I think it bears repeating, especially for the newer folks.
It's important even if most of your ordering is online, to make good notes with every prep purchase you make.
Simple stuff that will help you reference your order, cut down on consternation and misunderstandings, etc.
Here's an example I might use with abbreviations, etc.
MagazineExpress.com , 9/21, 10 G17 MAGS, 100 Rounds of Elephant Killer 9mm. "Out today" Todd 2:37pm
I can scribble this in a catalog, on a scrap of paper, type it on a wordpad, etc. etc.
If I ever can't remember what I ordered, or when, or from who, I can look at it and realize I ordered 10 G17 mags and 100 rounds of 9mm Elephant Killer rounds from Magazineexpress.com on 9/21 and Todd there told me at 2:37pm that it would go "out today."
Now this info can do several things for you-
1. If your the impatient type, instead of calling them 27 seconds after you ordered asking where it is, you have something to reference. "Todd" told you it would go "out today", so it's Friday, UPS isn't going to move anything on Sat and Sun, so I look and go "OK 3 days UPS from MagExpress to my location, it will probably be here by Wed." Often times if a company doesn't have your email address address you won't get an email tracking number. Also, sometimes a company gets busy and backed up on emailing you a tracking number 35 seconds after your purchase. Get this info to cut down on the impatience factor.
2. It can help you verify what you did and didn't order. Can't tell you how many times in 20 years I've had people say "I didn't get the widget with my order." "Sir, it looks like you didn't order a widget with this order." "Oh I forgot." Often times when we "shop" online or look at catalogs, we look at 50 different products on a website, in a catalog, etc. For me, it's usually budget constraints that keep me from ordering everything I want :( but if I don't write down what it is I actually DO order, I may get confused and think I ordered something I didn't.
3. This info can help you if indeed a real problem does come up.
Most especially now with the plethora of johnny come lately preparedness companies advertising everywhere, it's easy to get confused even to where you even made the purchase from if your not careful.
Back in the late 90's a company entered the market that purposely copied a lot of the products, marketing methods of some of the older companies. So this place advertised a lot of the same products older companies like mine did. At least a half dozen times a month we fielded calls from people asking where their orders were- ORDERS WE NEVER RECEIVED cause they ordered from the other company with similar products!!! We had some "doozeys" also- irate customers that only calmed down when they realized they had NOT in fact ordered from us but from that other place. We wasted a LOT of time researching orders for non existent customers- people that ordered from other companies but did not bother to write down even the basics of WHO they ordered from.
Just this very morning I got an email from a confused lady asking where her food order with the "free stove" was from August! WE HAVE NEVER SOLD STOVES NOR OFFERED "FREE STOVES" WITH FOOD ORDERS!!!
I verified that we indeed had never done business with his gal nor had any order past, present or pending for her, then emailed her back explaining that she had us mixed up with another company. More than likely, she saw our ad on SurvivalBlog and assumed we were the ones she ordered from. I gave her some tips on how to figure out who she ordered from- i.e, check her Credit card and see the name of the company that charged her, etc.
It's very important to keep track of purchases for these reasons as well as to avoid duplicating items where duplicates are not necessary. Yes it's important to HAVE duplicates of certain items, but sometimes the money for the backup water filter is better spent on food storage at that time, etc. So keeping track of your purchases can help you make the correct purchases for your budget at that particular time.
Keeping a small notebook or a wordpad file with your prep purchases on it will help you avoid a lot of problems and a lot of wasted time and effort.
Anyone else got any purchasing tips?
Lowdown3
It's important even if most of your ordering is online, to make good notes with every prep purchase you make.
Simple stuff that will help you reference your order, cut down on consternation and misunderstandings, etc.
Here's an example I might use with abbreviations, etc.
MagazineExpress.com , 9/21, 10 G17 MAGS, 100 Rounds of Elephant Killer 9mm. "Out today" Todd 2:37pm
I can scribble this in a catalog, on a scrap of paper, type it on a wordpad, etc. etc.
If I ever can't remember what I ordered, or when, or from who, I can look at it and realize I ordered 10 G17 mags and 100 rounds of 9mm Elephant Killer rounds from Magazineexpress.com on 9/21 and Todd there told me at 2:37pm that it would go "out today."
Now this info can do several things for you-
1. If your the impatient type, instead of calling them 27 seconds after you ordered asking where it is, you have something to reference. "Todd" told you it would go "out today", so it's Friday, UPS isn't going to move anything on Sat and Sun, so I look and go "OK 3 days UPS from MagExpress to my location, it will probably be here by Wed." Often times if a company doesn't have your email address address you won't get an email tracking number. Also, sometimes a company gets busy and backed up on emailing you a tracking number 35 seconds after your purchase. Get this info to cut down on the impatience factor.
2. It can help you verify what you did and didn't order. Can't tell you how many times in 20 years I've had people say "I didn't get the widget with my order." "Sir, it looks like you didn't order a widget with this order." "Oh I forgot." Often times when we "shop" online or look at catalogs, we look at 50 different products on a website, in a catalog, etc. For me, it's usually budget constraints that keep me from ordering everything I want :( but if I don't write down what it is I actually DO order, I may get confused and think I ordered something I didn't.
3. This info can help you if indeed a real problem does come up.
Most especially now with the plethora of johnny come lately preparedness companies advertising everywhere, it's easy to get confused even to where you even made the purchase from if your not careful.
Back in the late 90's a company entered the market that purposely copied a lot of the products, marketing methods of some of the older companies. So this place advertised a lot of the same products older companies like mine did. At least a half dozen times a month we fielded calls from people asking where their orders were- ORDERS WE NEVER RECEIVED cause they ordered from the other company with similar products!!! We had some "doozeys" also- irate customers that only calmed down when they realized they had NOT in fact ordered from us but from that other place. We wasted a LOT of time researching orders for non existent customers- people that ordered from other companies but did not bother to write down even the basics of WHO they ordered from.
Just this very morning I got an email from a confused lady asking where her food order with the "free stove" was from August! WE HAVE NEVER SOLD STOVES NOR OFFERED "FREE STOVES" WITH FOOD ORDERS!!!
I verified that we indeed had never done business with his gal nor had any order past, present or pending for her, then emailed her back explaining that she had us mixed up with another company. More than likely, she saw our ad on SurvivalBlog and assumed we were the ones she ordered from. I gave her some tips on how to figure out who she ordered from- i.e, check her Credit card and see the name of the company that charged her, etc.
It's very important to keep track of purchases for these reasons as well as to avoid duplicating items where duplicates are not necessary. Yes it's important to HAVE duplicates of certain items, but sometimes the money for the backup water filter is better spent on food storage at that time, etc. So keeping track of your purchases can help you make the correct purchases for your budget at that particular time.
Keeping a small notebook or a wordpad file with your prep purchases on it will help you avoid a lot of problems and a lot of wasted time and effort.
Anyone else got any purchasing tips?
Lowdown3
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