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Unintended Perk of the Online Mattress Boom: Never-Ending Free Trials (wsj.com) 270

Dozens of bedding venders such as Casper and Tuft & Needle offer generous return policies. Life hackers are taking advantage. From a report: Over the course of 15 months, Mr. Bir slept on five different mattresses, each one purchased and returned consecutively using the free-trial policies of dozens of bed-in-a-box startups. It all began in 2016, when Mr. Bir, a new arrival to New York City, was uncertain about how long he would stay, and in need of a cheap short-term sleeping surface. "I didn't have the intention of churning through so many," said Mr. Bir, 31, a technical architect at Slack Technologies. What began as a makeshift solution soon grew into an elaborate scheme, calculated to stretch the trials as far as they would go. "You could literally do this and never pay for a mattress," he realized. Online mattress sales are booming in the U.S. The success of direct-to-consumer services like Casper Sleep Inc. and Tuft & Needle, which deliver neatly boxed mattresses to consumers' doors, has spawned hundreds of copycats. To entice shoppers who would otherwise prefer to test the firmness of the mattress in the showroom, many of these online upstarts offer free home trials that can run for as long as a year. The customer typically pays for the mattress up front and gets a full refund if the mattress is returned before the cutoff.

For consumers like Mr. Bir, the implications were obvious: a virtually limitless supply of brand-new mattresses that, other than one's dignity, cost nothing -- that is, as long as they remember to return the mattresses in time. That's the rub. Two years ago, Lily Liu-Krason, a 26-year-old data scientist living in New York, found herself overwhelmed by the sheer number of mattress options available to her, so she followed a colleague's suggestion that she sign up for several of the free trials. Ms. Liu-Krason splurged on Casper's $149 same-day delivery and installation service, thinking that she would return her roughly $800 mattress before the 100-night free trial period ended, at which point she would start a free trial with another mattress maker.

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Unintended Perk of the Online Mattress Boom: Never-Ending Free Trials

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  • .... and that's how the world works: we get what we want and everybody else is on their own.

    I vote for enlightened self-interest.... it's not always pretty but it's a sure sight better than socialism
    • by Jfetjunky ( 4359471 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:17AM (#59570210)
      Came here to post that pretty much exactly. Yeah, they definitely set it up to allow this, but if enough people start doing it, I'm sure it'll be shut down. The big box stores will thank you when the operating model makes direct sales too hard and continue with their asinine markup.
      • by Train0987 ( 1059246 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:25AM (#59570240)

        That "asinine markup" is a direct result of scams like this and the assholes who encourage them.

      • by arglebargle_xiv ( 2212710 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @10:51AM (#59570618)

        Life hackers are taking advantage.

        That's certainly a... novel term for what they're doing. Sort of like saying "The IRS regulations contain loopholes in various places, life hackers are taking advantage to avoid paying taxes", or "Some people don't have burglar alarms on their houses, life hackers are taking advantage to acquire new large-screen TVs and laptops".

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward
          Right now I'm sleeping on a trio of 2ftx3ft 3in deep foam cushion pads covered in a 6ftx3ft 2in memory foam topper, held together on the floor by a twin size fitted sheet. Total cost was about $90, and while it's not the greatest, it's pretty darned cozy for the price if you're on a budget and moving between places like I am.

          Building your own mattress from pads from the arts & crafts section when you can't afford a real bed, that's a lifehack. These people aren't 'lifehackers' they're just leeches t
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by jbmartin6 ( 1232050 )
      Huh? We do have nice things, such as the opportunity to return a mattress if it isn't quite right or otherwise a poor fit. If Mr Bir et al were such a problem the mattress companies would not be offering such a sweet deal. Very likely the company finds the benefits of their policy far outweigh the costs of a few leeches.
      • Very likely the company finds the benefits of their policy far outweigh the costs of a few leeches.

        Your underlying assumption is that the number of leeches remains low compared to the number of standard customers. However, as we have seen in the past, the number of people who abuse a system generally goes up, and the system gets changed - ruining it for everyone. (See L.L. Bean and REI)

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        More likely the company is just as unethical as the people doing this. They will take that mattress, already sold for 20x what it costs to make, refurb it and sell it as new again.

        New cover and out out goes again.

        • More likely, they'll toss it into a landfill -- probably cheaper than refurbishment and less of a risk of liability for spreading bedbugs and other fun critters.
        • by hawk ( 1151 )

          I can't speak for the others, but Avocado green upped their return period from 100 days to a year recently, and claims that they get so few back that they don't have them sent back, but instead donate to local charities.

          I'm planning on buying one on their next good sale (I missed by one day this month!)

          And since I'm judging by CR's ratings (the nearest demo is over 300 miles away), I wouldn't consider it without the return policy (although I'm sure not sleeping on it for a year if I don't like it!)

    • >".... and that's how the world works: we get what we want and everybody else is on their own. "

      That is how the world works for the unethical, yes. Many people are not that way. The question is- why are generations becoming more and more unethical? I have lots of theories- most of them revolve around the deterioration of the family and education system.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @11:28AM (#59570758) Homepage Journal

        It's probably the realisation that the people promoting the ethics don't live by them and are actually just trying to get you to screw yourself for their benefit.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by markdavis ( 642305 )

          >"It's probably the realisation that the people promoting the ethics don't live by them and are actually just trying to get you to screw yourself for their benefit."

          That is very cynical. Many, many people who promote ethical lifestyles do, indeed, live by them. Or at least try to, the best they can. Traditionally, ethics (and morality, values, self-control, and responsibility) were taught by involved parents and often through their religious involvement. As I previously mentioned, the breakdown of fa

      • by Ly4 ( 2353328 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @12:06PM (#59570884)

        why are generations becoming more and more unethical?

        Like the guy said: The children now love luxury; they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise.

        The guy was Socrates, but I'm sure it still applies ... [bartleby.com]

      • The question is- why are generations becoming more and more unethical?

        What reason do we have to believe that they are? Your question might not have an answer, or worse, you might end up having to explain why generations are getting more ethical (also hard to believe, but possible). I suspect that you won't find any evidence that even faintly suggests peoples' ethics are significantly changing at all.

  • Irresponsible (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:12AM (#59570194)

    Do you have any idea how much waste this creates? Just because you can take advantage of something doesn't mean you should

    • It won't be wasted. It will be brushed down and sold as new again. That's why I wouldn't ever buy a matress from a mail order outfit.
      • by geekoid ( 135745 )

        No, they won't
        A) It's a crime.
        B) Most importantly: It's a huge liability.

        I wont buy one because I want to try my mattress first, and sending these back are often a pain in the ass.
        AND I like having the company the sells me a mattresses dispose my old one.

    • I was thinking the same exact thing. They can't, so far as I know, re-sell those 'used' mattresses. There's a small chance they can 'sterilize' them, but then they can't sell them as 'new', they have to be sold as 'used' or 'refurbished' or somesuch, basically selling them at a major loss. Doing what's described in this article is not just 'irresponsible', it's nigh-unto fraud, really, 'purchasing' a mattress on a try-before-you-buy policiy with no intention of actually keeping it.
      • Like people who buy expensive clothes, wear them for an occasion and then return them because they "don't fit". This and other 'victimless crimes' seem very popular with a certain type of person - not quite sociopathic but similar imho
  • by Ronin Developer ( 67677 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:16AM (#59570204)

    If I were a mattress company, I'd seriously be thinking about changing my policy...maybe, share names with other companies to prevent abuse. At the very least, keep a log of customers and verify they haven't pulled the scam with them in the past. I'm sure they could strike a deal with the credit bureaus to check CC numbers with previous customers against a new one presented to them.

    Nobody wants to buy a used mattress. If they resell the mattress as pre-used, do they mark them as such and charge a lower rate? No.

    No. They hope people will just forget about the return date and keep the mattress. Those that get returned are probably destroyed or donated to a charity and they get the write-off. I am hard pressed to believe that a mattress costs anywhere near $800 to make. Maybe, $100. The rest of just "padding" (pun intended) as a customer won't buy another for 5-10 years.

    • So you are suggesting blacklisting, sorry mattress-blacklisting.

      I'm actually cool with that (reduce "try it" time frames).

      My box mattress is awesome, and was inexpensive. Add a weighted blanket (where have these been all my life?), and you don't fall to sleep, sleep hits you.

  • by weilawei ( 897823 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:17AM (#59570206)

    But you trade your time for doing this for time doing other things. Let's say it's a money issue, and the mattess is $800. A mattress lasts...shoot, I don't know. I hate coil mattresses and have had the same solid cotton futon for over 30 years now.

    But let's say it lasts 10 years. You buy maybe 5 in a lifetime, then. That's $4000. If I make $20,000/yr, that's 80 hours of my labor per mattress, assuming I don't pay any taxes on income (yeah, right). 2 weeks of labor per decade, 10 weeks in all.

    If I make $50,000/yr, that's 32 hours of my labor per mattress. 3 days of work every decade, 3 weeks in all.

    If I make $100,000/yr, that's 16 hours of my labor per mattress. We're already into the range where I lose an equivalent amount of money just by taking time off to have it delivered and removed.

    So, yes, that may make sense for you, but it's a lot of extra work and hidden costs to you personally.

  • by Sumguy2436 ( 6186944 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:17AM (#59570208)

    Mr. Bir isn't a consumer. He's a leech, a scammer.

    Legitimate consumers and the environment have to pay for his exploitative behavior.

  • by Train0987 ( 1059246 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:17AM (#59570212)

    This guy is a scumbag running a scam, and he's being celebrated? He's stealing from retailers and creating a huge amount of waste.

    • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @10:05AM (#59570396) Journal

      Ultimately they HAVE to issue 'free trials' because you have no ability in an online store to 'just go lay on it and see how it feels' like you do in an old fashioned bricks and mortar store.

      So to sell online, they don't even (really) have the economic recourse of ending the free trials.

      He's literally exploiting a weakness in ecommerce generally - and one that the ENTIRE INDUSTRY is vulnerable to. All ecommerce stores generate massive amounts of "basically perfect products" waste...some small % donate it, but most destroy it for fear of creating a grey-market that undercuts they primary sales (ie Burberry, IIRC).

      My only thought is that perhaps these stores can sell the "only used for a free trial period" mattresses for a discount, but even then I sort of doubt it because the discount I PERSONALLY would need to sleep on someone's short-use mattress that could have been used for all sorts of gross things, probably exceeds their profit margin.

      I don't see a way out of this, as long as ecommerce is a thing, nor a consistent logical way to punish him that wouldn't be collusive practices between businesses (and likely held to be anticompetitive).

      • The subject of the article has no intention of paying for the product he is ordering, and he's openly bragging about it. At best the mattress companies should sue the shit out of him to make an example. That's a good way to minimize that "weakness" and curb future exploitation.

      • by tsqr ( 808554 )

        So to sell online, they don't even (really) have the economic recourse of ending the free trials.

        True, but they could make the trial period much shorter; that would make daisey-chaining trials a lot more inconvenient. Who needs more than two weeks to evaluate a mattress?

    • This is a America buddy. Screwing people over and then leaving a big stinking mess behind for some one else to clean up is the basis of our economy.

      The weird part is some one wrote an article about it being done on such a pedestrian scale.

      • by jm007 ( 746228 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @10:34AM (#59570546)
        this isn't about America.... it's humanity and it's the same worldwide

        we're 99.9% animal and we act like it; no different than a lion that sees a easy mark, takes it down, eats what it wants and then just walks away; doesn't clean up the mess nor let the prey's kin know nor even thinks about it ever again; and yet nobody thinks the lion is a piece of shit for not 'caring' for anything but itself

        the expectation that humans will act above our base instincts is where our disappointments come from; once I realized that civilization is nothing more than a thin veneer and just below that is a feral animal, things make much more sense

        as a whole, we're just animals pretending to be otherwise
    • This guy is a scumbag running a scam when he really has no reason to with the amount of money he's making. I hope Slack fires him. https://www.linkedin.com/in/ka... [linkedin.com]

    • This guy is a scumbag running a scam..
      So, really, he's a scambag?
  • That's not a perk (Score:3, Insightful)

    by isj ( 453011 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:18AM (#59570216) Homepage

    That's intentional abuse of the companies' time and money.

  • by localroger ( 258128 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:36AM (#59570278) Homepage
    Considering that you can get a perfectly good double mattress from the lower end of this market for around $130, the time and effort wasted with the returns have to be worth more than just buying a cheaper mattress and keeping it.
    • by Pascoea ( 968200 )
      $130 seems low. I've bought super cheap mattresses before, and man were they terrible. I suspect the market has improved a little bit, but from what I've experienced you have to spend about 3-400 for something worth sleeping on.
      • $130 seems low. I've bought super cheap mattresses before, and man were they terrible. I suspect the market has improved a little bit, but from what I've experienced you have to spend about 3-400 for something worth sleeping on.

        After years of back pain, I spent $6000 on the best mattress I could find. Worth every penny, compared to back surgery.

    • Exactly. When TFA states "a virtually limitless supply of brand-new mattresses that, other than one's dignity, cost nothing " I had to laugh. It costs a lot more than one's dignity, as in time and effort. Sure if your time isn't worth anything by all means spend it arranging for new mattress trials every few months.
  • who would otherwise prefer to test the firmness of the mattress in the showroom

    You can't even rely on that. Tired of "firm is better", I wanted the softest mattress I could find, and found a soft one in the showroom. When it arrived it was as firm as any other.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      who would otherwise prefer to test the firmness of the mattress in the showroom

      You can't even rely on that. Tired of "firm is better", I wanted the softest mattress I could find, and found a soft one in the showroom. When it arrived it was as firm as any other.

      My parents ended up buying one of those showroom mattresses where 1 side is firmer and the other side soft (to demo the different feels) since they both liked a different level of firmness.

    • who would otherwise prefer to test the firmness of the mattress in the showroom

      You can't even rely on that. Tired of "firm is better", I wanted the softest mattress I could find, and found a soft one in the showroom. When it arrived it was as firm as any other.

      Try a natural latex mattress. Most vendors sell them in layers to allow you to customize to suit you best. For queen and king beds they'll also let you do different layers on each side.

      We have 3 Savvy Rest [savvyrest.com] mattresses (master, kid, guest) with our's being the oldest at around 15 years. A few years ago we took our bed apart for a semi-annual cleaning and found a few of the layers were deteriorating abnormally. Traded emails with them, sent pictures, and they replaced the failing layers at no charge to us (mat

    • fwiw "Chattam & Wells" mattresses are like sleeping on a cloud.
  • by ThomasBHardy ( 827616 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:47AM (#59570316)

    They think they are "lifehackers" but isn't purchasing a product and using it with the prior intent to return it in a used state fraud?

    • by radja ( 58949 )

      no, returning goods after use is a consumer's right.

      • You are morally and ethically bankrupt. He never had any intention of keeping the product.

      • It appears this is the common opinion of immigrants to the US. Land of the free is slowly becoming land of the freeloaders, we are headed for a crash if this keeps up.
    • Its a genetic condition common among descendants of people from the Goldilocks region.

    • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @12:03PM (#59570876)

      >They think they are "lifehackers" but isn't purchasing a product and using it with the prior intent to return it in a used state fraud?"

      Yes, but not in a legal sense. It is the same mentality of people who go into a physical store, look at the products, use a salesperson's time to answer questions and provide a demo... and then leave and order it from some other online vendor. As if none of what was given to them has value. It is clearly unethical. Not illegal. Unethical. And some people apparently have no sense of ethicality, or they do a really good job of rationalizing their unethical behavior to the point they believe they are doing nothing wrong.

      These are warning signs of a society in trouble- and it traces, almost always, back to the disintegration of the nuclear family and parental involvement in teaching morality, values, ethics, and responsibility.

      And there are a lot of people who seem to thing legality defines what is ethical or moral. It doesn't. It is wrong to curse at someone or be rude, or abuse your body... but it is not and should not be illegal. Conversely, it is right to be polite and to help others, but those should not try to be codified into law. Law and government cannot replace what is being lost in the home during the formative years.

    • by hawk ( 1151 )

      not "lifehackers", but "parasites" . . .

      hawk

  • by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:49AM (#59570322) Journal

    Two years ago, Lily Liu-Krason, a 26-year-old data scientist living in New York, found herself overwhelmed by the sheer number of mattress options available to her, so she followed a colleague's suggestion that she sign up for several of the free trials. Ms. Liu-Krason splurged on Casper's $149 same-day delivery and installation service, thinking that she would return her roughly $800 mattress before the 100-night free trial period ended, at which point she would start a free trial with another mattress maker.

    Alas. With no subscription to the Journal, I may never learn the fate of Lily Liu.

    • Iâ(TM)m going to pretend she got ran over and went to hell.

    • by sinij ( 911942 )
      When rejected, these mattresses are discarded at the end of the trial. As such, Lily Liu-Krason is being very environmentally irresponsible despite her social media proclamations of environmental progressiveness.
  • Because if I were a mattress company, I'd be resending the returned mattresses out for more "free" trials, especially to people who are on the "free trial list".

  • by New Account 61 ( 6493676 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:57AM (#59570356)
    If you feel sorry for the companies, read this: https://www.fastcompany.com/30... [fastcompany.com]
  • and I mean that literally. I just ordered a new mattress which arrived vacuum-packed. Cut it open, and the 'new foam' smell is so bad it's been parked in my hallway for 1.5 weeks now.

  • by Dallas May ( 4891515 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @10:19AM (#59570472)

    ... You can waste hours and hours of your life trying to save a few hundred dollars on a mattress.

  • Luggage, too (Score:4, Interesting)

    by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @10:21AM (#59570482) Journal

    I know someone who does this with luggage. He'll buy a really nice set of luggage ($1000 and up) and go on a family vacation with it. When they come back he returns the luggage for a refund.

    The same guy also does this at Best Buy and Sears with large appliances (washers, dishwashers, etc), except it's even scummier behavior.

    He buys dishwasher and has it installed. A week later he calls with a bullshit complaint as to why he doesn't want it. They come and remove it.

    In the meantime, though, he's placed a few small marks on the item in places where they don't show, using a magic marker.

    The item goes back, and he heads to the Best Buy Outlet Store where they send all the returned and one-off items. He examines them and finds the one he marked, and then buys it for ~%50 off the original price or so.

    In the end, he gets a $500 dishwasher or dryer for ~$250 or so.

    Is it legal to do this? Maybe, but there's no doubt it's sleazy behavior.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      I know someone who does this with luggage. He'll buy a really nice set of luggage ($1000 and up) and go on a family vacation with it. When they come back he returns the luggage for a refund.

      Honestly, if you don't really care about looks, the best thing you can do for cost/protection is to use a hardsided, rolling cooler as your luggage. Those things are much more durable than your average luggage, have no zippers to get snagged/ripped, and if you seal it up real good with tape it's more or less waterproof. If you've got a little more money to spare you can buy yourself some Pelican cases.

  • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Monday December 30, 2019 @10:21AM (#59570484)
    How nice of him to out himself. I guess he doesn't realize that if he's taking advantage of a contract with absolutely no intention of honoring his side of the bargain, there's a word for that and that word is fraud. Thanks to the Streisand effect he may be getting some attention from legal departments soon. If you're doing something dodgy it's best to keep your mouth firmly shut.
  • by BenJeremy ( 181303 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @10:59AM (#59570646)

    They still charge to deliver and install. Sure, I can get a new mattress every 100 days, but it still seems prohibitively expensive to me when I have to pay delivery and installation. It means I'm paying almost $50 a month for the free trial.

    Some "Life Hackers" outsmart themselves with their "cleverness"

  • Sloopers!

  • Those "free trial" mattresses can't be re-sold after 100 days, 365 days, or however long the trial lasts. This means that perfectly good mattresses are being tossed into landfills. Yay throw-away society.
  • vs. a proper box spring and coil spring mattress that will last you at least half a lifetime, who's scamming who here?
  • The real question is are these mattresses any good? You can't trust online reviews anymore.

  • by mschuyler ( 197441 ) on Monday December 30, 2019 @09:37PM (#59572376) Homepage Journal

    So let's say you "take advantage" of this "incredible life hack." Every few months you haul in yet anther mattress and install it while making sure the old mattress gets packed up and shipped off in time for the deadline. Have you actually ever hauled a mattress through a house, maybe up and down stairs, and replaced it? Since you must get the new one in before the old one goes you inevitably have the old one sitting around for awhile before you can get it shipped off--even if it's free. That's a lot of work and a logistical nightmare, but if you think you are being clever doing it, knock yourself out, bro.

  • by twocows ( 1216842 ) on Tuesday December 31, 2019 @01:14PM (#59574108)
    I see a lot of comments arguing about whether he's taking advantage of these companies... I think the bigger question is, is it really even worth the hassle of unpacking and packing, shipping and unloading mattresses every few months just to save the cost of buying a cheap mattress? I guess if you're sufficiently poor and can't get one otherwise it might be, but I'd think that most of the people here are probably in some kind of technology-aligned field where their time is probably worth a lot more than the "savings" they'd get out of something like this.

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