Making sure you are happy with your purchase and their service, is what sets the good apart from the bad.
For example:
It is pretty universal, that there are no returns or exchanges on firearms. But, when you get a real lemon, and the shop is willing to exchange or refund your money... They're a winner (so long as they take care of it; rather than pawning the POS off on some unsuspecting party).
On the other hand, a single bad policy can ruin an entire store's reputation. My favorite local gun store used to be my primary stop for firearms and reloading supplies. Still, today, the number of firearms I bought at that store outnumbers any other store I've ever bought from (and most of them, combined). Now, I won't buy powder or primers from them, even if it's the last place in town that has any (and it always is
). And, I avoid buying other reloading supplies and firearms, out of principle.
This otherwise great store sold some powder to Cornbush, that later caused a
catastrophic failure in his M77 Hawkeye. After Hodgdon determined the exact type and lot number of powder that had contaminated the H335 he bought, he called the store:
I called the store I bought it from today, said I bought the wrong powder and asked if I could exchange it for the right stuff.
Guess what "sure bring it on down", I informed them what had happened and was hung up on.
Just for clarity, since his grammar isn't the greatest...
Cornbush called the store, told them he bought the wrong powder the day before, and asked if they would exchange it for what he wanted. Their reply was, "Sure, bring it down."
When he elaborated that he was testing their policy, since a can of powder from their store had caused the Hawkeye failure, they hung up on him. Though he doesn't detail it in that post, he called back a second time. The "Reloading Guy" and store manager just argued with him, that that has never been their store policy, they never would have allowed the exchange, and they could have never sold contaminated powder.
Someone calls your store, points out that you have a very dangerous policy (allowing the "reloading guy" to return and exchange gun powder
), and you call him a liar? That'll win some loyalty...