A few months ago, I was deeply in love with PopMarket. It’s a daily deal website for music, and I went through an intense phase of buying lots of music from them. But then it became clear how bad this relationship was for me, in the form of a botched order. Last September, I ordered a three-album set, one of which was a double-disc version of Janis Joplin’s seminal Pearl. When I got the order, I discovered a manufacturing error: instead of Pearl, the discs inside the packaging were of Earth, Wind, & Fire.
I wrote to PopMarket, got an almost instantaneous response where they sent me a replacement, and thus entered the rabbit hole. The replacement had the same error, and then the replacement for the replacement had the same error. After a few weeks of trying to get them to either send me correct discs or refund the order, I gave up. And I haven’t ordered from PopMarket again.
Last week, I got an email saying that my order of Johnny Cash’s The Legend had shipped. This is one of the albums that I had ordered, back in those heady days, but I received it months ago. I thought that their system must have hiccuped and sent a confirmation mail out again, so ignored it, but then the album showed up on my doorstep. So I wrote to them again, asking (a) what to do with this album that they’ve entirely inexplicably sent me, and (b) whether they have any intent at all of sending the order that they still haven’t completed. The response is rather opaque:
I’m sorry for any inconvenience that may have caused. I’ve forwarded your message to our warehouse department for review. As soon as I receive any further information I will let you know via email.
Err, yeah. You’ll excuse me if I don’t hold my breath on that one.
I still get the daily PopMarket emails, and sometimes I want to click through to order, but I always hold myself back. I’ve learned my lesson.