An odd Target policy - Printable Version +- CC Zone - Chip's Challenge Forum (https://forum.bitbusters.club) +-- Forum: Non-Chip's Challenge (https://forum.bitbusters.club/forum-6.html) +--- Forum: General (https://forum.bitbusters.club/forum-21.html) +--- Thread: An odd Target policy (/thread-2292.html) |
An odd Target policy - BitBuster - 24-Mar-2012 ...so I guess they were training a new employee, 'cause I saw a part of their training manuel left out by the register. While waiting in line I happened to glance at it, and I read something along these lines: The maximum gift card purchase a customer can make in any 24-hour period is $10,000. If a customer attempts to purchase more than $10,000 worth of gift cards, the associate is to inform them of the daily limit. Do not break up the purchase into two separate transactions. Who the shiitake buys $10,000 worth of gift cards? It has to be some sort of money laundering scheme; I don't think even a corporation would come up with a policy like this without having a good reason. An odd Target policy - BigOto2 - 24-Mar-2012 If I were them I'd make the limit more like $1,000 just to be safer. Not many would buy a gift card that huge either. An odd Target policy - BitBuster - 24-Mar-2012 Even $100 would be reasonable, I think. If you're going above that, you might as well cut the recipient a check. An odd Target policy - BigOto2 - 24-Mar-2012 Good point. Someone may want one for $200 for, say, an iPhone, but that's about it. An odd Target policy - BitBuster - 24-Mar-2012 Yeah, that's true. But odds are, if you're giving someone a gift card so that they can buy an iPhone (or a computer, or an .mp3 player, etc), you're close enough with them that you're going to pay for the whole thing and can just accompany them to the store (or, in the case of a parent/child or significant other relationship, just lend them your credit card). I don't know. I'm just speculating here. I don't really travel amongst the sorts of folks who routinely give out gift cards in hundred-dollar (or thousand-dollar) increments. An odd Target policy - geodave - 24-Mar-2012 Some Targets have appliances and stuff, so I can see where the number might be big. An odd Target policy - BitBuster - 24-Mar-2012 ...yes, but $10,000? In gift cards? This isn't about putting a $10,000 cap on purchases. It's about a $10,000 cap on gift card purchases. Seriously? An odd Target policy - AdrenalinDragon - 24-Mar-2012 We don't have Targets in England, but what I will say is that if you were a millionaire, you'd just buy the product without the gift card, right? An odd Target policy - BitBuster - 24-Mar-2012 Exactly. Or you'd just buy the expensive product for your kid (and you probably wouldn't buy it at Target anyway; Target is for the common folks). Or they could just draw the money out of their trust funds for themselves. |