Forum Moderators: not2easy
We use this to cut down on the "can we come out to the warehouse" type phone enquires from the locals, and gives them a place to go, if they are looking for product, but don't want to buy online.
I was surprized to get a phone message the other day, asking for me to remove this information from my website (address and store phone number) which is all public information.
This store should be gratefull, that I was sending him the retail customers we did not want out of the goodness of my heart. But go figure, some people are strange.
I will remove this information for this ungratefull SOB when I get around to it, but where do I stand legally on this?
There is no link to his website (he does not have one), but don't I have the right to list public information without harasement?
and should assume that the store has good reason for making it.
I think that is the real gist of the topic here, not whether or not he should remove it (of course he should).
IMO, what this may be showing is more about the general publics' real ignorance of the internet than anything else. We get some really strange calls and emails that just leave me mystified.
they should have a presence on the web by now ...
I am amazed from time to time that some large companies still do not have a web presence - or if they do, it is some one page thing that looks like it was built in 1993 as a school project.
I doubt that many of them even know how much the lack of a basic website is hurting them. A recent article in Forbes noted that 50% of all purchasing managers for fortune 500 companies used the internet for research and purchasing. I know that we have taken at least a couple of accounts away from other companies.
And last year we started buying all of our high power connectors from another company for the sole reason that we could get instant specifications and pricing from their website.