BBCE Set run

BBCE is selling a set run of mid grade baseball sets 1954 - 1975 ish. I just bought a 1958 Topps Set, and wanted to give Steve a shout-out for great customer service.
BTW, if anyone has a centered Maris RC in a PSA 5 or better, I'm in the market.
BTW, if anyone has a centered Maris RC in a PSA 5 or better, I'm in the market.
Kiss me once, shame on you.
Kiss me twice.....let's party.
Kiss me twice.....let's party.
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Comments
James
Name here does not matter: What is your website?
Baseball Card Exchange: Name here does not matter, I'm sure you'll be able to figure it out.
<< <i>Who runs their facebook page? Saw this on it yesterday as a response to their posting about these baseball sets. Not so great customer service unless making a potential customer feel stupid on a public forum is considered good customer service.
Name here does not matter: What is your website?
Baseball Card Exchange: Name here does not matter, I'm sure you'll be able to figure it out. >>
The box where "What is your website?" was typed is dangerously close to their website link/address. They probably thought someone was messing with them.
This is kind of a running joke on our Facebook. Someone has asked once before and it was in jest. Now others ask occasionally the same thing, just to keep the joke going.
I guess now, we wouldn't know the difference if someone was really asking, or it was someone running with the lasting joke theme.
However, I guess if you are on Facebook, you have a computer and internet access, so the web address probably is plastered all over the page!
<< <i>Sometimes sarcasm and tongue-in-cheek doesn't come out so good on a keyboard.
This is kind of a running joke on our Facebook. Someone has asked once before and it was in jest. Now others ask occasionally the same thing, just to keep the joke going.
I guess now, we wouldn't know the difference if someone was really asking, or it was someone running with the lasting joke theme.
However, I guess if you are on Facebook, you have a computer and internet access, so the web address probably is plastered all over the page! >>
Having not known this is a running joke - and I read every Facebook update from you guys - I can say that the response highlighted above came across really poorly. When in doubt, best to not use sarcasm or at least punctuate it with a
<< <i>Sometimes sarcasm and tongue-in-cheek doesn't come out so good on a keyboard.
This is kind of a running joke on our Facebook. Someone has asked once before and it was in jest. Now others ask occasionally the same thing, just to keep the joke going.
I guess now, we wouldn't know the difference if someone was really asking, or it was someone running with the lasting joke theme.
However, I guess if you are on Facebook, you have a computer and internet access, so the web address probably is plastered all over the page! >>
For a running joke I would have seen it at least once in the previous four months on your facebook page
'79 and '80 were gone by the time i checked the site
WTB: PSA 1 - PSA 3 Centered, High Eye Appeal 1950's Mantle
<< <i>Sometimes sarcasm and tongue-in-cheek doesn't come out so good on a keyboard.
This is kind of a running joke on our Facebook. Someone has asked once before and it was in jest. Now others ask occasionally the same thing, just to keep the joke going.
I guess now, we wouldn't know the difference if someone was really asking, or it was someone running with the lasting joke theme.
However, I guess if you are on Facebook, you have a computer and internet access, so the web address probably is plastered all over the page! >>
This part of your response once again shows you do not have a clue:
However, I guess if you are on Facebook, you have a computer and internet access, so the web address probably is plastered all over the page!
To all the people that have had their lives disrupted by me, I am sorry.
May God have mercy on my soul.
Steve Hart
<< <i>If you're on the internet - on a company's Facebook page - you can't be asking what their website is. That is so 1997. >>
It's almost like calling someone to ask what their phone # is.
<< <i>Who runs their facebook page? Saw this on it yesterday as a response to their posting about these baseball sets. Not so great customer service unless making a potential customer feel stupid on a public forum is considered good customer service.
Name here does not matter: What is your website?
Baseball Card Exchange: Name here does not matter, I'm sure you'll be able to figure it out. >>
You're barking up the wrong tree...I can't say enough great things about the bbce and what they've done for the hobby industry and my enjoyment/collection...total class act in every way.
<< <i>Who their facebook page? Saw this on it yesterday as a response to their posting about these baseball sets. Not so great customer service unless making a potential customer feel stupid on a public forum is considered good customer service.
Name here does not matter: What is your website?
Baseball Card Exchange: Name here does not matter, I'm sure you'll be able to figure it out. >>
If that's all it takes to make you feel stupid, you must have have been slightly leaning that direction to begin with.
<< <i>I am sorry.
To all the people that have had their lives disrupted by me, I am sorry.
May God have mercy on my soul.
Steve Hart >>
a very un-Steve like response indeed. OMEN OMEN OMEN!
<< <i>
<< <i>If you're on the internet - on a company's Facebook page - you can't be asking what their website is. That is so 1997. >>
It's almost like calling someone to ask what their phone # is. >>
I get telemarketers doing it all the time.
Instagram: mattyc_collection
<< <i>Still sounds like an unnecessarily risky move, to potentially let a customer misinterpret something as snide, no matter the monopoly one has. A multi-millionaire might have had a senior moment; not worth the potential risk for some levity, IMO. >>
Most people have become much better at playing internets.
For instance, trolls are a dying breed just because most people no longer get upset at words they read on a web site.