McDonlads Archives - Page 6 of 17 - I Hate Working In Retail

By

McDonald’s orders 7,000 kiosks to replace cashiers

 

McDonald’s recently added 64,000 people to its payroll in the United States, but job prospects in Europe for those so inclined to work in the fast food industry are looking pretty grim right about now. That’s because the fast food giant is poised to add touchscreen kiosks in more than 7,000 of its restaurants in Europe in effort to replace actual, human cashiers.

McDonald’s Europe President Easterbrook told the Financial Times (subscription required), via The Sydney Morning Herald, that the touchscreen kiosks should help speed up customer transactions up to three or four seconds. The European eateries currently serve about 2 million people per day; McDonald’s hopes it will get even more people to flock in through their doors.

Electronic menus that replace physical beings is nothing new. Microsoft has been pushing its touchscreen computer, the Surface, which has mostly been a big hit at Vegas casinos, hotels, and clubs — where users can order from the table, play around with the image onscreen, and… “flirt” with people at other tables. For the last couple of years, there have been touchscreen kiosks stationed at at least seven McDonald’s restaurants in Australia. McDonald’s says they have no interest in replacing cashiers with kiosks in Australia, however, or anywhere else for that matter.

Besides monetary incentive, and not to mention that the kiosks will also be getting rid of cash transactions since they only accept credit or debit cards, the kiosks are also a way to gather statistical information about people’s eating habits, said Easterbrook. The company could potentially track every last thing you order (or perhaps offer you a free Big Mac with every ten that you purchase?).

“Ordering food has not changed for 30 or 40 years,” Easterbrook said, reasoning the addition of touchscreen kiosks.

Details regarding the cost of the technology or when it will be rolled out were not disclosed.

Sourced from Scoop.it

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

By

Next Time Someone Says Fast Food Isn’t A Real Job, Remember This

MCDONALDS MEAL

We’ve heard it once. We’ve heard it twice. And we’re sure to hear it again: Fast food jobs aren’t “real jobs.” They’re for teenagers who need extra cash or for young workers who need a “launching pad” to a better job down the line.

These sort of assumptions get thrown around all the time. “Why can’t you get a real job?” a Montana judge asked a 21-year-old fast food worker convicted of vandalism in June, implying that a different job would help him pay off his restitution quicker.

But in reality, fast food jobs are a very real segment of our economy. And for many real moms, dads and other working people, they’re a very real source of income too.

So the next time someone says fast food jobs aren’t “real,” please remember some of these points:

For years, the fast food industry has created jobs at a faster rate than the rest of the economy.

Since the recession ended, we’ve seen a troublingly uneven recovery, in which many of the middle-income jobs lost from 2008 to 2010 have been replaced by low-wage jobs. And fast food jobs are a large reason why, outpacing the country’s overall job growth.

“Fast food is driving the bulk of the job growth at the low end — the job gains there are absolutely phenomenal,” Michael Evangelist, a policy analyst at the National Employment Law Project, an advocacy group, told The New York Times in April.

According to an NELP report, 44 percent of jobs added in the past four years have been low-wage jobs that pay workers around $10 an hour.

chart

The majority of fast food workers aren’t teenagers, but real adults with real responsibilities.

Opponents of raising wages for fast food workers often say that those jobs are mostly for teenagers living with their parents who are just looking for some extra spending money. But that’s not true anymore.

Increasingly, fast food jobs are being filled by adults who need full-time work. According to an analysis of government data by the Center for Economic and Policy Research, 70 percent of fast-food workers are 20 or older these days.

teenagers
 

Real adults, with real families.

CEPR’s analysis also found that more than 1 in 4 fast food workers have a child. For what it’s worth, it costs about $245,000 to raise a kid.

child
 

So the fast food industry’s low wages end up having a very real impact on taxpayers.

Because fast food pay is low, workers often have to rely on public assistance programs like food stamps and Medicaid to get by, which ends up costing American taxpayers billions of dollars every year.

wages

Fast food workers are gaining momentum as a real labor group to be reckoned with.

Over the past two years, fast food workers have come together to organize a series of massive strikes calling for a $15 minimum wage and the right to unionize. The most recent protests spread to about 150 cities.

And their strikes have helped make some very real change for all low-wage workers.

Fast food workers haven’t had much success unionizing. But throughout the course of their two years of striking, 13 states and 10 local governments have raised their minimum wage. Democrats are now leaning on the minimum wage as an issue that can bring them support from both sides of the political spectrum.

minimum wage
All four states considering a minimum wage increase in the November elections are Republican. (Chart courtesy of CNBC.)
The bottom line is: Fast food jobs are real jobs, filled by real workers facing realpoverty. And that’s a very real problem for all of us.

Sourced from huffingtonpost.com

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

By

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

1. Customers who are pissed you made their food wrong, even though you’re working the register.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

2. When someone pays with a metric f*** ton of change, then having to count all of it.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

3. When huge families come in with massive orders… or worse yet, busses.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

4. Those customers who insist their expired coupons are still good.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

5. Because they “literally just used the same coupon yesterday.”

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

6. When someone orders a Big Mac with no Mac sauce, add ketchup, add mustard, chopped onions instead of minced onions, add mayo, no cheese, light lettuce, and no bun.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

7. “Oh, and that’s a meal, by the way.”

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

8. Or worse, when someone orders a combo, but with no drink and no fries.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

9. Every employees least favorite question: “Can I make this two separate orders?”

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

10. When you accidentally close the cash register without getting the customer’s change.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

11. Customers who insist on going through drive thru with a broken window instead of just coming inside.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

12. That time of day when the sun hits the drive thru windows just right, making it impossible to see the screen on the cash register.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

13. Customers who pull up JUST out of arm’s reach at the drive thru.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

14. And then you drop all of their change between the drive thru window and their car.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

15. Customers who assume the drive thru microphones can pick up their inaudible library voices.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

16. When you’re working the same shift as a store manager and have to be on your best behavior.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

17. Trying to get in and out of the freezer as fast as possible.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

18. But the box of pies you need is behind an entire truck’s worth of frozen hamburger patties.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

19. When customers get more food on the table than in their mouths.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

20. Then just leave it all there for you to clean up.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

21. Hearing phantom beeps for the rest of your day/week/life.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

22. The army of boring suburbanites who show up when shamrock shakes come back.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

23. Customers who want four sauce packets for a six-piece McNugget.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

24. Clearing an order from the screen before it’s ready, then immediately forgetting what the order was.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

25. Going home covered in scars from burning them on literally everything behind the counter.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

26. Having to clean the fry station and drop a fresh basket for that asshole who wants fries with no salt.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

27. Having to wipe an inch of grease off your face after you’ve worked grill or at the fry station.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

28. The horrifying moment you drop an entire sack of ketchup and it goes EVERYWHERE.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

29. And the worse thing of all: an entire shift working fries…

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

30. …and going home at the end of your shift reeking of rotten grease.

The 30 Worst Parts About Working At McDonald’s As A Teenager

Sourced from buzzfeed.com

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •