Fair to believe they are watch experts upon reading this?
No, I wouldn't not use that information to consider them experts. Remember, Joma is an online retailer. This is their website:
Yes, their most moved product is probably watches but they do not say they are "experts." They sell clothing, pens, other accessories, shoes, beauty supplies, and more. Because of this, I would never consider them experts but just an online store that specializes in clothing/accessories. For them to make the amount you suggested, that would imply they move a literal ton of inventory. Do you really suspect they have someone inspect every individual item? Absolutely not. They might have 100 of the watch you bought for sale. Unfortunately you happened to get a defective one. What you linked to me is their service center. That service center only equates to a very small percentage of the overall Joma staff and remember, those people ONLY service watches that are returned to them/warranty. They do
not service/inspect every watch that enters the warehouse. That's highly unrealistic. This is Joma's primary staff- Warehouse workers that receive shipments and ship out. They move pallets to their respective locations. Photographers. Lets say Joma has 100 of a specific watch. The photographer will only photograph one and use those images to advertise all 100 of the same watch. This mean the watch you ordered, likely was unloaded from a truck and placed on a rack until a picker grabbed it and placed it on a truck for shipment. Editors will edit those images and pass them off to the developers who will list them for sale. Other back end developers to make sure the site runs smooth. A call center to handle orders, issues, whatever. And other people like managers. It's very likely that none of these people are the experts you'd like them to be and even more unlikely they are even into the hobby. It's an online retailer not a Rolex AD. If you called in and asked for specifics of a watch, the person on the other end is just looking at the same info you are. How do I know this? I have worked for a very large online retailer for outdoor goods/camping. None of us were experts and I often don't go camping, though I have in the past. Think of Amazon- Do you think Amazon inspects every item they receive before they ship it out? How many of those items get returned because of damage/defect? It doesn't always happen but it does sometimes happen. Joma operates the same way. You unfortunately fell into the "sometimes" category. I sympathize with you. It sucks to be on your end but we have all been on your end at one point in our life. Just as if it were me, I would hope you get your money back. Please remember however, Joma are not who you are making them out to be (highly qualified experts). They are just an online retailer.
If JS only sells to seasoned buyers who already know the unwritten "rules of the game," they should post an appropriate warning so average buyers like me (I suspect the vast majority of their customers) stay away from their website. Otherwise, if they expect an average, non-expert buyer to take a certain course of action if the watch hands are not moving, shouldn't they post appropriate instructions on their website? Had they told me to video-record when I opened the box, or contact the seller as "the very first thing" (
@Dan S) if the watch hands were not moving, I would have certainly done so. They did not.
We only become "seasoned" after going through what you have. We learn from our mistakes and are able to help others from them. What you listed in this is just common sense. That's not to be rude either. If they listed out every individual defect for a customer to watch out for, they would have an instruction PDF as thick as the Bible. That is why they use the blanket statement "damage" and "defect." If you receive something that is defective as in the hands aren't moving, they expect you to call them. The second you take action into your own hands by fixing it, they are no longer responsible. That is why they have their own service center. Yes, it's an inconvenience for you but that is also the risk of buying online. You might get a 10/10 order but you might also get a 4/10 order and need to send it back. You don't NEED to video yourself opening the box. I used that example because you said you have witnesses. Joma would have believed you if you called immediately and said the watch was DOA. You wouldn't need to prove it. You would just need to say it. You can tell us that you are in the right and Joma is in the wrong until you are blue in the face and pass out, but ultimately you did void their return policy by opening up the watch. Regardless of how qualified the person was, you still opened up the watch. That takes the watch from "new" to "used." Just like if I were to buy a new car, remove the hood, and put it back on: The dealership would tell me the car was used. Like I have said, you can keep fighting with them. Maybe you will win. Maybe not.