March 2014 - Page 24 of 25 - I Hate Working In Retail

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13 Crazy Stories About Customers Trying To Return Worn, Altered, And Stained Clothing. Gross!

Turns out, if you fuss enough and in just the right way, sometimes you can return gross, old stuff stores aren’t technically supposed to accept back. Anonymous associates from shops around New York City share stories of the craziest merchandise return attempts they’ve ever dealt with.

 

White House Black Market

Policy: Returns must be made within 60 days of purchase. Items must be unworn and unwashed.

1.

Plea: “One woman tried to return a pair of jeans that she had purchased a while ago. There was no receipt, no tag and there were stains all over the crotch area — lots of different colored stains, too. She said the stains weren’t hers, and that her roommate had borrowed them without asking… Looking back, I wish I had worn gloves or something.”

Verdict: Rejected.   

BCBG Max Azria


Policy: Return items within 10 days for store exchange. No refunds, except for online purchases.

2.

Plea: “It was around Christmas, and this woman came in, crying and begging for her money back. We told her our policy, and she eventually left. The next day, she came back and called the cops.”

Verdict: Accepted.

3.

Plea: “There was a customer who spent $17,000 in one day. The next day, she came back with a note from her therapist that said she was a shopping addict and needed to return the items.”

Verdict: Accepted.

4.

Plea: “My all-time favorite story is this guy who came in and bought $5,000 worth of clothes for his mistress — he told me she was his mistress, too. I helped him pick out a few outfits, but then two or three days later he came back in. She told him it was way too over the top, and made him return everything.”

Verdict: Rejected, with a twist: “He couldn’t get his money back, so he spent his entire store credit on three of us working in the store instead. I got a nice jacket.”

 
Lucky Brand Jeans

Policy: Returns must be made within 30 days of purchase for a full refund.

5.

Plea: “People try and return jeans that they’ve already altered all the time. We’ve had customers come in who have added five or six inches to the hem line and now want a refund.”

Verdict: Rejected.

Aerosoles

Policy: Returns must be made within 30 days if unworn or defective. Receipt required.

6.

Plea: “One of our most popular items is this knee-length brown suede wedge boot. We’ve sold hundreds and we’ve never had a quality issue with them. One day, this lady walked in wearing them, but one of the boots was ripped down the side. She had wrapped a rubber band around them to keep them on. She had owned the boots for a year, and when we wouldn’t take them back, she made this huge scene and called them defective.”

Verdict: Accepted. (Begrudgingly.)

7.

Plea: “I kept explaining our policy to this one really angry customer, but she wasn’t having it. Then she slammed her fists on the counter and said, ‘Well, It’s MY policy not to be screwed over.’ She threw her credit card at me and knocked an entire table of shoes over on her way out.”

Verdict: Rejected.

Bloomingdale’s

Policy: Return or exchange most merchandise for a full refund anytime after purchase. (One of the best policies in the business.)

8.

Plea: “I used to have a regular customer who I would always help pick out outfits. Eventually, I found out that she had figured out my days off and would come in and return the outfits that she had clearly worn, tags still on.”

Verdict: Accepted.

9.

Plea: “Prom season was always the worst. We’d have girls come in the day after prom trying to return dresses with sweat stains that smelled like cigarettes and beer.”

Verdict: Accepted.

Kate Spade

Policy: Returns must be made within 30 days. (Or 14 days for sale items.)

10.

Plea: “We had a woman who would come in almost every week with returns of things she bought online. Every item would just reek of mothballs. Other customers would step away from her. Eventually, I told her that I couldn’t resell her stuff anymore.”

Verdict: Accepted, for a while.

J.Crew

Policy: Returns must be made within 30 days, and items must be unworn, unwashed, undamaged or defective. Receipt required for items purchased by cash or check.

11.

Plea: “We get a lot of studio pulls in this store… That’s when a studio, like Disney or something, buys merchandise for actors to wear on shoots. So we also get a lot of illegal studio pulls. People don’t tell you who they are and they buy a ton of stuff and then return it when the shoot is over. One guy was trying to return one of these illegal pulls and I knew it. He made up this big story about how it was for his two nieces — both conveniently size 10 — who were going to visit Ethiopia but ended up not going.”

Verdict: Accepted, but he was added to the do-not-return list.

American Apparel

Policy: Returns for store credit or exchanges must be made within 45 days, except for bodysuits (which are the most commonly returned items), swimwear, unitards, intimates, sale items, vintage, cosmetic and grooming products, which can only be returned if defective.

12.

Plea: “Some French tourists wanted to return a tutu unitard they bought before they went home. They wanted their money back and spent an hour yelling at me in French before I finally got them to call our customer service line.”

Verdict: Accepted.

Gap

Policy: Returns allowed within 45 days if item is unwashed, unworn or defective.

13.

Plea: “Some people freak out over getting less back than what they paid for it— like if the item had gone on sale since they purchased it. They curse and yell at us over 89 cents. But we’re used to it. Yesterday, someone peed in the dressing room for no reason.”

Verdict: Accepted. (And, gross.)

Post taken from BuzzFeed.com

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Aldi staff wrapped in film, chastised by rats. A shocking story of the Abuse of Trainee Managers

Former trainees at discount chain Aldi Süd say they were wrapped in clingfilm and chained to posts as a punishment for “being cheeky.” It is the latest in a string of abuse allegations to appear in a book written by a former manager.

“The foil was so tight I could hardly breathe,” said one trainee, who accuses his colleagues of smearing permanent marker over his face in a fraternity-style attempt at an initiation, sanctioned by supervisors.

He did not initially report the incident. “I was scared of being fired right away, as I was still on my trial period,” he said. Staff apparently also threatened to lock him in a minus 20-degree freezer if he was cheeky again.

The allegations appear in an updated edition of ‘Inside Aldi’ by former Aldi Süd manager Andreas Straub.

Among the allegations featured in the book are accounts of staff being bullied using rats and subjected to ‘psychological terror’ for speaking up for their rights. Straub accuses other German supermarket chains of similar mistreatment.

It is Straub’s second book about his former employee. The first, ‘Aldi, Einfach Billig,’ (Aldi, Simply Cheap) which is to be made into a film, accused the company of spying on employees and setting unreasonable performance standards.

Straub told The Local: “There was a culture of fear at Aldi Süd and nothing has changed since the publication of the [first] book. I hope this might lead to some changes.”

Earlier this year a former detective told Der Spiegel that the management of an Aldi store in Dornstadt in Baden-Württemberg asked him to install miniature cameras over the lockers in the staff changing rooms.

“I was tasked with reporting all irregularities,” the detective told the magazine in January. “So [I had to say something] if a member of staff was working too slowly, or if I heard about them having a relationship with another member of staff, or received other details from their private lives, for example their financial situations.”

Aldi has repeatedly denied spying on staff but told Spiegel Online it was “shocked” by the latest allegations and would “do everything” to investigate the reports.

In a statement to The Local, Aldi Süd said: “To our dismay, our internal investigation shows that the incident described does in essence represent the truth.

“We regret this incident in the distribution centre in Mahlberg, which according to our research, took place at the end of 2012/beginning of 2013 and are deeply concerned.”

Kate Ferguson

The Local (news@thelocal.de)

 

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The 11 Worst Types Of People You Get Stuck Behind In Line At The Grocery Store

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Grocery shopping is one of those tasks that can be really enjoyable (as long as you don’t live in New York City where it’s a total nightmare) or really painful. If you’re prepared with a list and can take your time, shopping in the grocery store can be fun and rewarding. If you’re in a rush, however, or if the store is crowded, it can quickly become a dreaded task you vow to never do again. And the worst part is often the check-out line.

We’ve all been there. You’ve carefully gotten just the right amount of items to check out at the express lane, only to find the person in front of you is totally disregarding the rules and has 40 items when he should have no more than 10.

It’s enough to make you swear off the super market forever. Here are 11 types of people who stand in front of you in line at the grocery store.

1 The person who needs to know the cashier’s entire life story.


He doesn’t seem to believe the people behind him have a life.

2 The person who uses a million coupons.


We respect you, but we don’t want to stand behind you.

3 The person who makes everyone behind her wait while she fishes through her purse for an hour.


She’ll take her sweet time finding her wallet, even though she’s had 10 minutes in line to get it out of her bag.

4 The person who realizes she’s forgotten something.


She makes everyone wait while she dashes to grab that final item, and she takes forever. Unacceptable.

5  The person who should have gone through the express lane.


What were you thinking?!

6  The person who spends way too long crafting the perfect signature.


You’re joking, right?

7 The person who will do anything to get in front of you in line.

As if other people in the store aren’t also in a rush.

8 The person who asks a thousand questions in the store, and still can’t make her mind up by the time she checks out.
 

Spare us, please.

9 The person who makes you feel bad about your groceries.


Because all she has are fruits and vegetables.

10 The person with 40 items in the express lane.


He may play dumb, but he knows exactly what he’s doing.

11 The person who thinks she can cut you in line because she has an adorable child.


Your child may be adorable, but we were here first.

Courtesy of Fark.com