DumpsterFireHottub

joined 1 day ago
[–] DumpsterFireHottub@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I am leaning towards just pushing back on this and forcing my boss to explain how it is not fraud. Thankfully, my name is rarely attached to the quotes. I just build them, but it's the sales rep name that goes on it.

I appreciate your input!

[–] DumpsterFireHottub@lemmy.world 19 points 1 day ago (11 children)

Good advice. I did start bcc'ing my personal email when talking about this.

[–] DumpsterFireHottub@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Sorry. We configure the devices and provide ongoing support for them. To my understanding, the vendor doesn't even sell the extra feature any more. I think they've replaced it with something else. But I think the short answer to your question is that there would be no way to have the vendor implement the feature without the customer knowing and that would lead the customer to find out they didn't have it in the first place.

[–] DumpsterFireHottub@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

They decided that theyll just tell me what needs to go on the quotes and what price to set it at and then I do that. Most of the things I price out have prices defined for them already. I'm really just a dumb middle man in this process.

The fact that the customer might withdrawal I think is why he's afraid to just be upfront with them on it.

I'd just say to think carefully about what is really your responsibility and what isn't.

That seems fair, and is more or less the position my coworker took...still leaves a bad taste in my mouth.

[–] DumpsterFireHottub@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

I think only if they went directly to the vendor we're partnered with for the product, but Im pretty sure that vendor requires customers to go through a partner like us.

 

I work for a small company, in the United States. Part of my duties is building out quotes for products and services our company sells. I'm trying to avoid being overly specific, but basically I have been asked to quote out a product we often sell, but to also include in the quote a feature which out company cannot actually provide. The customer has several of the item I am supposed to quote already and believes that they have the additional feature on all of the existing devices, so expects to see it on this quote for their new site.

I have brought up with my boss in the past that we have not implemented the additional feature and to the best of my knowledge we can't. He assured me he was looking at addressing that. Today, after receiving the request for this new quote, I asked my boss about it, he said he still hasn't come up with a plan to address the issue, but wants me to move forward with pricing it out anyway.

It would be a big hit to our company if the customer left us, but I struggle to see how what my company is doing here isn't fraud. I'm not really comfortable with doing this, but my relationship with management is already strained and I wasn't really looking to create any more waves at the moment.

Are there good resources I could look to to determine if this would constitute fraud from a legal perspective? Has anyone here ever been in a similar situation?

I'm looking for another job, but don't have anything lined up yet, so nervous about doing (or not doing) something that would get me fired, but Im not comfortable with what appears to me to be dishonest at best and fraudulent at worst.

Edit: wanted to add that to the best of my knowledge, we aren't selling that additional feature to anyone else at the moment. I think my boss is just afraid of this customer in particular finding out since they've already been sold the feature and they're a larger customer.

Edit 2: thanks everyone for the advice. It is much appreciated. I've got a lot of thinking to do tonight.