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03-16-2016 06:03 PM
In case anyone still misunderstands the concept, when you make a purchase (I'm going to use smile.amazon.com as the example) you select a charity and Amazon donates a portion of your sale amount to the charity you chose. You are not directly donating to that charity. If an items cost $40, you are paying $40 whether or chose a charity or not. It's Amazon who is getting less from the sale of the item, not you.
03-16-2016 06:32 PM
@karlam wrote:In case anyone still misunderstands the concept, when you make a purchase (I'm going to use smile.amazon.com as the example) you select a charity and Amazon donates a portion of your sale amount to the charity you chose. You are not directly donating to that charity. If an items cost $40, you are paying $40 whether or chose a charity or not. It's Amazon who is getting less from the sale of the item, not you.
Thank you, I should have explained it better.![]()
03-16-2016 06:45 PM
So shop at Amazon. Why people think they should tell people how to spend their money is beyond me.
I'm a Drs. without borders myself.
03-16-2016 06:54 PM
I donate to Service Dog Project via Amazon Smile . . . it's a great idea and I wish QVC would look into doing something like this.
03-16-2016 07:08 PM - edited 03-16-2016 07:11 PM
@eddyandme wrote:
@karlam wrote:In case anyone still misunderstands the concept, when you make a purchase (I'm going to use smile.amazon.com as the example) you select a charity and Amazon donates a portion of your sale amount to the charity you chose. You are not directly donating to that charity. If an items cost $40, you are paying $40 whether or chose a charity or not. It's Amazon who is getting less from the sale of the item, not you.
Thank you, I should have explained it better.
Yeah. I could/should have worded my response better.
You would have the option of having a portion of the proceeds from your purchase go to one of several charities made available by the seller.
I don't understand those who object to this as an option available. No different than any other option- choice of items to buy, colors, sizes, where to ship, gift or not, etc., etc., etc...
"I contend that we are both atheists . I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours." Stephen Henry Roberts
03-16-2016 07:32 PM
@MRSTH wrote:
@eddyandme wrote:
@karlam wrote:In case anyone still misunderstands the concept, when you make a purchase (I'm going to use smile.amazon.com as the example) you select a charity and Amazon donates a portion of your sale amount to the charity you chose. You are not directly donating to that charity. If an items cost $40, you are paying $40 whether or chose a charity or not. It's Amazon who is getting less from the sale of the item, not you.
Thank you, I should have explained it better.
Yeah. I could/should have worded my response better.
You would have the option of having a portion of the proceeds from your purchase go to one of several charities made available by the seller.
I don't understand those who object to this as an option available. No different than any other option- choice of items to buy, colors, sizes, where to ship, gift or not, etc., etc., etc...
"I contend that we are both atheists . I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours." Stephen Henry Roberts
You perfectly explained to them that it doesn't cost them anything 'cause the percentage donated comes from QVC's profits and that's why they can claim it - it's an "expense" for QVC and has no affect on the cost of the product, otherwise it would not be tax deductible for the Q! And, the ones against it don't have to elect it and it would have no "ill-effects" on them. Guess it's just different strokes for different folks. But, I do think it would please many Q customers and encourage some of us to shop the Q!
03-16-2016 07:35 PM
Donayion is a good thing. We both agree with that and we both know QVC makes donations already. What immediately comes to my mind is the Hamptons event every summer, but I seriously doubt that's all they donate.
As for whether they win. they win only if they get a CREDIT on their taxes for the whole dollar: I think they get a deduction and I have no idea how corporate taxes work so I don't know what that deduction is worth to them.
For me, I give to what I want to give. If I already wanted to buy something that had a donation attached, I'd buy. But I never buy just because there's a donation attached. I've never tried to buy anything from the Hamptons event - probably wouldn't even watch it if I didn't live on Long Island. As it is, I'm glad they donate, but I'm pretty much not interested in my donating via buying things. I don't even like to buy Girl Scouts cookies!
03-16-2016 07:55 PM
The point is you don't have to even consider "donation" when shopping. It's only for those of us who'd like to would sign-up for it, and, for some us of us it would encourage us to shop here, It has no effect on anyone who doesn't care for it: no one would know who wants a portion of the Q's proceeds, however small, donated to a cause they believe in and those who don't. For QVC, it's not only a tax deduction, but good PR/customer satisfaction. Companies do various things to attract customers. new and old, e.g., easypay (which is also elective), free shipping, membership with benefits (Amazon Prime, for example) and this option would probably attract some customers to their site. This wouldn't be "hyped" like the Hamptions event, it would be a private choice on your personal account; and, wouldn't be "pushed" like Girl Scout cookies (though I have sold/bought many in my lifetime!) it would be private - only QVC and the charity would know and the charity wouldn't even know whose purchases contributed because QVC would be the donor.
03-18-2016 09:27 PM
@millieshops wrote:Donayion is a good thing. We both agree with that and we both know QVC makes donations already. What immediately comes to my mind is the Hamptons event every summer, but I seriously doubt that's all they donate.
And there's the being FFANY event for breask cancer in October.
I'm fine with what QVC does. I give to the charities I want to give to on my own. QVC is generous in its own way I guess. I don't think a company needs to do this other than what QVC is already doing. If you want to give to a charity, just give and take the tax deduction.
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