Forum Moderators: buckworks
We have a subscription website. So users pay using either PayPal or Yahoo PayDirect and gain access to a subscription area of the website for about $5 / month.
We recently had a user enjoy about 3 weeks of the subscription content, then file a fraud complaint with Yahoo PayDirect saying he wasn't happy with the service and wanted a refund. Was he really unhappy with the service or did he just want his 5 bucks back? There's no way to really know, but the latter is the reason we don't offer refunds typically.
Is there a black list out there of people that do this? Charge their credit cards and then reverse the charges? The credit card companies always side with the consumer, which makes sense in most cases, but that policy allows for this kind of abuse.
So does anyone have any suggestions on what we can do?
Thanks,
Tyson
If I legitimately filed a chargeback on my credit card and another business refused to accept my business ONLY because of that, they're just looking for trouble.
My first comment still stands. Will you refuse 5 customers, just to prevent 1 from possibly scamming you? I don't know about you but I'd choose to have 4 customers paid up and 1 charged back.
I would consider such a check useful for very large sales. We are more likely to refuse a sale when it's large enough that the loss would badly hurt us. It's opposite from what I often hear, but being able to do such a check would give us more reason to accept such a sale than the other way around.
Fraulent chargebacks, will qualify you for being and 'idiot', however legimate but stupid and difficult customers ussually win out :)
The whole system is set up for the consumer to "win" any dispute with companies, even the illegitimate ones where the consumer is clearly wrong.
You have to accept it and move on. Any battle you get in with the customer will result in complaints to the BBB, the Attorney General, and a Chargeback. They will do this even if they're completely morally wrong.