Last edit by: lowkeyflyer
This is the master thread for all VGC and MCGC sold at Staples.
The previous discussion can be found here.
The VGCs sold at Staples are issued by Metabank and serviced by Blackhawk Network.
The activation code for online purchase comes with the card. Cards purchased at store are activated at check-out.
To activate cards over the phone (without activation codes), call (877) 426-2551 to talk to a rep.
To activate cards over the web, www.giftcardkey.com.
The default PIN number is the last four digits of the card number but can be changed online.
As of 5/12/2014, all known portals are dead.
Earn 5x points with Chase Ink, or Simply Cash for 5% cash back
Buy Visa gift cards (Metabank) at Staples ($200 for $7.95) or the website ($300 for $8.95).
2k Limit per transaction / 10k per day for online. In-store is usually 2k but YMMV
Often times, there are promotions with no or reduced activation fees
The previous discussion can be found here.
The VGCs sold at Staples are issued by Metabank and serviced by Blackhawk Network.
The activation code for online purchase comes with the card. Cards purchased at store are activated at check-out.
To activate cards over the phone (without activation codes), call (877) 426-2551 to talk to a rep.
To activate cards over the web, www.giftcardkey.com.
The default PIN number is the last four digits of the card number but can be changed online.
As of 5/12/2014, all known portals are dead.
Earn 5x points with Chase Ink, or Simply Cash for 5% cash back
Buy Visa gift cards (Metabank) at Staples ($200 for $7.95) or the website ($300 for $8.95).
2k Limit per transaction / 10k per day for online. In-store is usually 2k but YMMV
Often times, there are promotions with no or reduced activation fees
Visa/MasterCard Gift Cards at Staples(2017 onwards)
#1381
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Midwest U.S.A
Programs: Too many to list. Since the early 90's.
Posts: 1,407
I'm surprised there aren't more wiser-than-your-average-manager at office supply stores who realize allowing multiple purchases by good customers (whether it's allowing one 2k purchase at a time or at least one or two single VGC purchases each day by each good customer) simply helps their numbers, which corporate sees. I've seen every stingy manager who greatly limited GC purchases, even of customers willing to show ID and such, sent packing by corporate after a while or their store getting shuttered and then if they did manage keeping their position moved to another location a great distance for them to commute. I had enough of one manager at a different chain, who thought I looked like another GC buyer even though I could prove my name is different but banned me from occasionally buying a few cards, so reported him and the store to corporate and that location was shuttered within a year. Corporate knew I was a multi-business ordering machine, so they weren't too happy and it just put more eyes on that location. I hated to see some of the good employees lose their jobs, but when a couple people rule the roost and act like the GC Gestapo, they don't last long in that location. Maybe I should have said 'soup nazi' as in "no gc for you!"
At a different chain, I even had the employees (while the manager was on break) ask me to help corporate see the light when it came to a bad manager. They were closed within the year. I knew those employees would actually lose their job, not just get a new manager, but also knew they'd be happier in a different business.
At a different chain, I even had the employees (while the manager was on break) ask me to help corporate see the light when it came to a bad manager. They were closed within the year. I knew those employees would actually lose their job, not just get a new manager, but also knew they'd be happier in a different business.
#1382
Join Date: Sep 2009
Posts: 2,805
I'm surprised there aren't more wiser-than-your-average-manager at office supply stores who realize allowing multiple purchases by good customers (whether it's allowing one 2k purchase at a time or at least one or two single VGC purchases each day by each good customer) simply helps their numbers, which corporate sees. I've seen every stingy manager who greatly limited GC purchases, even of customers willing to show ID and such, sent packing by corporate after a while or their store getting shuttered and then if they did manage keeping their position moved to another location a great distance for them to commute. I had enough of one manager at a different chain, who thought I looked like another GC buyer even though I could prove my name is different but banned me from occasionally buying a few cards, so reported him and the store to corporate and that location was shuttered within a year. Corporate knew I was a multi-business ordering machine, so they weren't too happy and it just put more eyes on that location. I hated to see some of the good employees lose their jobs, but when a couple people rule the roost and act like the GC Gestapo, they don't last long in that location. Maybe I should have said 'soup nazi' as in "no gc for you!"
At a different chain, I even had the employees (while the manager was on break) ask me to help corporate see the light when it came to a bad manager. They were closed within the year. I knew those employees would actually lose their job, not just get a new manager, but also knew they'd be happier in a different business.
At a different chain, I even had the employees (while the manager was on break) ask me to help corporate see the light when it came to a bad manager. They were closed within the year. I knew those employees would actually lose their job, not just get a new manager, but also knew they'd be happier in a different business.
#1383
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Midwest U.S.A
Programs: Too many to list. Since the early 90's.
Posts: 1,407
#1387
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 203
I'm surprised there aren't more wiser-than-your-average-manager at office supply stores who realize allowing multiple purchases by good customers (whether it's allowing one 2k purchase at a time or at least one or two single VGC purchases each day by each good customer) simply helps their numbers, which corporate sees. I've seen every stingy manager who greatly limited GC purchases, even of customers willing to show ID and such, sent packing by corporate after a while or their store getting shuttered and then if they did manage keeping their position moved to another location a great distance for them to commute. I had enough of one manager at a different chain, who thought I looked like another GC buyer even though I could prove my name is different but banned me from occasionally buying a few cards, so reported him and the store to corporate and that location was shuttered within a year. Corporate knew I was a multi-business ordering machine, so they weren't too happy and it just put more eyes on that location. I hated to see some of the good employees lose their jobs, but when a couple people rule the roost and act like the GC Gestapo, they don't last long in that location. Maybe I should have said 'soup nazi' as in "no gc for you!"
At a different chain, I even had the employees (while the manager was on break) ask me to help corporate see the light when it came to a bad manager. They were closed within the year. I knew those employees would actually lose their job, not just get a new manager, but also knew they'd be happier in a different business.
At a different chain, I even had the employees (while the manager was on break) ask me to help corporate see the light when it came to a bad manager. They were closed within the year. I knew those employees would actually lose their job, not just get a new manager, but also knew they'd be happier in a different business.
#1388
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Midwest U.S.A
Programs: Too many to list. Since the early 90's.
Posts: 1,407
Not from what I've heard, but it depends on who you're talking to up the chain. For some chains the numbers are used in their quarterly reports. Even if that doesn't matter, it does matter when managers and/or employees act rude to someone that does matter to someone else at the corporate level. Even if you don't know anyone, it only takes a few customers calling to get the wrong kind of attention from corporate (headhunter eyes) on a location, an employee (who may hoard GCs for a buddy) or a manager or manager-on-duty who doesn't treat customers as if they are valued. I actually buy merchandise at the places that I'm allowed to buy GCs when they are on sale. No one loses money (look at HAWK's financials) as long as id is checked properly and common sense prevails. Some companies encourage what they call "point gamers" because they bring business. Those of us who have large available credit and have been at this a while are responsible, pay our pills, and the banks (except for certain weird ones with algorithms that don't actually work well) love us. We invest. The banks or credit unions who treat me as a valued customer get treated well with my business and that means investment managers are happy. It's all good. I started in point gathering programs back in the 90's on my own and have been able to use that for charity, helping needy people go on dream vacations and been able to take my family to places they wanted to go which all brings tourist to those locations and stores. Even the airlines actually make money on your 'free' seat. I'd rather see the glass half full the half empty and appreciate people. We all help people in one way or another with our jobs (of course there are the few cons around that try to ruin things). Peace to my fellow ms'rs and those who create enticing CCs and programs.
#1389
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Florida
Posts: 29,731
Not from what I've heard, but it depends on who you're talking to up the chain. For some chains the numbers are used in their quarterly reports. Even if that doesn't matter, it does matter when managers and/or employees act rude to someone that does matter to someone else at the corporate level. Even if you don't know anyone, it only takes a few customers calling to get the wrong kind of attention from corporate (headhunter eyes) on a location, an employee (who may hoard GCs for a buddy) or a manager or manager-on-duty who doesn't treat customers as if they are valued. I actually buy merchandise at the places that I'm allowed to buy GCs when they are on sale. No one loses money (look at HAWK's financials) as long as id is checked properly and common sense prevails. Some companies encourage what they call "point gamers" because they bring business. Those of us who have large available credit and have been at this a while are responsible, pay our pills, and the banks (except for certain weird ones with algorithms that don't actually work well) love us. We invest. The banks or credit unions who treat me as a valued customer get treated well with my business and that means investment managers are happy. It's all good. I started in point gathering programs back in the 90's on my own and have been able to use that for charity, helping needy people go on dream vacations and been able to take my family to places they wanted to go which all brings tourist to those locations and stores. Even the airlines actually make money on your 'free' seat. I'd rather see the glass half full the half empty and appreciate people. We all help people in one way or another with our jobs (of course there are the few cons around that try to ruin things). Peace to my fellow ms'rs and those who create enticing CCs and programs.
Multiple shift managers said the store did not make money selling those cards at promotion time. They are short at just say, this is a loss leader to get you in the store for other (expensive) items. All of them claim when in non-promo time, you can buy as much as the register allows, which is $2K per transaction.
So there, a counter point from the local store to your 2 lengthy posts.
Last edited by Happy; Jan 19, 2020 at 6:26 pm
#1390
Join Date: Sep 2019
Posts: 48
FWIW, the one and the only Staples in our county strictly enforces the one per day rule and it is per Household, not just per person. I am fine with that as I primarily buy it to use for other things, such as paying expenses that the entities dont take AMEX (prefer the BBP 2x).
Multiple shift managers said the store did not make money selling those cards at promotion time. They are short at just say, this is a loss leader to get you in the store for other (expensive) items. All of them claim when in non-promo time, you can buy as much as the register allows, which is $2K per transaction.
So there, a counter point from the local store to your 2 lengthy posts.
Multiple shift managers said the store did not make money selling those cards at promotion time. They are short at just say, this is a loss leader to get you in the store for other (expensive) items. All of them claim when in non-promo time, you can buy as much as the register allows, which is $2K per transaction.
So there, a counter point from the local store to your 2 lengthy posts.
#1391
The first time I was at the store, the $200 VCGCs were all empty. I managed to get a few and it was $2k per day. The 2nd time I went back, the VCGCs were all fully stocked. The manager was there and the store was empty. He showed me the sign with the highlighted "one card per day". But he told the cashier to sell me two cards.
So I do not know what the benefit the store manager gets. He could have told the cashier to sell me 10 cards, but he did not.
So I do not know what the benefit the store manager gets. He could have told the cashier to sell me 10 cards, but he did not.
#1392
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 369
I ordered the fee-free $100 mcgc's a couple weeks ago and they finally arrived yesterday. I activated and everything seems fine but none of my purchases are going through (neither at WM or to reload my Amazon). Nothing ever goes smoothly with these stupid mcgc's and I never learn my lesson. Never again!
#1393
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 377
I ordered the fee-free $100 mcgc's a couple weeks ago and they finally arrived yesterday. I activated and everything seems fine but none of my purchases are going through (neither at WM or to reload my Amazon). Nothing ever goes smoothly with these stupid mcgc's and I never learn my lesson. Never again!
#1395
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 369
I called customer service and they kept telling me this was a problem with the merchant (even though I attempted transactions with 5+ different merchants and all declined). I kept escalating until I found someone willing to acknowledge the problem. They said I'll either get replacement cards or a refund check, I'm waiting to hear back.