second only to john lewis......
In their dreams!
Best customer service I receive is from Lakeland.
John Lewis/Waitrose are excellent, and Marks & Spencer not far behind.
I think the CS like everything at QVC needs to move into 21st century.
But honestly, unless stuff is being returned under DSR, I would expect it to be thoroughly checked (weighing might help determine when the beauty products are used) and if they are not 100% certain they are still in brand new condition, they should begin selling them at a discount in "as is" condition.
Clothes returns, particularly where the tags have been removed (not that all ranges have tags) should be cleaned as well as checked. Given that most of them are polyester mixes, they should wash and dry like a dream without any colour fade and be ready to be bagged up and sold again.
Pickles - I can't believe you had the same experience twice with what you might class as late ordering of TSV! How unlucky for you! It's a cautionary tale for all of us.
I hope your CS experience when you complain and return the offending items is better than the initial sloppy/shoddy experience.
Oh, and here's a thought... if you're on advanced orders or waitlist, and what you are being sent is returns not fresh stock from the supplier - I think QVC should clearly indicate that on the dispatch note. Better yet, they should contact you, tell you what's available is a return, and let you decide if you want to risk the condition of the item.
But - bottom line: they have no business charging full price for returns unless they have checked and verified that the customer it's going to be sent to is going to get
exactly what is described on the QVC website. EG: if your face cream is supposed to be 30 ml of PCMC, for example, that is
exactly what should be in the pot. I presume QVC have to adhere to the Sale of Goods Act as well as DSR? If the goods aren't as described you could have a case against QVC.