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There's the old saying, don't judge a book by its cover. The first company came in a shiny fancy new truck. There were two workmen to give an estimate. One used a measuring device, the other punched numbers into a calculator. Gave me three quotes from $750 to $1,600 depending on what type of work I needed, yada, yada, yada. Plus the price included 20% first time user discount. Hard sell type of person. Told him I will get back if interested. It felt like they were jacking up the price because the house was For Sale and that I probably looked desperate.
The second company, an one man operation, came in a beat-up old rusting truck with the name so faded you could barely see it. The owner looked homeless as he was very scruffy looking. He walked around the house measuring the rooms in his head and quoted me $275 to steam clean and deodorize.
My boss uses the above person for carpet cleaning and handyman work so I know he does a good job, so he wasn't a stranger to me. Plus he could patch a hole in the ceiling of my parent's home office where there was a water leak and paint the ceiling for $150. So guess which price I took. I know, got to be careful about you get what you pay for. But I know this guy does good work. Plus he gave me a lot of other suggestions to make the place show better :)
Two others that have been around for years are the hearing aid "trial" to test new hearing aid devices, as well the "private funding" enabling hearing aid providers to offer aids at a discount.
Years ago we did see one consultant who was offering the so-called private funding discount, not b/c we believed the come-on but b/c we wanted to get a baseline hearing test. Even with the so-called private funding, the guy wanted about $4K for each aid.
When the owner came in for the big sales pitch, I pressed him about the so-called funding, he admitted it was a marketing tool (read "gimmick").
The latest twist is that this outfit called the other day to schedule an update hearing for Dad. It's been years, I've had no contact with them, but obviously they keep my contact info.
Everyone, don't forget that you can use the provisions of the Fair Credit Billing Act to challenge unauthorized charges.
After seeing what a fiasco it was with the utility heat provider, I would never sign up with either of them. I prefer commercial companies which compete, rather than monopolies which don't know the meaning of competition.
A couple of times the Watchtower or some other aggressive religious outfit ignores the sign. If I hear them knocking, I use the peep hole to see who's there, wait till they leave, then I walk up and down the street till I find their car, then very obviously stand so they can see me and write down the license number, vehicle make, etc.
Once one of the women asked me what I was doing and I told her it was part of the neighborhood monitoring system for scam artists and criminals. Of course she tried to assure me that she was a good Christian out to save souls or whatever, but I just walked away.
I finally sent an e-mail saying I was within the Federal law 3-day cooling off for door-to-door sales. But the daily telephone continued until one day I finally did answered and a very sweet woman was on the line and I asked her politely please remove my name and telephone number.... and she did :)
Yet the same company salespeople swarm over our subdivision like locust trying to get work. We are an older subdivision where the houses are 30-35 years old, so prime targets for new roofs, new siding, new windows, new front doors, new gutters.... [sigh].
It has gotten to a point where I won't answer my front door unless I see a car in the driveway.
What I am finding is that mom sleeps late, dads up bright and early and the calls start at about 8 am. These parasites have his MO and know he's a kindly, demented old guy. Once mom is up the calls decrease and she can nipp them in the bud. She told me today that she's tired of these guys "And I've just been getting a real smarty mouth with em ". Go get em mom!
Another thing I had to do was call AOL which was Dad's email provider. I had noticed on the past 3 credit card statements that Dad was being charged for computer checkups at $20+ per month, and another $5 for something else offered by AOL. I know this was my Dad's doing as he never was a happy camper with his computer speed.... HELLO, Dad was on dial-up and living in a large metro area, of course he will have trouble trying to connect to AOL or the internet. So he was trying all different solutions instead of signing up for cable or FiOS.
I called AOL and it was easy to get Dad off of these items. I just had to know the security answers. The one "what is your Mom's maiden name" kept coming up wrong until I realized it was Dad's mother's maiden name that was on file, not my Mom's maiden name :P