โFeb-18-2020 08:13 AM
โFeb-18-2020 03:38 PM
โFeb-18-2020 03:11 PM
โFeb-18-2020 03:07 PM
โFeb-18-2020 03:04 PM
bpounds wrote:SDcampowneroperator wrote:
The reason we ask to see the card is to verify expiry and that names match. Cant have someone borrow uncles card. That has happened.
That's your privilege. Apparently that extra few bucks is very important to your business model. The guy down the street must be less profit constrained.
I guess I appreciate the hotels that cheerfully want to help me save a very few bucks, instead of looking for any reason to get out of the discount.
I'm sure there are folks who go around just saying they are XXX members. If your bottom line is so thin that you feel you have to weed those out, then I guess you'll need to card everyone. It's the only way to be sure.
โFeb-18-2020 02:12 PM
โFeb-18-2020 02:05 PM
โFeb-18-2020 02:03 PM
bpounds wrote:We see verifying eligibility for a discount as being responsible to the guests who qualify. Good Sam members paid for their membership so why should someone who didn't pay get the benefit? We offer an active duty discount in respect for those who are serving in the military, it would be disrespectful to those service members to offer it to someone who wasn't in the service. Or, to quote the old American Express commercial: "Membership has it's privileges."SDcampowneroperator wrote:
The reason we ask to see the card is to verify expiry and that names match. Cant have someone borrow uncles card. That has happened.
That's your privilege. Apparently that extra few bucks is very important to your business model. The guy down the street must be less profit constrained.
I guess I appreciate the hotels that cheerfully want to help me save a very few bucks, instead of looking for any reason to get out of the discount.
I'm sure there are folks who go around just saying they are XXX members. If your bottom line is so thin that you feel you have to weed those out, then I guess you'll need to card everyone. It's the only way to be sure.
โFeb-18-2020 01:36 PM
โFeb-18-2020 01:24 PM
โFeb-18-2020 01:13 PM
SDcampowneroperator wrote:
The reason we ask to see the card is to verify expiry and that names match. Cant have someone borrow uncles card. That has happened.
โFeb-18-2020 12:45 PM
โFeb-18-2020 12:38 PM
โFeb-18-2020 12:23 PM
bpounds wrote:Really? If I'm a member and expect a discount I *want* to prove it. I don't want non-members to say they are and get my discount. The establishment doesn't know me or anyone else and therefore one's "word" doesn't mean anything.
I don't expect the establishment to quiz me about memberships, or discounts that might apply. I appreciate any clerk that makes an effort to help me save money, but I don't expect that. I will sometimes ask if they honor this or that. All they can say is no.
My experience is more with hotels than RV parks, since I rarely use an RV park, but I expect the experience to be very similar.
If I ask if they have a AAA discount, and they do, I will admit that I resent being asked to see my card. And in fact, I am almost never asked to actually show proof of AAA/AARP/GS, or any other. I can probably count on one hand the number of times that my word on the matter hasn't been satisfactory. It's not that they don't have the right to ask, it's just that 99 other places did not ask, and this one place thinks I am lying about it, which makes them a less enjoyable establishment than those other 99. Not a deal breaker by any stretch, just that it tells me something about the place.
โFeb-18-2020 11:45 AM
โFeb-18-2020 11:05 AM
DrewE wrote:That is how they sell those random, not really wanted, low priced items. Probably some legal issues with just raising the price of an order above the advertised price.
It's the customers responsibility to request applicable discounts. It can be nice to remind them if there's reason to believe they would be eligible, but that's not a requirement on the merchant, just a nice neighborly thing to do.
Possibly one exception I'd suggest would be for the campground to automatically apply a lower total rate for a longer stay than actually requested/used. For instance, if staying six nights at $50 a night and the weekly rate is $275, it seems to me the campground maybe ought to, as a matter of course, use the weekly rate for the six days, possibly without even asking. But even then it is in no way unethical or scummy to charge the posted, agreed-upon rate for the length of the stay.
(Similarly, I think it would be nice if mail order and online merchants that offer free shipping on orders over $x would automatically bump an order up to $x if doing so results in a lower total cost than the actual order plus non-free shipping...or at least offer the option of buying nothing at $.01 per unit, rather than forcing one to add random, not-really-wanted low priced items to bring the total up to the free shipping threshhold.)