It included our gift card codes and, yes, they work. And then I hung up, hoping it wasn’t some kind of scam, and reassuring myself that I didn’t give away any personal information - I repeated the invoice number given to me, not the order number from my account.Īnd then … 39 minutes later … this arrived in my Inbox. The voicemail said I could leave my name, invoice number and a message confirming or rejecting the order. I called anyway, but got a voicemail system saying that business hours had ended at 4:30 pm CT. I was kinda suspicious because the invoice number she left on voicemail didn’t match the order number that showed in my account. I didn’t get around to returning the call until about 3:15 pm. It was a female calling from “calling to verify recent activity on a account.” Her message included an invoice number and instructions to call back to confirm the order. On Tuesday, at about 11:25 am, I got a voicemail from an unknown number. I figured they might’ve had a ton of orders for this deal, so I waited. I logged in to to check the order, and it still said “Processing” with Monday as the delivery date. I got a notification saying that the order would be processed on Monday and I’d get the e-Gift cards then. I placed an order for two e-Gift cards via, and created a new account there in the process so that I could check on the status of the order. Bargain! Since we don’t store a credit card number in our iTunes accounts, we use gift cards to establish a credit in our accounts and make purchases against those credits. ![]() 19th), I saw on that Walmart was selling $100 iTunes e-Gift cards for just $80. I got a call from Walmart to confirm an order that I placed online. ![]() In 2012, who’s ever heard of any online store calling a customer to confirm an online order … much less the biggest retailer on the planet?īut it’s true.
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