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Wikipedia

Columbia House

Columbia House was an umbrella brand for Columbia Records' mail-order music clubs, the primary iteration of which was the Columbia Record Club, established in 1955. The Columbia House brand was introduced in the early 1970s by Columbia Records (a division of CBS, Inc.), and had a significant market presence in the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s.

Columbia House
TypePrivate
IndustryDirect-to-consumer distributor of DVDs and Blu-ray and LaserDisc
Founded1955; 68 years ago (1955)
FounderColumbia Records
HeadquartersNew York, New York, United States
Area served
United States
Canada (until December 2010) Mexico (until April 2001)
ProductsMovies
Music (formerly)
ParentEdge Line Ventures
Websitecolumbiahouse.com
Logo until 2008

In 2005, longtime competitor BMG Direct Marketing, Inc. (formerly the RCA Music Service or RCA Victor Record Club) purchased Columbia House and consolidated operations. In 2008, the company (as well as book club operator Bookspan) was acquired by private investment group Najafi Companies, and its name was changed to Direct Brands, Inc.

Although Direct Brands shut down music mail-order operations in mid-2009, it continued to use the Columbia House brand to market videos in the U.S. and Canada, selling DVDs and Blu-rays via the controversial practice of negative option billing. DB Media's Canadian assets ceased operating on December 10, 2010, and all staff were dismissed,[1] while U.S. operations continued as usual. In December 2012, the company was sold to Pride Tree Holdings, Inc. In 2013, the company changed its name to Filmed Entertainment Inc.[2] The sale of the DVD division at bankruptcy auction was announced August 10, 2015.[3]

History Edit

Rapid growth Edit

Columbia Record Club was formed in 1955 by CBS/Columbia Records as an experiment to market music directly by mail,[4] spurring sales to rural consumers and heading off competition from mail-order companies from outside the record industry.[5] New members to the club were enticed with a free record just for joining.[4] To appease brick-and-mortar retailers, titles in the club's catalog were not made available until six months after retail release (later reduced to three months), and retailers that helped recruit members got a 20% commission. By the end of that year, the club had 125,175 members who had purchased 700,000 records[4] ($1.174 million net). The operation grew so quickly that, in 1956, it was moved from New York City to a new home base: a distribution center in Terre Haute, Indiana, a railway-accessible city where Columbia had recently opened a record pressing facility.[4] Within a year, the club had 687,652 members and had sold 7 million records[4] ($14.888 million net) and, by 1963, it commanded 10% of the recorded music retail market.[5]

Licensing Edit

In the late 1950s, both RCA Victor and Capitol Records began licensing programs of their own, but the three record clubs rarely allowed any of their own labels' releases to be marketed by rivals. For example, Columbia recordings were not available from the RCA Victor Record Club, and RCA recordings were unavailable through the Columbia Record Club.

In 1958, facing the loss of members who wanted a wider variety of records, the club began manufacturing and marketing records for competing labels, including Verve, Mercury, Warner Bros., Kapp, Vanguard, United Artists, and Liberty.[5] Rival clubs operated by RCA and Capitol offered only their own labels' products at the time. Licensors were guaranteed a minimum number of sales, but were held to exclusive, restrictive contracts, which led to price-fixing allegations against the club in 1962, followed by 7 years of mostly ineffective litigation.[5] The licensing program continued and expanded in the 1960s as the music industry grew and changed.[5]

New formats and the rise of the Columbia House brand Edit

The Columbia Record Club began marketing stereo records and equipment in 1959, reel-to-reel recordings (via the Columbia Reel-To-Reel Club) in 1960, 8-track cartridges (via the Columbia Cartridge Club) in 1966, and cassettes (via the Columbia Cassette Club) in 1969.[4]

The Columbia Record Club was also notable in continuing to issue product in formats no longer available on the commercial market. After the major record labels quit releasing albums on reel to reel tape format, Columbia still continued to make select new titles available on reel tape up until 1984. 1982 was the approximate year the 8-track tape disappeared from record stores yet Columbia continued to release new titles in the format until 1988 and finally after the major record labels abandoned the vinyl LP format in 1989, Columbia issued select new titles on vinyl until 1992. In all three cases, the new releases on the abandoned formats were usually limited to the new Selection of the Month title (although the country music Selection of the Month had never been available on reel tape unless the album had possible crossover appeal to the Pop/Rock or Easy Listening club members).

By the early 1970s, "Columbia House" had become an overarching brand for the various divisions, led by the Columbia Record Club, later renamed the Columbia Record & Tape Club.[citation needed] By 1975, membership was over 3 million.[4]

A small CRC was in a conspicuous spot on the media and the cover, which showed that Columbia House was the manufacturer.

In 1982, the CBS Video Club, which had formed the previous year as the CBS Video Library, became part of the Columbia House family.[4] Also, during that same time period, Columbia House and The Cannon Group founded the UK-exclusive mail-order VHS distribution service Videolog. Sony acquired the CBS Records Group, including Columbia House, in 1988, then at 6 million members. Bertelsmann Music Group had recently acquired RCA Records and changed the name of Columbia House's only surviving rival, RCA Music Service (formerly RCA Victor Record Club), to BMG Music Service.

In 1991, the CBS Records Group was renamed as Sony Music Entertainment and Sony sold half of Columbia House to Time Warner, which contributed Time-Life's video and music clubs to the joint venture.[4] Membership was over 10 million at the end of that year.[4] The influence of Columbia House and other music clubs reached its peak in 1994 accounting for 15.1 percent of all CD sales.[6] In 1996, club membership was at 16 million. That year, the Columbia House website was launched.[4]

Meanwhile, a parallel club, the Columbia Record Club of Canada, was operated by the Canadian branch of CBS Records from the late 1950s until membership and financial problems led to its apparent demise in 1977.[7] It was relaunched in 1979 as the Canadian Music Club, attracting 100,000 members by the end of that year.[4]

Market decline Edit

In mid-1999, a merger was announced between Columbia House and struggling online retailer CDNow, an independent, publicly owned company that had funding and other partnerships with Columbia House and its owners Sony and Time-Warner. The merger was abandoned in early 2000, with Columbia House's poor finances and stiff competition from online giant Amazon.com cited as factors.[8][9][10] Within months, CDNow was purchased by Bertelsmann, which partially merged it with BMG Direct into a venture called BeMusic. CDNow was taken over and merged into Amazon the following year. By 2001, music clubs accounted for less than eight percent of all CD sales, coinciding with the ascent of Internet shops and retail outlets such as Amazon and Wal-Mart, which offered music at similar discounts without subscriptions.

Security breach Edit

In 2001, a security breach in the Columbia House website exposed thousands of customer names, addresses and portions of credit card numbers, leaving private information about customers vulnerable to exploitation. The issue involved a particular section of the website, which could easily be accessed by deleting a portion of the website address in the address bar, discovered by customer Mark Alway. Upon the discovery of the breach, he emailed the Columbia House staff who were quick to respond to the problem. This event gave rise to concerns over the website's capability of keeping private information secure from hackers or devastating scams. Although no information was reportedly obtained from the temporary breach according to Columbia House, industry professionals were quick to point out that the simple error was the consequence of negligent handling of customer information.[11]

Consolidation and downsizing Edit

In 2002, Sony and AOL Time Warner sold 85% of Columbia House to The Blackstone Group L.P., a New York-based investment firm. The next year, the possibility of a merger of Columbia House and Blockbuster Inc. was reported in the Wall Street Journal, Associated Press reports, and trade publications. Although the owners were said to be in talks, the merger never materialized.

In 2005, longtime competitor BMG Direct Marketing, Inc., then the current owners of BMG Music Service, acquired Columbia House, renamed the merged company BMG Columbia House, Inc., and consolidated operations under the BMG Music Service name.[12][13]

In 2008, the company, including its Canadian branch,[14] was acquired from Sony BMG by investment firm JMCK Corp., a Najafi Group company based in Phoenix, Arizona, and the name was changed to Direct Brands, Inc.[12][13] Direct Brands consolidated the remaining facilities, and shut down music mail-order operations on June 30, 2009. However, Direct Brands continued to operate a DVD and Blu-ray Disc club under the Columbia House brand in both the U.S. and Canada.[13] The Columbia House name is still owned by Sony Music Entertainment, and is used under license.

In December 2010, the Canadian branch went into bankruptcy, and its websites began redirecting visitors to a letter of explanation from the companies' trustees in bankruptcy.[15][16]

Bankruptcy Edit

The parent of the Columbia House music and DVD clubs announced on August 10, 2015, that it plans to sell its Columbia House DVD Club business, which sells recorded movies and TV series directly to consumers, through a bankruptcy auction.[3]

Return to music sales Edit

In December 2015, Columbia House's owner, John Lippman, announced his intention to begin a vinyl subscription service that will allow subscribers the ability to choose which records and genres of music they receive.[17][18][19]

Current ownership Edit

While Sony Music still owns the Columbia House trademark, Edge Line Ventures LLC is the current licensee of the Columbia House name.[20]

Business practices Edit

Since Columbia House's beginnings, following the sale of Columbia House to BMG, and continuing after the sale to Direct Brands, Columbia House has attracted criticism for its business practices, some of which are outlined here:

Membership Edit

During the first three decades of Columbia House, it had a most unique marketing strategy: Give the customer a handful of vinyl records for free (although most of its early marketing campaigns required the customer to tape a penny to the enclosed postcard/order form) with the promise that they would purchase a set number of records at full retail price plus shipping.

There were dozens of small sheets of stamps that were enclosed in the mailer. These stamps had pictures of the actual album cover of the records that Columbia House would sell. The customer would tear the stamp off the sheet, lick the back of the stamp and affix them onto the order card.

These Columbia House envelopes would come as junk mail to what seemed was everyone's home on a regular basis. One recipient might get one type of offer, but a neighbor might receive a more lucrative offer. Many times, it was the teenagers of the house who intercepted this mail. They were easily suckered in with the idea of getting the albums they wanted all at once and all they had to do was to buy three or four albums within the next two or three years. There were many underage customers who legally could not be bound to this agreement/contract; Columbia House knew these were unenforceable, but they didn’t care (though eventually, this policy did change).[citation needed] Columbia House made it easy to defraud them. Some older-than-teens scammed by getting free music with the intention of never paying—sometimes amounting to stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars of CDs[21]

Negative option billing practice Edit

Columbia House practices negative option billing,[13] a form of commercial distribution in which services are automatically supplied to the consumers until a specific cancellation order is issued.[22] The practice has drawn many complaints from consumers.[23] The Federal Trade Commission has published information to protect customers against this practice,[24] specifically referencing a $0.49/video offering.

Other questionable business practices Edit

In specified circumstances, "memberships" are available, whereby the customer is not required to respond to Director Selection mailings unless he or she wants to buy the movie. When such memberships expire, the old rules return where a response is required in time to prevent shipping of full price movies without customer input. Customers are not reminded when those rules change. The customer also has access to a large variety of other movies, which are advertised by mail and online towards the customer. Only full price purchases deplete that minimum purchase obligation. Purchases are not cumulative, meaning that two movies bought at ten dollars each do not deplete the minimum list price movie purchases by one movie. If the minimum number of movies has not been purchased by the end of the term, the monetary worth of those movies is charged to the customers' accounts. If any purchases have been made using Columbia House's point of sale device, either credit cards or debit cards linked to credit card accounts, then those accounts are automatically debited. The company will either mail or email a reminder notice prior to the commitment expiring, giving the customer the opportunity to purchase the required purchase obligation before they are charged for any commitment or contract charges. Likewise, backordered movies are automatically debited to those accounts when they become available, without further notification to the customers. Failure to clear such purchases result in collections efforts by Columbia House against the customers.

Alleged fraudulent sale of debt Edit

In December 2008, BMG Music Service (now yourmusic.com) supposedly sold an unknown number of fraudulent debt claims to a collection agency, National Credit Solutions. Supposed delinquents were not made known of their debt and most had not made purchases with the company for at least five years. Victims of the sale of false debt claims were not made known of either their debt or the account opened with National Credit Solutions. Most victims learned of the collections agency account when they were denied for a loan, had credit cards canceled, or checked their credit reports.[citation needed]

Class action suit Edit

On August 4, 2011, a nationwide class action suit was filed against Columbia House (Direct Brands Inc.) seeking monetary damages and an injunction stopping Direct Brands Inc. alleged business practices of unauthorized credit card charges, inability to cancel, unwanted products being mailed to homes and several other alleged issues.

"Fun Cash" and "Dividend Dollars" and "Bonus Points" Edit

Columbia House offered a point system, where movies bought resulted in "points" or "Fun Cash" ("Dividend Dollars" was the term used when the movies came in VHS format, which is no longer the case). Fun Cash does did transfer from one subscription to another. There were a number of restrictions to the use of Fun Cash, which generally made regular re-enrollment a lower cost and more tangible option for those interested in savings.

Other clubs Edit

Columbia House has made forays into other media besides music and movies. For a few years, Columbia House offered a CD-ROM club, allowing customers to buy computer games. It is now allowing members to buy video games from its site, but thus far has not offered a specific club for this. One can also enter into agreements concerning the regular purchase of "box sets", which are compilations of popular TV series. One agreement, allows customers access to any of Columbia House's products. Everything can be sourced via the company website.

Better Business Bureau rating Edit

As of 2010, this business had an unsatisfactory rating with the BBB because of a failure to respond to complaints.[25][26] This company also has an unsatisfactory record because of a pattern of complaints. Specifically, complainants allege receiving merchandise and/or bills for merchandise from BMG/Columbia House for CDs and/or DVDs that they did not order. Complainants further allege that they did not join BMG/Columbia House and do not know how the company obtained their information and that the company's phone line and website do not provide live customer service representatives to help resolve these problems.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ . Alvarezandmarsal.com. December 10, 2010. Archived from the original on May 4, 2012. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  2. ^ http://listings.findthecompany.com/l/6589969/Filmed-Entertainment-Inc-in-New-York-NY[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b Jay, Marley (August 10, 2015). "Columbia House owner files for bankruptcy". Toronto Sun. Associated Press (AP). Retrieved August 13, 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Columbia House Company History". FundingUniverse. Retrieved February 21, 2010.
  5. ^ a b c d e "414 F.2d 974, United States Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit: COLUMBIA BROADCASTING SYSTEM, INC., and Columbia Record Club, Inc., Petitioners, v. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION, Respondent". June 26, 1969. Retrieved February 21, 2010.
  6. ^ "Columbia House Company History & Company Profile". Fundinguniverse.com. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  7. ^ "Record club may close in Canada", The Montreal Gazette, March 25, 1977 (CP wire article)
  8. ^ "Press Releases- Newsroom". Time Warner. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  9. ^ "CDNow, Columbia House kill merger – CNET News". News.cnet.com. March 13, 2000. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  10. ^ "CDNow, Columbia House terminate merger deal – ZDNet Asia News". Zdnetasia.com. March 14, 2000. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  11. ^ "Columbia House breach exposes customer info – CNET News". News.com.com. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  12. ^ a b Foulkes, Arthur (March 18, 2009). "Former Columbia House operation in Terre Haute closing this year". Terre Haute Tribune-Star.
  13. ^ a b c d (PDF). July 21, 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 6, 2011. Retrieved February 22, 2010.
  14. ^ "Canadian Heritage – July–August–September 2008". Pch.gc.ca. Retrieved October 26, 2013.
  15. ^ . Alvarez & Marsal Canada Inc. Archived from the original on December 14, 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2010. On December 9, 2010, DB Media Distribution Inc., DB Media Distribution (Canada) (formerly The Columbia House Company (Canada)) and their related partners were assigned into bankruptcy in Canada. [...] As a consequence of the bankruptcy, we regretfully inform you that DB Media will not be fulfilling any customer orders through its book and DVD clubs as of December 9, 2010, as the Canadian operations have ceased.
  16. ^ . Alvarezandmarsal.com. Archived from the original on December 15, 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2010.
  17. ^ Corrigan, Tom Columbia House Seeks Revival as Vinyl Finds New Groove Wall Street Journal. January 5, 2015
  18. ^ Smith, Aaron Columbia House is back and so is vinyl CNN Money. January 5, 2015
  19. ^ Kreps, Daniel Columbia House to Relaunch as Vinyl Subscription Service in 2016 Rolling Stone. January 5, 2015
  20. ^ "Columbia House".
  21. ^ "Man Admits Fraud in Joining CD Clubs Thousands of Times". The New York Times. 2000-03-25. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
  22. ^ "Negative option billing is the shady marketing practice you're probably already falling for". Blue Water Credit. 18 June 2015. Retrieved 2020-07-25.
  23. ^ [1] July 1, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ "Prenotification Negative Option Plans". Ftc.gov. April 24, 2009. Retrieved June 12, 2012.
  25. ^ . Data.bbb.org. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved October 26, 2013.
  26. ^ . Search.newyork.bbb.org. Archived from the original on February 10, 2012. Retrieved June 12, 2012.

External links Edit

  • Official website
  • FCC Citation to Columbia House for violating DO NOT CALL REGISTRY legislation
  • Consumer Affairs Article on Complaints against Columbia House
  • Return To Sender: BMG Music Has Been Discontinued

columbia, house, other, uses, disambiguation, umbrella, brand, columbia, records, mail, order, music, clubs, primary, iteration, which, columbia, record, club, established, 1955, brand, introduced, early, 1970s, columbia, records, division, significant, market. For other uses see Columbia House disambiguation Columbia House was an umbrella brand for Columbia Records mail order music clubs the primary iteration of which was the Columbia Record Club established in 1955 The Columbia House brand was introduced in the early 1970s by Columbia Records a division of CBS Inc and had a significant market presence in the 1970s 1980s and early 1990s Columbia HouseTypePrivateIndustryDirect to consumer distributor of DVDs and Blu ray and LaserDiscFounded1955 68 years ago 1955 FounderColumbia RecordsHeadquartersNew York New York United StatesArea servedUnited StatesCanada until December 2010 Mexico until April 2001 ProductsMoviesMusic formerly ParentEdge Line VenturesWebsitecolumbiahouse comLogo until 2008In 2005 longtime competitor BMG Direct Marketing Inc formerly the RCA Music Service or RCA Victor Record Club purchased Columbia House and consolidated operations In 2008 the company as well as book club operator Bookspan was acquired by private investment group Najafi Companies and its name was changed to Direct Brands Inc Although Direct Brands shut down music mail order operations in mid 2009 it continued to use the Columbia House brand to market videos in the U S and Canada selling DVDs and Blu rays via the controversial practice of negative option billing DB Media s Canadian assets ceased operating on December 10 2010 and all staff were dismissed 1 while U S operations continued as usual In December 2012 the company was sold to Pride Tree Holdings Inc In 2013 the company changed its name to Filmed Entertainment Inc 2 The sale of the DVD division at bankruptcy auction was announced August 10 2015 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Rapid growth 1 2 Licensing 1 3 New formats and the rise of the Columbia House brand 1 4 Market decline 1 5 Security breach 1 6 Consolidation and downsizing 1 7 Bankruptcy 1 8 Return to music sales 1 9 Current ownership 2 Business practices 2 1 Membership 2 2 Negative option billing practice 2 2 1 Other questionable business practices 2 3 Alleged fraudulent sale of debt 2 4 Class action suit 2 5 Fun Cash and Dividend Dollars and Bonus Points 2 6 Other clubs 3 Better Business Bureau rating 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory EditRapid growth Edit Columbia Record Club was formed in 1955 by CBS Columbia Records as an experiment to market music directly by mail 4 spurring sales to rural consumers and heading off competition from mail order companies from outside the record industry 5 New members to the club were enticed with a free record just for joining 4 To appease brick and mortar retailers titles in the club s catalog were not made available until six months after retail release later reduced to three months and retailers that helped recruit members got a 20 commission By the end of that year the club had 125 175 members who had purchased 700 000 records 4 1 174 million net The operation grew so quickly that in 1956 it was moved from New York City to a new home base a distribution center in Terre Haute Indiana a railway accessible city where Columbia had recently opened a record pressing facility 4 Within a year the club had 687 652 members and had sold 7 million records 4 14 888 million net and by 1963 it commanded 10 of the recorded music retail market 5 Licensing Edit In the late 1950s both RCA Victor and Capitol Records began licensing programs of their own but the three record clubs rarely allowed any of their own labels releases to be marketed by rivals For example Columbia recordings were not available from the RCA Victor Record Club and RCA recordings were unavailable through the Columbia Record Club In 1958 facing the loss of members who wanted a wider variety of records the club began manufacturing and marketing records for competing labels including Verve Mercury Warner Bros Kapp Vanguard United Artists and Liberty 5 Rival clubs operated by RCA and Capitol offered only their own labels products at the time Licensors were guaranteed a minimum number of sales but were held to exclusive restrictive contracts which led to price fixing allegations against the club in 1962 followed by 7 years of mostly ineffective litigation 5 The licensing program continued and expanded in the 1960s as the music industry grew and changed 5 New formats and the rise of the Columbia House brand Edit The Columbia Record Club began marketing stereo records and equipment in 1959 reel to reel recordings via the Columbia Reel To Reel Club in 1960 8 track cartridges via the Columbia Cartridge Club in 1966 and cassettes via the Columbia Cassette Club in 1969 4 The Columbia Record Club was also notable in continuing to issue product in formats no longer available on the commercial market After the major record labels quit releasing albums on reel to reel tape format Columbia still continued to make select new titles available on reel tape up until 1984 1982 was the approximate year the 8 track tape disappeared from record stores yet Columbia continued to release new titles in the format until 1988 and finally after the major record labels abandoned the vinyl LP format in 1989 Columbia issued select new titles on vinyl until 1992 In all three cases the new releases on the abandoned formats were usually limited to the new Selection of the Month title although the country music Selection of the Month had never been available on reel tape unless the album had possible crossover appeal to the Pop Rock or Easy Listening club members By the early 1970s Columbia House had become an overarching brand for the various divisions led by the Columbia Record Club later renamed the Columbia Record amp Tape Club citation needed By 1975 membership was over 3 million 4 A small CRC was in a conspicuous spot on the media and the cover which showed that Columbia House was the manufacturer In 1982 the CBS Video Club which had formed the previous year as the CBS Video Library became part of the Columbia House family 4 Also during that same time period Columbia House and The Cannon Group founded the UK exclusive mail order VHS distribution service Videolog Sony acquired the CBS Records Group including Columbia House in 1988 then at 6 million members Bertelsmann Music Group had recently acquired RCA Records and changed the name of Columbia House s only surviving rival RCA Music Service formerly RCA Victor Record Club to BMG Music Service In 1991 the CBS Records Group was renamed as Sony Music Entertainment and Sony sold half of Columbia House to Time Warner which contributed Time Life s video and music clubs to the joint venture 4 Membership was over 10 million at the end of that year 4 The influence of Columbia House and other music clubs reached its peak in 1994 accounting for 15 1 percent of all CD sales 6 In 1996 club membership was at 16 million That year the Columbia House website was launched 4 Meanwhile a parallel club the Columbia Record Club of Canada was operated by the Canadian branch of CBS Records from the late 1950s until membership and financial problems led to its apparent demise in 1977 7 It was relaunched in 1979 as the Canadian Music Club attracting 100 000 members by the end of that year 4 Market decline Edit In mid 1999 a merger was announced between Columbia House and struggling online retailer CDNow an independent publicly owned company that had funding and other partnerships with Columbia House and its owners Sony and Time Warner The merger was abandoned in early 2000 with Columbia House s poor finances and stiff competition from online giant Amazon com cited as factors 8 9 10 Within months CDNow was purchased by Bertelsmann which partially merged it with BMG Direct into a venture called BeMusic CDNow was taken over and merged into Amazon the following year By 2001 music clubs accounted for less than eight percent of all CD sales coinciding with the ascent of Internet shops and retail outlets such as Amazon and Wal Mart which offered music at similar discounts without subscriptions Security breach Edit In 2001 a security breach in the Columbia House website exposed thousands of customer names addresses and portions of credit card numbers leaving private information about customers vulnerable to exploitation The issue involved a particular section of the website which could easily be accessed by deleting a portion of the website address in the address bar discovered by customer Mark Alway Upon the discovery of the breach he emailed the Columbia House staff who were quick to respond to the problem This event gave rise to concerns over the website s capability of keeping private information secure from hackers or devastating scams Although no information was reportedly obtained from the temporary breach according to Columbia House industry professionals were quick to point out that the simple error was the consequence of negligent handling of customer information 11 Consolidation and downsizing Edit In 2002 Sony and AOL Time Warner sold 85 of Columbia House to The Blackstone Group L P a New York based investment firm The next year the possibility of a merger of Columbia House and Blockbuster Inc was reported in the Wall Street Journal Associated Press reports and trade publications Although the owners were said to be in talks the merger never materialized In 2005 longtime competitor BMG Direct Marketing Inc then the current owners of BMG Music Service acquired Columbia House renamed the merged company BMG Columbia House Inc and consolidated operations under the BMG Music Service name 12 13 In 2008 the company including its Canadian branch 14 was acquired from Sony BMG by investment firm JMCK Corp a Najafi Group company based in Phoenix Arizona and the name was changed to Direct Brands Inc 12 13 Direct Brands consolidated the remaining facilities and shut down music mail order operations on June 30 2009 However Direct Brands continued to operate a DVD and Blu ray Disc club under the Columbia House brand in both the U S and Canada 13 The Columbia House name is still owned by Sony Music Entertainment and is used under license In December 2010 the Canadian branch went into bankruptcy and its websites began redirecting visitors to a letter of explanation from the companies trustees in bankruptcy 15 16 Bankruptcy Edit The parent of the Columbia House music and DVD clubs announced on August 10 2015 that it plans to sell its Columbia House DVD Club business which sells recorded movies and TV series directly to consumers through a bankruptcy auction 3 Return to music sales Edit In December 2015 Columbia House s owner John Lippman announced his intention to begin a vinyl subscription service that will allow subscribers the ability to choose which records and genres of music they receive 17 18 19 Current ownership Edit While Sony Music still owns the Columbia House trademark Edge Line Ventures LLC is the current licensee of the Columbia House name 20 Business practices EditSince Columbia House s beginnings following the sale of Columbia House to BMG and continuing after the sale to Direct Brands Columbia House has attracted criticism for its business practices some of which are outlined here Membership Edit During the first three decades of Columbia House it had a most unique marketing strategy Give the customer a handful of vinyl records for free although most of its early marketing campaigns required the customer to tape a penny to the enclosed postcard order form with the promise that they would purchase a set number of records at full retail price plus shipping There were dozens of small sheets of stamps that were enclosed in the mailer These stamps had pictures of the actual album cover of the records that Columbia House would sell The customer would tear the stamp off the sheet lick the back of the stamp and affix them onto the order card These Columbia House envelopes would come as junk mail to what seemed was everyone s home on a regular basis One recipient might get one type of offer but a neighbor might receive a more lucrative offer Many times it was the teenagers of the house who intercepted this mail They were easily suckered in with the idea of getting the albums they wanted all at once and all they had to do was to buy three or four albums within the next two or three years There were many underage customers who legally could not be bound to this agreement contract Columbia House knew these were unenforceable but they didn t care though eventually this policy did change citation needed Columbia House made it easy to defraud them Some older than teens scammed by getting free music with the intention of never paying sometimes amounting to stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars of CDs 21 Negative option billing practice Edit Columbia House practices negative option billing 13 a form of commercial distribution in which services are automatically supplied to the consumers until a specific cancellation order is issued 22 The practice has drawn many complaints from consumers 23 The Federal Trade Commission has published information to protect customers against this practice 24 specifically referencing a 0 49 video offering Other questionable business practices Edit In specified circumstances memberships are available whereby the customer is not required to respond to Director Selection mailings unless he or she wants to buy the movie When such memberships expire the old rules return where a response is required in time to prevent shipping of full price movies without customer input Customers are not reminded when those rules change The customer also has access to a large variety of other movies which are advertised by mail and online towards the customer Only full price purchases deplete that minimum purchase obligation Purchases are not cumulative meaning that two movies bought at ten dollars each do not deplete the minimum list price movie purchases by one movie If the minimum number of movies has not been purchased by the end of the term the monetary worth of those movies is charged to the customers accounts If any purchases have been made using Columbia House s point of sale device either credit cards or debit cards linked to credit card accounts then those accounts are automatically debited The company will either mail or email a reminder notice prior to the commitment expiring giving the customer the opportunity to purchase the required purchase obligation before they are charged for any commitment or contract charges Likewise backordered movies are automatically debited to those accounts when they become available without further notification to the customers Failure to clear such purchases result in collections efforts by Columbia House against the customers Alleged fraudulent sale of debt Edit In December 2008 BMG Music Service now yourmusic com supposedly sold an unknown number of fraudulent debt claims to a collection agency National Credit Solutions Supposed delinquents were not made known of their debt and most had not made purchases with the company for at least five years Victims of the sale of false debt claims were not made known of either their debt or the account opened with National Credit Solutions Most victims learned of the collections agency account when they were denied for a loan had credit cards canceled or checked their credit reports citation needed Class action suit Edit On August 4 2011 a nationwide class action suit was filed against Columbia House Direct Brands Inc seeking monetary damages and an injunction stopping Direct Brands Inc alleged business practices of unauthorized credit card charges inability to cancel unwanted products being mailed to homes and several other alleged issues Fun Cash and Dividend Dollars and Bonus Points Edit Columbia House offered a point system where movies bought resulted in points or Fun Cash Dividend Dollars was the term used when the movies came in VHS format which is no longer the case Fun Cash does did transfer from one subscription to another There were a number of restrictions to the use of Fun Cash which generally made regular re enrollment a lower cost and more tangible option for those interested in savings Other clubs Edit Columbia House has made forays into other media besides music and movies For a few years Columbia House offered a CD ROM club allowing customers to buy computer games It is now allowing members to buy video games from its site but thus far has not offered a specific club for this One can also enter into agreements concerning the regular purchase of box sets which are compilations of popular TV series One agreement allows customers access to any of Columbia House s products Everything can be sourced via the company website Better Business Bureau rating EditAs of 2010 this business had an unsatisfactory rating with the BBB because of a failure to respond to complaints 25 26 This company also has an unsatisfactory record because of a pattern of complaints Specifically complainants allege receiving merchandise and or bills for merchandise from BMG Columbia House for CDs and or DVDs that they did not order Complainants further allege that they did not join BMG Columbia House and do not know how the company obtained their information and that the company s phone line and website do not provide live customer service representatives to help resolve these problems See also EditTime LifeReferences Edit Alvarez amp Marsal Alvarezandmarsal com December 10 2010 Archived from the original on May 4 2012 Retrieved June 12 2012 http listings findthecompany com l 6589969 Filmed Entertainment Inc in New York NY permanent dead link a b Jay Marley August 10 2015 Columbia House owner files for bankruptcy Toronto Sun Associated Press AP Retrieved August 13 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l Columbia House Company History FundingUniverse Retrieved February 21 2010 a b c d e 414 F 2d 974 United States Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit COLUMBIA BROADCASTING SYSTEM INC and Columbia Record Club Inc Petitioners v FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION Respondent June 26 1969 Retrieved February 21 2010 Columbia House Company History amp Company Profile Fundinguniverse com Retrieved June 12 2012 Record club may close in Canada The Montreal Gazette March 25 1977 CP wire article Press Releases Newsroom Time Warner Retrieved June 12 2012 CDNow Columbia House kill merger CNET News News cnet com March 13 2000 Retrieved June 12 2012 CDNow Columbia House terminate merger deal ZDNet Asia News Zdnetasia com March 14 2000 Retrieved June 12 2012 Columbia House breach exposes customer info CNET News News com com Retrieved June 12 2012 a b Foulkes Arthur March 18 2009 Former Columbia House operation in Terre Haute closing this year Terre Haute Tribune Star a b c d Letters from Direct Brands amp BMG Direct lawyer to Federal Trade Commission re Prenotification Negative Option Rule Review PDF July 21 2009 Archived from the original PDF on June 6 2011 Retrieved February 22 2010 Canadian Heritage July August September 2008 Pch gc ca Retrieved October 26 2013 DB Media Alvarez amp Marsal Canada Inc Archived from the original on December 14 2010 Retrieved January 24 2010 On December 9 2010 DB Media Distribution Inc DB Media Distribution Canada formerly The Columbia House Company Canada and their related partners were assigned into bankruptcy in Canada As a consequence of the bankruptcy we regretfully inform you that DB Media will not be fulfilling any customer orders through its book and DVD clubs as of December 9 2010 as the Canadian operations have ceased DB Media Distribution Inc Alvarezandmarsal com Archived from the original on December 15 2010 Retrieved January 24 2010 Corrigan Tom Columbia House Seeks Revival as Vinyl Finds New Groove Wall Street Journal January 5 2015 Smith Aaron Columbia House is back and so is vinyl CNN Money January 5 2015 Kreps Daniel Columbia House to Relaunch as Vinyl Subscription Service in 2016 Rolling Stone January 5 2015 Columbia House Man Admits Fraud in Joining CD Clubs Thousands of Times The New York Times 2000 03 25 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 07 24 Negative option billing is the shady marketing practice you re probably already falling for Blue Water Credit 18 June 2015 Retrieved 2020 07 25 1 Archived July 1 2006 at the Wayback Machine Prenotification Negative Option Plans Ftc gov April 24 2009 Retrieved June 12 2012 Better Business Bureau Start With Trust Data bbb org Archived from the original on October 29 2013 Retrieved October 26 2013 BetterBusinessBureau Search newyork bbb org Archived from the original on February 10 2012 Retrieved June 12 2012 External links EditOfficial website Consumer Advocate Site FCC Citation to Columbia House for violating DO NOT CALL REGISTRY legislation Unsatisfactory BBB Rating 1 Unsatisfactory BBB Rating 2 Consumer Affairs Article on Complaints against Columbia House US District Court Ruling on Sandra L Pruett vs The Columbia House Company Return To Sender BMG Music Has Been Discontinued 12 For One CD Deals No More BMG Music Service Ends In June Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Columbia House amp oldid 1166164571, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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