August 2014 - Page 10 of 14 - I Hate Working In Retail

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23 Things Only People That Work In Retail Will Understand

As a society, we generally like to buy stuff. Whether it’s clothes, food, beer or furniture, someone has to be there to scan through all of our transactions to ensure we can have our goodies.

Those people tend to be the most tortured and neglected of all the working world, so to all the sales assistants, cashiers, customer service representatives and shelf stackers, we salute you.

Here are some things that only people that’ve worked in retail will understand.

1) How infuriating it is when someone reads your name badge and uses it when they speak to you. “Hello… JOHN, please can you tell me where you keep the tinned goods?”

2) When people tut and sigh when they’re waiting in a queue. It isn’t going to make the line move any quicker buddy!

3) Similarly, when people tap their fingers on the till/conveyer belt whilst they wait. Now I’m going to go even slower, just for you.

4) Feeling your phone vibrate in your pocket but not being able to check your texts because your manager is around. Argh, what if it’s an invite to the pub tonight?! Or that fit bird you’ve been texting?!

5) People turning up 5 minutes before closing time, but it’s okay because they “know what they want”. Really?!

6) People who want to pay part cash, part card. Just leave, get out.

7) Rude people. I don’t HAVE to serve you, pal. Maybe you should buy yourself some manners whilst you’re here.

8) People who walk slowly everywhere, with no idea that there are people trying to get past.

9) When you’re arguing violently with a customer that the price was correctly displayed and then your manager comes over and discounts it for them anyway. Sigh.

10) When parents send their children to pay and they think it’s the cutest thing ever. It isn’t, I have a queue, get a move on.

11) When customers comment on the state of the toilets/how big the queues are/how empty the store is/how difficult it is to find a member of staff. Do I look like the owner of the company?

12) When you’ve just straightened an aisle and someone comes along and messes it up. Oh, I wanted to do that all over again, thank you for being so generous.

13) The nervousness you feel when you have to tell someone their card is declined. This is going to be awkward.

14) Being handed crumpled up money and change. I’m going to sit here and count this out very slowly now, because of you. You started this.

15) Having a couple argue at the till. Please take your baggage elsewhere.

16) That polite laugh you have to do when a customer makes a joke. The things we do…

17) People who lose their kids so decide to shout at the top of their lungs, echoing throughout the whole store… Quieten down and stop letting your children roam free.

18) Making your way to the break room for that final peace and quiet, only to be stopped by a customer on your way up and missing 15 minutes of your lunch. NOOOOO.

19) Or what’s worse, being stopped by a sweet old lady customer when you’re leaving for the day. Ugh, moral dilemma…

20) Being caught by your manager having a sneaky chat in the store room. BUSTED.

21) You’ve ignored a phone call or two when you know that your manager is going to call to ask you to work. “Oh sorry, I had no signal!”

22) When hilarious customers tell you that “it must be free!” because it doesn’t scan, or ask you can give them ‘the winning’ Lottery ticket… Nope. T*t.

23) Perhaps the worst of all, “Do you work here?!”. No, I just wear this fetching uniform for the fun of it.

Sourced from Ladbible.com

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More grocery tales-what some all night grocery crews do while you sleep- besides stock shelves

Most high volume grocery stores have to stock their shelves while most of us are sleeping. In my twenty plus year grocery career, most of my grocery crews were hard working, honest, and good people. There were however a few bad apples during those years. This hub is going to talk about some of the more interesting things that I had the pleasure to witness.

The case of the outrageous phone bill.

Place: Chesapeake, Virginia. Time frame: 1992.

One of my main jobs as the assistant manager, was to examine and analysis the monthly SOS(store operating statement). While doing this I noticed that our phone bill which normally ran about 175 dollars, was actually 813 dollars for one month. After requesting a copy of the bill, I noticed two things….(1) someone was calling 1-900 sex lines in the middle of the night and (2) the calls were coming from the always locked district manager’s office which was located in the backroom of my store. After explaining to my manager and district manager what I had found, we called our loss prevention department. Loss prevention came to the store and installed two hidden cameras. One was inside the district manager’s office while the other was just outside his office.

We had five suspects as our night crew consisted of four night stockers and one baker. Amazingly the loss prevention cameras discovered our criminal the very first night. The newest member of the night crew was a kid who had worked part-time as a bagger on the front-end before graduating to the night crew when he turned 18 a couple months earlier. I never saw the images that the cameras recorded(thank goodness) but evidently they showed the kid picking the lock to the district manager’s office and using the phone for more than a phone conversation. Needless to say the next night the grocery crew was down to three night stockers.

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The case of the backroom miracle.

Place: Central Virginia Time Frame:1996.

In 1995, I switched companies and had to work my way back up the store management ladder again. I got assigned to a store in Central Virginia, as a co-manager of the store. It did not take me long to realize that the store manager and the grocery manager pretty much hated each other and that the grocery manager’s job was in serious jeopardy. One night the manager had a quick meeting between the three of us. He pretty much told the grocery manager if all the backstock(extra stock in the backroom versus being on the sales floor) was not gone in the morning then the grocery manager could kiss his job goodbye. As I went home that night, I thought there was no way the grocery manager was going to keep his job. As the schedule would have it, I was the opening manager the next morning.

Much to my surprise a miracle had occurred during the night. The sales floor looked awesome and the back room was unbelievable, the product level had gone down drastically, it was practically an empty backroom. When the store manager arrived later that day, he was equally impressed about the backroom. He told me….”I think I have finally gotten through to him, he is finally doing things my way”. Over the next month everything went pretty smoothly in the store. About a week before one of our bi-annual grocery inventories, the grocery manager quit and went to work with another company. The results of the inventory were brutal, the store had lost over $100,000 dollars in inventory in a six month cycle. Needless to say the company was not happy about the loss. After a loss prevention investigation turned up very little as to how we lost so much product, they made us do another grocery inventory. The results were the same as the first one….a $100,000 dollar loss of inventory.

About three months later we would finally figure out the miracle of the backroom. That summer it rained very little. The retention pond beside the store began to get low. As the very dry summer continued, someone noticed something unusual about the retention pond. As I walked towards the retention pond I could not believe my eyes….there sticking out the water were cases and cases of grocery product….the grocery manager had emptied the backroom that night almost five months ago, by putting all the backstock in the retention pool. If I learned one thing about this experience it would be…… when you paint someone in a corner you never know what they will do to survive.

What a great place to hide something….a retention pond.

The Case of The Guy Who Told on Himself.

Place: Western North Carolina Time Frame: 2001.

I took over a store in Western North Carolina in March of 2001. I had not been in the store for more than 3 weeks when I had an interesting conversation with a grocery stocker. I will call him Forrest which should explain a little bit about him. I came to work at 6:30 in the morning, purchased my Diet Mountain Dew(I don’t drink or smoke but I do Dew) and starting walking the store to see how things were looking. Forrest came up to me saying….”Cogerson Cogerson…..we have a problem….that new stocker…he is not following the rules.” I asked which rules was he not following? He said “You know…. the rules where we can fill up a paper bag up with anything we want as long as it fits in one paper bag and you take it out of the store before the sun comes up….but that new stocker….he is taking two bags or more….he is being a pig…..he is going to get us into trouble.” I was trying to understand what he was saying…..I was like….so you can get anything for free as long as it fits in one paper bag?…..Forrest said….”Yeah just like it has always been….but the new guy….he won’t listen….. he has been filling up a whole cart and taking it to his car”.

I told Forrest I would look into his concerns. My first phone call was to loss prevention. That night loss prevention arrived at the store and talked to my grocery crew. They all admitted that they had been taking one bag a night for as long as they could remember. The grocery manager’s logic was if they each only took one bag a night the losses would never amount to a great loss and nobody would ever know what was happening. The next day, I had to start hiring an entire new stock crew, including Forrest’s replacement. About a week later, I talked to Forrest and he still did not really understand why he could not continue to work at the store, he said…”If only that new guy would have followed the rules we would not have gotten into trouble”.

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What Assistant Managers Earn At Walmart, Home Depot And Other Popular Companies

Taking a job at Walmart or Home Depot doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll always be earning an hourly wage.

If you work your way up to assistant manager, you could earn a decent salary, on par with what managers make in some white-collar industries.

Managing is tough, after all. Snagajob.com reports that assistant mangers “have a lot of responsibility and this job requires great leadership skills.”

We reviewed Glassdoor compensation reports — which includes benefits, salaries, and other compensation— for assistant manager positions at major retail and food outlets.

So just how much are people earning? We’ve ranked the salaries from lowest to highest.

 

Assistant managers at GameStop earn $21,810

A former assistant manager said, “If you like games it’s good. Most of store store is friendly and fun. Great for a second job for a day or two a week.”

However, “Corporate is constantly cutting hours making it hard for part time employees to work. This puts a bigger strain on management. The ideas and tasks emailed down are constantly going back and forth and hit with big deadlines with no help its hard to get done. The pay is low, and the stress level is very high.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

 

Assistant managers at Bob Evans earn $34,253

Assistant managers at Bob Evans earn $34,253

Wikimedia Commons

Bob Evans

An assistant manager in Bowling Green, Ky., said the company was “a place to start my restaurant management career. Really good ServeSafe training. It was nice doing some training at the corporate office.”

However, “Local management was promoted by who the Area Manager liked better rather than who actually did their job. The computer system is painfully slow. The uniform standard has gone out of the window now. The entire time that I worked there I never got a raise. My pay was messed up after relocating and recieved a paycheck for 93 cents and only 1/2 pay for the next 10 weeks which ruined me financially. I lost my home and my credit.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at American Eagle Outfitters earn $35,318

Assistant managers at American Eagle Outfitters earn $35,318

Wikimedia Commons

American Eagle Outfitters

An assistant manager said of the company, “Employee discount would have to be the best. I’m a huge shopper so you have to love that. Health insurance is wonderful. Regional manager is helpful, district manager is friendly.”

However, the “pay is poor for high competing companies. Jim O’Donnell is getting older, so the company’s growth is in question.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at Walgreens earn $38,170

Assistant managers at Walgreens earn $38,170

An executive assistant store manager said Walgreens employees “meet good people, good pay and you gain a lot of management experience.”

Unfortunately, the job entails “long hours, a lot of physical work, sometimes politics is played, and some managers put you down.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at Sherwin-Williams earn $38,630

Assistant managers at Sherwin-Williams earn $38,630

Sherwin-Williams.com

Sherwin-Williams

A former assistant manager said the company offers a “Good employee discount. Got to learn hands-on how to run a business. Hours were good. Schedule was flexible. Good pay.”

However, there were “times when store was short-staffed, but only had a minimal budget to hire more part-timers. Upper management had their favorite employees.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at Panera Bread earn $38,922

Assistant managers at Panera Bread earn $38,922

Wikimedia Commons

Panera Bread

An assistant manager in Silver Spring, Md., said the company offers a “thorough training program, and there are a lot of other cool assistant managers who are fun to work beside.”

However, there are ” WAY too many hours. Crazy early shifts (5am), then late nights all in the same week (leave around 10:30-11pm). GM generally doesn’t work very hard and will put everything on the Assistant Mangers. Senior management in the franchise is a group of good ol’ boys and good luck getting promoted. They promote their buddies.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at Enterprise Rent-A-Car earn $39,924

Assistant managers at Enterprise Rent-A-Car earn $39,924

Wikimedia Commons

Enterprise Rent-A-Car

An assistant manager said the job comes with “great pay, promote on performance, competitive atmosphere, benefits, bonuses.”

But it has its difficulties. “The customers are sometimes very difficult to deal with under the guidelines of customer service principles enterprise has in place,” the employee said.

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at CVS Caremark earn $43,874

Assistant managers at CVS Caremark earn $43,874

Wikimedia Commons

CVS Caremark

A CVS Caremark retail drug store manager said the “compensation package is decent. Training tools are plentiful. They have CVS learnet which gives you detailed modules for every possible training you need.”

However, there are “not enough hours per store to accomplish daily goals. Senior management micromanages every aspect of your store so it doesn’t even feel like your the store manager. LP awareness at the corporate level is blind to every day functions.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at Walmart earn $45,258

Assistant managers at Walmart earn $45,258

Walmart via Flickr

A current Walmart manager said the company offers “Great culture and environment to work. Walmart provides advancement opportunities for all individuals. I would advise anyone to look at Walmart for career opportunities.”

However, the reputation isn’t always the best. “Some small mom-and-pop stores look at Walmart as a bad giant retailer who steal jobs from other companies,” the manager said.

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at Best Buy earn $58,971

A sales manager in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. said of the company, “Fun, fast paced environment. Employees are amazing and we genuinely have fun. It is a relaxed atmosphere but with a sense of urgency at all times to get to customers.”

However, there are “Long, long hours, taking time off is a dirty word. Customers are absolutely terrible. Most customers we have to interact with are flat out rude and feel a sense of entitlement. We sell electronics and we have customers that act like total children when they don’t get their way. I know this is industrywide but I have never seen it this bad in 8 years.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Assistant managers at Home Depot earn $62,397

Assistant managers at Home Depot earn $62,397

Wikimedia Commons

Home Depot

An assistant manager in Batavia, New York said “money is paid to workers and managers.”

However, “Politics have taken over the company in the last few years to where Frank needs to dig in and get this fixed.”

Average total pay reports from Glassdoor include salary, bonus, and other factors

Data Accurate to November 2011

Sourced from.businessinsider.com/