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- Aug 12, 2015
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Yes had their sale email.On the other hand, thehomebrewcompany UK seem to have a sale on. I filled my basket this morning, came back to it a couple of hours later and found the prices had gone down by 10%. The shopfront has changed, too. I was a bit nervous about that so I called them and they say its kosher. A bag of Minch pale is at a very good price!!!!
I agree this is really inappropriate at a corporate level. It's not even in their interests. If B2B customers stop ordering and the company folds, Young's won't get paid at all!The message from Youngs is a bit rum IMO.
Where there is a commercial dispute, it's a well worn tactic for one company to present a winding up petition against the other to apply pressure to settle a debt. They usually go nowhere because, even if the petition goes to a court hearing, the alleged debtor can show they are sufficiently solvent to pay their debts or there is a genuine dispute over what is owed.
However, publicly insinuating that a business is insolvent is a whole new level. I hope Youngs can back up what they're saying else they can get themselves into a lot of trouble. I went on the Brew2bottle website and Youngs' statement that "stocks are at a minimum" or the "majority [of products] is out of stock" appears to be untrue.
I have no links at all to Brew2bottle but I do like to see fair dealing in business. Publicly calling them out like this is unnecessary.
The message from Youngs is a bit rum IMO.
Where there is a commercial dispute, it's a well worn tactic for one company to present a winding up petition against the other to apply pressure to settle a debt. They usually go nowhere because, even if the petition goes to a court hearing, the alleged debtor can show they are sufficiently solvent to pay their debts or there is a genuine dispute over what is owed.
However, publicly insinuating that a business is insolvent is a whole new level. I hope Youngs can back up what they're saying else they can get themselves into a lot of trouble. I went on the Brew2bottle website and Youngs' statement that "stocks are at a minimum" or the "majority [of products] is out of stock" appears to be untrue.
I have no links at all to Brew2bottle but I do like to see fair dealing in business. Publicly calling them out like this is unnecessary.
Whilst of course I love a bit of drama I do agree it's unprofessional and maybe not the best way to handle the situation. I understand the frustration of getting a client to pay but I don't think I'd do this.I agree this is really inappropriate at a corporate level. It's not even in their interests. If B2B customers stop ordering and the company folds, Young's won't get paid at all!
They also need to make sure everything is factually correct, or it could cost them £££.
I am interested to see what B2B have to say.
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