Global socio-economic trends these days
indicate that the consumer must be more prudent in dispensing the meagre
income trickling into increasingly emptying pockets. While income is
shrinking daily, basic needs such as food, shelter, clothing, education,
health and even entertainment, are making us masters at juggling
priorities and balancing budgets. The least one would expect is that the
trade environment would adjust to these challenges and help stretch
the naira to maximum value. Unfortunately, various factors are
colluding to make the commercial environment increasingly hostile. So as
a consumer, you need to be more discerning, alert and enlightened so
that you won’t end up with the current Nigerian financial dilemma of “no
cash-backing for budget implementation.”
One key aspect of commercial
transactions is the issue of trust between the consumer and the
manufacturer or service provider. When we exchange cash for goods and
services, there is an implied assumption that we trust the manufacturer
enough to accept his claim that the product will meet a particular need.
For instance, if you buy a television set, you assume that the
manufacturer has installed a receiver that will pick up the signals of
TV stations and transmit them to your home via the set so you paid for
without any doubt at all. That is trust.
Unfortunately, the consumer can no
longer conduct transactions naively like this as the incidences of
fraudulent manufacturers and service providers abound. They capitalise
on the consumer’s trust to defraud by putting sub-standard, fake and
sometimes life threatening goods on the shelves for sale. This is why
the Latin maxim “caveat emptor” which means “let the buyer beware”, must
be your watchword when buying goods and services, especially in Nigeria
where there are very weak or non-existent structures to protect the
consumer from this kind of exploitation. A crash programme on protecting
yourself from buying goods that will not serve you is thus necessary to
get value for your ever shrinking naira in this cashless economy. The
buzz word here is “warranty” or “guarantee”.
Commerce, in trying to sustain the
trust between buyer and seller, evolved the principle that the seller
must commit to the veracity of his claim concerning his product or
service by giving the buyer tangible additional assurance that his good
or service is authentic and can be trusted, within a specified period,
to deliver on its expected use or benefit. A buyer can thus rest assured
that his trust in the seller’s integrity is not misplaced so he buys
with confidence and peace of mind. That is a warranty.
While this principle is the global
standard for trade, it is almost totally absent in our commercial
environment. Nigerian consumers either do not understand they have a
right to expect a warranty at point of purchase or are just too
disillusioned to expect anything from the seller. This inertia
unfortunately, fuels the dumping of sub-standards goods and poor
services in the Nigerian market, resulting in great loss of value in the
consumer’s purchasing power. While we wait for the Federal Government
to put some sanity in the commercial environment, here are tips to
protect you from being cheated or wasting money on sub-standard goods.
• Have a budget:
Decide how much you are willing to pay for any item or service long
before going to buy it. You can compare prices in other markets via the
internet to get a fair price range so you know when a product or service
is overpriced.
• Always ask for a discount:
Even on ‘fixed’ or advertised prices. I have a book titled “Never Pay
Retail” which has eye opening tips on how to pay the least possible for
the most quality. I might share some of those principles sometime on
this page. I ask for discounts on bank charges like COT, super market
prices, fixed prices, everything. The worst the seller can say is no but
99% of the time; I always get something off, no matter how small.
• Ask questions: Never
let your tight schedules make you buy what you can’t use especially big
ticket items like consumer electronics, cars, phones, etc. Engage the
seller so you know what you are buying. Many times, while questioning
the seller, I realize a new phone does not have the facilities to do
what I need to do. A seller wants to sell so he won’t tell you unless
you ask.
• Avoid buying in traffic: Suddenly,
we now buy pillows, tables, blenders, and more while in traffic. This
is the surest way to buy a sub-standard product. Be honest, how many
things have you bought in traffic only to find them broken, fake or
overpriced? My list is endless. Let’s stop throwing money away. If you
cannot return it, don’t buy it!
• Insist on a written warranty before paying for any product or service:
Retailers have this dubious clause printed on their invoices that
“goods purchased in good condition cannot be refunded, returned or
replaced”. That is a direct violation of your consumer rights. There is a
reasonable time that a durable product is expected to last before it
becomes unserviceable. It is called ‘implied warranty’ and recognised in
law. I Never accept an invoice with that clause, even in the open
market. The clause must be cancelled or I will not buy the product.
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