🚩 1. “DM for Price”
Why consumers complain:
• No price transparency
• Different prices for different people
• Wastes time
• Creates room for discrimination
Consumer concern: Pricing should be clear and upfront.
🚩 2. “Serious Buyers Only”
What consumers hear:
• “Don’t ask questions.”
• “Don’t compare prices.”
But asking questions is a consumer right, not an unserious behavior.
🚩 3. “No Refund Under Any Circumstance”
This is one of the biggest red flags.
Consumers complain because:
• What if the item is defective?
• What if the wrong item is delivered?
• What if the product was misrepresented?
Blanket “no refund” policies may conflict with consumer protection principles under the FCCPA.
🚩 4. “Payment Confirms Order (No Cancellation)”
Consumers ask:
• What if the vendor delays for weeks?
• What if the product is unavailable?
There must be fairness on both sides.
🚩 5. “Price Is Not Negotiable i.e. Don’t Stress Me”
While sellers can set prices, hostile communication:
• Damages trust
• Discourages questions
• Creates poor customer experience
Respectful engagement is part of ethical business.
🚩 6. “Delivery is not FREE!”
Consumers worry about:
• Hidden charges
• Sudden inflated logistics costs
Transparency should come before payment.
🚩 7. “If You Don’t Like It, Don’t Buy”
Consumers interpret this as:
• Lack of accountability
• Refusal to handle complaints
Healthy markets thrive on accountability.
đźš© 8. Edited Photos vs Reality
Common complaint:
“What I ordered vs What I got.”
Misrepresentation – especially intentional – destroys trust quickly.
🚩 9. “No Physical Store”
Having no physical store is not the problem.
But having:
• No traceable identity
• No business details
• No accountability
– is the problem.
đźš© 10. “Limited Slot – Pay Now!”
Artificial urgency creates pressure and can push consumers into rushed decisions.
Pressure selling is a frequent complaint online.
In Conclusion,
Consumers are not asking for perfection.
They are asking for:
✔️ Transparency
✔️ Fairness
✔️ Respect
✔️ Clear pricing
✔️ Accountability
When multiple people share the same frustration, it signals a systemic issue not just personal preference.
