If the item was faulty its not a case of no problem its covered by the Direct Selling Regulations which is an addition to the Sale of Goods Act
See Which guide to Distance selling Regulations and who bares the cost of faulty goods returns
The problem is, when QVC calculate a buyer's "return rate" they don't differentiate between cancelled orders (under DSR or because an item is faulty) and those sent back under their 30 day MBG . My "quibble" is this is impacting on our statutory "sale of goods" and DSR rights, which legally cannot be limited by a retailer either by its contact terms or by applying other conditions (ie 49% or less). If I bought 66 items in a 12 month period but returned 35 of them under DSR or because the item was faulty, never arrived, or the wrong item sent then QVC (as far as we can tell) would send me "The Letter" because they don't record these separately. I have to say I would love to tackle them if this happened.
I return as many items as possible by cancelling the order by email within 7 days under the Distance Selling Regs (apart from the odd faulty/incorrect item) to minimise my 30 day mbg returns and if they
ever send me the letter again I'll be ready for them because unlike qvc I
do record the reasons for every return or cancelled order. DSR is supposed to offer the distance buyer the equivalent of picking up and inspecting an item in a shop. You can take it out of the packaging, feel the fabric or compare the colour to you face or furniture or whatever but if it's not for you you can "put it back on the shop rail" and send it back. Can you imagine being in M&S and picking up 5 jumpers and putting them back and the staff telling you not to pick up so many without buying one?
And another thing: when I spoke to the CS person for my telling off after the Letter, he couldn't tell me the parameters of the 12 month period used for the calculation of the returns percentage. Surely someone at QVC knows whether it's a rolling 12 months, a Jan - Dec calendar month or an April to April tax year but the CS person wasn't interested in discussing their goal posts, the exaggerations of the presenters or their encouraging me to buy more than one and send back the one I don't like or doesn't fit, but he just wanted to tell me off.
Finally, QVC do not stand the cost of returns that can't be resold, the vendor does.