View Full Version : Jackson & Perkins gift certifucates at 10% off
DFStoneJr
08-02-2003, 05:43 PM
If this post is out of line here, please forgive me. But I'm hoping that
the opportunity to save 10% on Jackson & Perkins certificates is in
something of a gray area where the benefits to people outweigh the
semi-commercial nature of the post, which will be my only one of this
nature.
I have 16 Jackson & Perrkins gift certificates of $25 each that I'm willing
to part with for 10% below face value on a first-come, first-served basis.
You must order at least two cards or certificates ($50 worth). I'll accept
Paypal, cash on delivery, money order or cashier's check.
I currently have 154 feedback comments at eBay/Half.com. Three neutral
comments came from sales I had to cancel because of an inventory screw-up
that I have since rectified. All others are positive. I'll send you a link
if you want to check me out.
It's like buying money at 10% off! Give them as gifts or use them yourself!
Scopata Fuori
08-02-2003, 05:43 PM
> I have 16 Jackson & Perrkins gift certificates of $25 each that I'm
willing
> to part with for 10% below face value on a first-come, first-served basis.
> You must order at least two cards or certificates ($50 worth). I'll
accept
> Paypal, cash on delivery, money order or cashier's check.
The catalogs come with a 10 to 20% discount coupon for nothing, on a regular
basis. If you want to convert actual gift certificates to cash, put them on
eBay at a *real* starting bid of a dollar or so, then they'll be bid to
whatever the market will bear.
Scopata Fuori
DFStoneJr
08-02-2003, 08:25 PM
> The catalogs come with a 10 to 20% discount coupon for nothing, on a
regular
> basis. If you want to convert actual gift certificates to cash, put them
on
> eBay at a *real* starting bid of a dollar or so, then they'll be bid to
> whatever the market will bear.
The offer does not represent a value to you. It might to others. A simple,
"No, thank you" would have sufficed.
I could indeed put them on eBay, but an auction involves a degree of
uncertainty for both buyer and seller. That uncertainty is eliminated with
a fixed price. Additionally, eBay transaction involve listing fees and
commissions, which can be avoided by making them available in venues such as
this. Lastly, I don't see anything on tghe certificates that precludes them
from being used on top of whatever discount might be offered "for nothing,
on a regular basis."
Bob Bauer
09-02-2003, 06:32 PM
On Sat, 8 Feb 2003 12:14:00 -0600, "DFStoneJr"
> wrote:
>The offer does not represent a value to you. It might to others. A simple,
>"No, thank you" would have sufficed.
Apparently not. What the poster was trying to gently explain to you
is that 10 percent off is not much of a deal. Period.
Don't forget that J and P roses are overly inflated in price to start
with. Nobody is going to take you up on it. Not at only 10 percent
off.
Bob Bauer
"Bob Bauer" > wrote in message
...
> On Sat, 8 Feb 2003 12:14:00 -0600, "DFStoneJr"
> > wrote:
>
> >The offer does not represent a value to you. It might to others. A
simple,
> >"No, thank you" would have sufficed.
>
> Apparently not. What the poster was trying to gently explain to you
> is that 10 percent off is not much of a deal. Period.
>
> Don't forget that J and P roses are overly inflated in price to start
> with. Nobody is going to take you up on it. Not at only 10 percent
> off.
>
> Bob Bauer
>
>
Agreed.
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