Nervous owner of my first swiss watch

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Everyone is assuming the sales rep was rude and a jerk, but it sounds to me like he was strategically trying to make a sale. "Sorry to tell you that it's a counterfeit. Those resellers have a lot of fakes. But we have the authentic version for sale right here." 馃槣
 
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Lots of assumptions here kids.

Who said the op didn鈥檛 push the issue after being politely declined for information they could not provide?
 
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In my opinion the OP did nothing wrong. While I'm not surprised the OB salesperson acted rudely, that says more about the SA's attitude than the actions of the OP. The SA had a chance to forge a relationship with a potential customer down the line and instead turned the person off. If I was the manager of that OB I would be livid. They aren't selling a commodity product--they are selling luxury goods. Sales are about relationships.

And get off the guy's back about "not doing his research." The watch was a gift. And in order to authenticate the watch he went to people a normal person would assume are experts about Omega watches (the OB). And then he went online and posted on a website that should be visited by some of the most expert Omega enthusiasts in the world.

I say, welcome tarun3232. I hope you enjoy your Seamaster and stick around to post here once in awhile.

It sounds like most people here are saying the same thing, just from different perspectives, so I dont really under stand the second part of your post criticising other commenters.

Yes a good salesperson would and should go absolve and beyond to cultivate a potential future customer (and it sounds like this is the experience other have had). I鈥檝e never worked in sales but unless I was flat out with customers who were spending with me there and then, I like to think this is what I鈥檇 do.

I鈥檓 not actually saying people should always do their own research for a one off modern purchase. What I was saying is that you should pay for the service/sales experience you need. If you鈥檙e confident in spotting fakes etc you can basically buy from anywhere. If you鈥檙e a complete novice and need reassurance that a watch is genuine, you should buy from a dealer you trust 100%. New or secondhand. Buying from one source then taking it to another for verification is relying on the second place going above and beyond to meet your needs, by providing a service they perhaps don鈥檛 actually provide (and almost certainly one you aren鈥檛 paying for).

Taking this further, it may be that some OBs cannot provide this authentication service. I read recently that Tag no longer authenticate watches in their stores (possibly as the modern fakes are so good) and Rolex certainly don鈥檛. Unless you鈥檙e an expert, which most sales staff aren鈥檛, the best way to id fakes is to open the watch up and see the movement. If the OB doesn鈥檛 have a watchmaker on site they can鈥檛 do this.
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Guiding and servicing new owners shuld be good business practise for any retailer. When OP has graduated he may be as crazy as the rest of you and buy 5 speedys, 3 seamasters and a DeVille, IF he was treated well in the Omega store in the first place.

I have no experiece from sales, but isnt this just common sence? Sure they got no obligation to do anything, but if it dont take time from paying customers, why not? Its about basic decency as well, helping others as far as you can and not thinking " whats in it for me".
 
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There's always two sides to a story. It's my experience that the entire picture of any story isn't completely accurate when just one side is presented.
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There's always two sides to a story. It's my experience that the entire picture of any story isn't completely accurate when just one side is presented.