Another Planet’s Hell
Their pushy employee Jason put words in my mouth, kept steering me toward a hasty quote, and offered technically and financially unsound advice. Despite knowing I needed an industrial build whose dimensions were well-suited to 8' panels (something my builder himself advised), Jason advised 6' panels instead and inexplicably suggested this would reduce field cuts. More to the point, Jason offered this unsolicited advice without yet having the complete details of my project—even though I kept telling him those details were forthcoming. All these red flags happened over just nine days; I decided not to ignore them and walked away. Here's how Jason replied when I told him all this in an email: "Red flags indeed. I hope your project goes well. Take care. Jason FenceTown" Calling a customer's due diligence, integrity, agency, and knowledgeability a red flag is the ultimate proof. You decide if this is a company you want to work with. EDIT (response to the business’s reply): The red flags keep mounting. Thank you for making them so public. Your reply corroborates my review perfectly. For all those potential customers who read this, there can be no doubt about what working with you would entail. 1. You admit your bad advice. You explicitly admit telling me to use 6' panels to “save time and money.” As I stated, for an Industrial build (8' standard) on a lot with fixed dimensions, this is technically unsound advice that ignores the site plan, not to mention both my and my builder’s wishes. 2. You pretend you weren’t the ones who were dismissed from my project. You vaguely claim “it was determined to not do business with him.” And yet, I’m the one who sent the email terminating our talks on Friday, 01/23/26 at 1:57 p.m., citing as red flags “your persistent intellectual dishonesty and clear heavy-handed agenda to dictate the particulars and timeline of my project.” After all, that’s the only way Jason could’ve replied as he did: “Red flags indeed. I hope your project goes well. Take care. Jason FenceTown.” And that’s when I replied not only thanking you for further validating my decision to sever ties but also demanding you stop contacting me. 3. You claim the map was “inaccurate” and “incomplete.” How would you even know? You literally don’t even know the building site’s address. The fact is the map was a precise professional builder’s drawing. And I told you three separate times via email to “standby” while I finished the final materials list, and that it’s that list that we’ll use to do the ordering. Instead of listening, you rushed and pushed a “ballpark” quote I didn’t request or have use for. BTW, quick logic check: If the map were “inaccurate” and “incomplete” as you claim, how could you possibly use it to give me a remotely reasonable quote? You can’t have it both ways. This could have been the easiest sale of your year. I was doing all the legwork to hand you a finished order. Instead, you proved exactly why no one should trust you with a project of this scale.