Difference between revisions of "Menards Rebate Program Fraud"

From Free Knowledge Base- The DUCK Project: information for everyone
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "Menards engaged in potentially unfair business practices that could have violated the law through its rebate programs. Menards offers 11 percent rebates in the form of a merc...")
 
m
 
(4 intermediate revisions by one user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
Menards engaged in potentially unfair business practices that could have violated the law through its rebate programs.  Menards offers 11 percent rebates in the form of a merchandise credit only available at its retail store locations. Menards reportedly advertises and offers these rebates in an aggressive manner to entice consumers to purchase products.
 
Menards engaged in potentially unfair business practices that could have violated the law through its rebate programs.  Menards offers 11 percent rebates in the form of a merchandise credit only available at its retail store locations. Menards reportedly advertises and offers these rebates in an aggressive manner to entice consumers to purchase products.
 +
 +
'''The Tricks Menards Uses'''
 +
 +
Menards offers these temporary 11 percent rebates with the hope that many consumers will either '''fail to send in the requisite paperwork''' or fail to redeem the rebate altogether. Menards attempts to drive down the redemption rate of the in-store only rebate checks by mailing the paper check in a '''piece of junk mail'''. When consumers receive their rebate check in the mail, they inadvertently throw it away.
 +
 +
'''Seemingly Never Ending Rebate Sale'''
 +
 +
Received rebates are only redeemable for Menards purchases and not all purchases are eligible.  The rebate can not be converted to cash.  Menards advertises the price after rebate as the significant "bold face" price even though customers may not receive nor be eligible for the rebate.  The majority of the fiscal year is during one of many repeated Menards 11 percent rebate promotions, making it the norm rather than the sale exception.  It is less common for Menards to offer an alternative promotion or non-rebate related condition.
 +
 +
'''Join Class Actions When Available'''
 +
 +
Consumers who purchased any rebate-eligible product and never received the promised rebate check may be eligible to pursue damages through a Menards rebate class action lawsuit potentially including those customers that inadvertently threw away the rebate upon receipt believing it to be unsolicited advertising.
 +
 +
 +
[[Category:Buyer Beware]]
 +
[[Category:Caveat Emptor]]

Latest revision as of 19:06, 4 April 2024

Menards engaged in potentially unfair business practices that could have violated the law through its rebate programs. Menards offers 11 percent rebates in the form of a merchandise credit only available at its retail store locations. Menards reportedly advertises and offers these rebates in an aggressive manner to entice consumers to purchase products.

The Tricks Menards Uses

Menards offers these temporary 11 percent rebates with the hope that many consumers will either fail to send in the requisite paperwork or fail to redeem the rebate altogether. Menards attempts to drive down the redemption rate of the in-store only rebate checks by mailing the paper check in a piece of junk mail. When consumers receive their rebate check in the mail, they inadvertently throw it away.

Seemingly Never Ending Rebate Sale

Received rebates are only redeemable for Menards purchases and not all purchases are eligible. The rebate can not be converted to cash. Menards advertises the price after rebate as the significant "bold face" price even though customers may not receive nor be eligible for the rebate. The majority of the fiscal year is during one of many repeated Menards 11 percent rebate promotions, making it the norm rather than the sale exception. It is less common for Menards to offer an alternative promotion or non-rebate related condition.

Join Class Actions When Available

Consumers who purchased any rebate-eligible product and never received the promised rebate check may be eligible to pursue damages through a Menards rebate class action lawsuit potentially including those customers that inadvertently threw away the rebate upon receipt believing it to be unsolicited advertising.