So, I worked for Amazon for a year. Great gig. We were taught to replace, refund, reconcile. Now, there are a lot of factors at play. Their algorithm tell the customer service agent if you have ever called before, if you have had a lot of missing packages, if you have a lot of credit, if anything weird or wonky is going on, etc. in your account. People who were repeat callers get sent to a specialty team. Some even get emails and blocked calls preventing them from calling from numbers and information on file. Anyway --
I was a level II RG. I could refund, replace, or reconcile a situation up to $1500 and I could issue Amazon credits up to $50 per order. What this meant was that if your order was $1500 or less, I got to decide if we were going to give you a refund, reship the item, or if we were going to investigate with USPS and for your trouble, I could doll out a gift card to you for up to $50 to be used on items that were sold and shipped by Amazon. If your order was $5 or $50, the outcome would have likely been the same. If your item was more expensive but you've purchased 12,000 worth of merchandise this year, it would have still likely have been the same.
It's Christmas time, and if you used the online platform to select your item and the system worked properly, it probably set off alarms that you were calling about a $10 item and your call likely went to the retail department that were hired for Christmas and working from home. Those folks get a smaller limit, less responsibility, etc. but they can issue refunds, reship, and give out little $$ tokens to help.
USPS has been guilty of scanning packages prematurely. They were on the news recently for scanning in to meet quotas. Something you can do is request GPS coordinates of where a package was scanned and delivered at. Sometimes it will magically appear, other times it will show it was delivered elsewhere and USPS will provide a refund for insurance if Amazon wants, and even still -- sometimes they will argue it's your fault. *Shrugs*
Amazon was great about customer service. They wanted us to never blame, always listen, fix any additional issues... oh and get off the phone in like 4 minutes or less haha. The service agent has metrics to keep up with to keep their job if they were a seasonal or temp. They need to make sure you fill out a happy survey
I'm all over the place this morning -- but basically, if your account is in good standing, you don't have frequent issues, and it is an item that is in stock and not a camera, iPhone, or piece of expensive jewelry -- and it's fulfilled or sold & fulfilled by Amazon -- they will probably replace it or refund you for as much as $1500. I rarely did those myself and forwarded to a higher team -- but on one occasion, I did refund a camera lens set for a photographer of $1200 -- after it was apparent the driver had took it elsewhere (The driver was an Amazon truck!)
It's coffee time.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 12/22/2017 01:45PM by MountainCacher88.