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I tried Wal-Mart's in-store pickup and and it created more problems than it solved

Sep 23, 2015, 22:57 IST

Walmart department manager Karren Gomes helps stock shelves with school supplies as the retail store prepare for back to school shoppers in San Diego, CaliforniaThomson Reuters

I recently tried Wal-Mart's in-store pickup option for an online order, and I was shocked by how inconvenient it was.

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I was in the market for a Fitbit, so I compared prices online and found the lowest price at Walmart.com.

At $78.52, the Walmart.com price was $1 cheaper than Amazon's and more than $20 cheaper than Best Buy's.

So I decided to go with Wal-Mart.

I wanted the Fitbit that same day, but I was afraid that the price would be higher in the stores. (I was right - when I went to pick up my purchase, I walked by the electronics department and saw that it was listed for $99).

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So I made the purchase on Wal-Mart.com last Thursday, and selected the option for in-store pickup.

Wal-Mart sent me an order confirmation immediately that said I would receive another email when my Fitbit was ready for pickup.

I expected it to be ready within minutes. How long could it take for someone to pull the item from shelves?

But more than three hours passed before I got the email saying my order was ready. It was close to 9 p.m. at that point, so I decided to wait until the following day to pick it up.

When I arrived at Wal-Mart on Friday, I was expecting to pick up the Fitbit at the front of the store and be on my way home within minutes.

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Instead, I was directed to a department labeled Walmart.com that was located all the way in the back of the store. (This isn't unusual - according to Wal-Mart's website, the Walmart.com pickup areas are typically located towards the back of stores).

This surprised me. I thought the purpose of the in-store pickup option was convenience.

As I walked through the store, I passed the electronics department and spotted the Fitbit. I decided last minute that I wanted a blue Fitbit instead of the black one I picked out online, so I grabbed the gadget from the shelf and continued walking toward the Walmart.com department, hoping for an easy exchange.

Once there, I stood in line for about 15 minutes. There was only one associate at the register and a customer ahead of me had a problem with his order.

When it was finally my turn, I pulled up the confirmation email on my phone and displayed a bar code for the associate to scan.

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She told me the scanner didn't work, so I read the 13-digit confirmation code aloud to her.

Once she found my order, I asked her if I could exchange it with the Fitbit I pulled from the shelf. It was the same exact product, just in a different color.

She said that the store inventory and Walmart.com inventory are separate, so I would have to get refunded for my online purchase and then go to the front of the store to buy the Fitbit I grabbed from the shelf.

"They are the exact same product," I said. "Why can't I just go home with the one from the shelf?"

She advised me to talk to customer service.

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The color wasn't important enough to me to spend any more time waiting in line in the store, so I decided to just go home - 30 minutes later - with the original Fitbit I had ordered online.

The whole experience was only mildly annoying, but it was enough of an inconvenience to persuade me never to use Wal-Mart's in-store pickup again. And after some research, I discovered that other customers have had similar experiences with Wal-Mart's in-store pickup.

In retrospect, I should have paid the extra $1 to purchase the Fitbit at Amazon and waited an extra day to get it delivered for free to my doorstep.

We reached out to Wal-Mart for this story and will update when we hear back.

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