doom the multimillion-dollar company, and seeing packages go out containing a hair tie and a face wash sample must be incredibly frustrating for warehouse workers. These customers also say they won’t be shopping at Sephora anymore. Now, that is the free market at work. Customers who feel their business isn’t valued go elsewhere. |
Earlier this month, we shared with you the story of Sephora’s Epic Rewards promotion that quickly ran out of rewards. Customers were upset after the promotion, believing that they had been misled into racking up points for special “rewards” when there were so few rewards to go around that it might as well have been a raffle. Today,
- by Laura Northrup
- via Consumerist
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