Retail Stories Archives - Page 38 of 63 - I Hate Working In Retail

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20 Ghastly Struggles Every Retail Worker Understands.

Here at the SF Globe, we love nostalgia pieces. If you’ve worked retail, you’ll grimace and laugh as we walk you through memory lane in hell, (cough, cough), we mean retail.

 

1. The Berating Customer

 

We’ve all experienced it: customers who think it’s a-okay to verbally assault the staff. “You work in retail. You’ll never amount to anything. You can’t even help me find the Ketchup!” or “You can’t even make a decent cup of coffee! I asked for four hazel nut pumps and two espresso shots. This is clearly three pumps of hazel nut!”

2. Being Treated Like A Stripper

I absolutely love it when customers throw their money at me like I’m a stripper. It makes my day. I also love it when they tap their credit card on the counter when I’m ringing their purchase. Am I going fast enough for you?

3. The Best Form Of Birth Control

 

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Do you remember when you thought kids were cute? That was before you witnessed that little girl in a deceiving flowered dress who threw herself onto the floor in aisle 9 and screamed her lungs out.

4. Oh, Are You Closing?

 

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When a customer comes in at 8:59pm, and the store closes at 9:00pm. Am I open? What do you think?

5. Your Store Turns Into A Daycare

 

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If you worked in a bookstore, then you also remember being a babysitting service. When I was at Barnes and Noble, I got berated by a parent who’s child tore all of the pages from a book. I didn’t realize I was supposed to put on hold the responsibilities I was being paid for to watch her child.

6. Being Appreciated For All Of Your Hard Work, What? Wait. That Happens?

After working 9 hours on your feet all day, your boss tells you that you’re not doing enough. You’re not meeting your quota. Is customer service not part of my quota? Because that’s where all my time went.

7. The Great Pay – Gap.

 

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Don’t you just love the pay from your retail job? With all the money you make you can afford to pay your student loans, your rent, utilities, food – wait, that doesn’t sound realistic.

8. Being On Your Feet, All-Day Long

Do you remember in elementary school when you couldn’t wait to get out from your desk and onto your feet? After 8-hour days on your feet, now all you want to do is veg out on the couch to reruns of Grey’s Anatomy and Scandal.9. The Fitting Room Nightmare

You won’t believe the disgusting things you’ll find in a women’s fitting room, unless you’ve worked retail. The protective stickers that lace the crotch of bathing suits, yup – stuck to the fitting room walls. Grosser than that, I almost puked the first time I saw a used pad lying on the fitting room floor. Dressing rooms aren’t bathrooms, ladies.

10. Mind-Numbing, Zombie-Like Slow Days

 

I love it when there’s absolutely nothing for me to do at work, and I can’t bring a book – or be on my phone. Those days are so much fun when I get to stand around from 9 to 5, watching the clock as it ticks second-by-second with nothing else to do.

11. Foot Fetish Calls
This is random, but it happened. I was getting ready for Black Friday and a woman called asking about boots. She asked me if I was wearing boots, and I was. That’s when the call got creepy. She asked me what they looked like. “They’re dark brown with lace up the sides and fur on top.” Then she started to breathe heavy. “That sounds nice. Do you wear them often?” I asked her if I could help her find specific boots. She continued to breathe heavy and then hung up.That was the creepiest customer call I have ever gotten!

12. When Customers Pay You In Change

 

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Don’t you love it when customers take out a bag of change – taking the time to count it out, penny by penny, nickle by nickle? Once a customer paid $15.00 in unrolled change – at the end of my shift.

13. New Guy Trauma

Being the new guy in a retail job is great. The dirty looks people throw your way when you tell them you’re not currently hiring; regulars refusing to talk to you because they don’t know you; and being ignored when you ask someone if you can help them, only to have them find your manager to ask for help.

14. Clean Up In Aisle 10

Cleaning up anything on Aisle 10, 9 or a 1,001 is never fun, but I had the unpleasant experience of cleaning up an impressive sized pool of dog vomit in the pet aisle on my first day of work because my coworkers couldn’t handle cleaning it without almost vomiting themselves.

15. Seasonal Affective Disorder

 

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What is the weirdest environment you’ve worked in? I worked part-time at a Halloween store one October and fake impaled bodies decorated the stock room. That was also the break room.

16. Dealing With Dirty Money

One thing I do not miss from retail work is handling dirty money that comes from the most ungodly places. Are you really pulling that twenty from beneath your sock to pay me? No thank you.

17. The Out of Stock Armageddon

 

All hell breaks loose when you tell a customer that what they want is out of stock or that you don’t carry it anymore. “But you had it last week. I can easily take my business elsewhere!” Please do, being rude to me won’t magically make what you want appear.

18. Being Dehumanized Feels Great!

 

I love being treated like a second class citizen. When I was a cashier, people would take the pens right out of my shirt pocket without asking. It was random, but also degrading. Did they not see me?

19. Returning Purchases

You don’t have a receipt? I’m sorry, I can’t *is interrupted by incessant yelling.*

20. When Working At A Clothing Store

Nothing is more infuriating than finding packages of Fruit of the Loom underwear and shirts torn open, thrown about and misplaced. Really? Must you rip it open?

Sourced from sfglobe.com
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23 Ridiculous Customer Behaviors All Retail Workers Have Seen

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I admit that the majority of my retail experience has been clothing-and-shoe based, but I’m sure there are equivalent horrors in stores of all kinds. I do think, however, there’s a special brand of insanity that overcomes customers upon entering a clothing store. Here, 23 things we’ve all seen in our time.

1. Leaving an enormous amount of clothing strewn around the floor of the dressing room — bonus points if they’re streaked with makeup! — and walking out as though nothing happened, not even trying to hand you their unwanted items.

2. Walking around the store and just sort of… putting something back on the shelf, about a half mile from where it’s supposed to go, in full view of an employee. (Why is just asking, “Hey, could you put this away for me?” at the very least not an option?)

3. Asking if they can “take something home and then call you with their credit card number.” ???

4. Asking to hold things for a week, and getting angry when the hold policy is no more than 24 hours.

5. Angrily informing an employee that “you have the item at the other store,” as though that is somehow going to make the item materialize in the next 10 seconds from sheer willpower.

6. Not believing an employee when they tell you in full certainty that they don’t have any more of a certain item in the back room. (Usually they are so adamant because they’ve already checked for one or more customers that day, and if you force them, they’re literally going to go in the back room, stare at the wall, and count to 10.)

7. Having everything short of a house party in a dressing room, despite being told clearly that your friends can’t go into the room with you.

8. Walking out onto the store floor and just kind of browsing around for a while wearing the clothes they’re currently trying on, barefoot and with tags sticking out everywhere.

9. Taking an item from the bottom of the stack, letting the entire stack topple over in front of them, and not even batting an eyelash.

10. Giving the “one-finger” sign to the cashier.

11. Getting in long, protracted arguments with the cashier about what “no refunds, exchange only” actually means, and why, no, we can’t rewrite the fundamentals of the company policy just so that you can get your 30 dollars back.

12. Blatantly attempting to return things that are beyond used and worn out.

13. Trying on an item that is clearly at least three sizes too small for them, and destroying the item in the process (and then leaving it on the floor, of course, because why not??).

14. Threatening to “call corporate” about a problem that the employee has no control over. Everyone should understand by the way that “calling corporate” is what every employee dreams a disgruntled customer will do, because it gets them out of your face and ensures that they will be sitting on hold for the next three hours.

15. Demanding to speak to the manager and, when informed that the person they’re yelling at is, in fact, the manager, not believing them.

16. Requesting giant bags and gift-wrapping for a three-ounce item that cost six dollars.

17. Trying on excessive amounts of clothing that they have no intention of buying strictly to take endless selfies in the dressing room. (Yes, the employees know when you’re taking selfies. Yes, they’re making fun of you.)

18. Cornering an employee to “ask them about something” which is basically a way to hit on them when they can’t escape.

19. Asking if they can get a “sample” of things that would never in any universe be considered samples.

20. Pitting the employees against each other by telling them that the “other one always does it” when one of them says that they can’t do something.

21. Ignoring signs that ask not to bring food — especially ice cream — into the store, and then dribbling ice cream down the front of several items.

22. Without asking, just leaving a giant cup of Starbucks at the front counter while they shop, until you have a little petting zoo of random Starbucks cups next to the cash register.

23. Generally talking to you as a retail employee like you are the temporary butler that they have personally hired, and not like you’re a representative of a company that has rules to abide by and a dozen other customers to be helping. You can always tell when someone doesn’t think retail is a “real job

 

Sourced from thoughtcatalog.com

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Retail Horror Stories – When Customers Go Bad

These retail horror stories prove that sometimes there’s just no way to please some people. Have you served customers like these?

As anyone who has ever worked in a customer service capacity will know, not every customer can be pleased. Regardless of who is to blame in these situations, when the wrong person gets in the wrong mood things tend to get ugly – fast.

It’s unfortunate, perhaps, that usually it is the brand failures that gain the most attention in the mainstream media, and we’ve seen plenty of examples of ‘the sales assistant from hell‘ and various social media gaffes. It’s almost as if none of the blame is ever placed squarely on the behaviour of certain customers.

But we know this isn’t an accurate reflection of reality.

Having worked in multiple showrooms over the years, I’ve seen my fair share of the wrong kind of customer. From con artists to angry mothers – it doesn’t take long to realise that sometimes people just aren’t interested in anything more than ruining a staff member’s day.

The worst example of this I ever encountered was a young man that started raving death threats after being told he would not receive a refund on the laptop he had purchased earlier – because he’d punched it hard enough to leave an imprint of his fist nearly one centimetre deep.

Whether these cases get very much attention or not, there are plenty of similar examples to be found throughout the internet. Today, we look at a few highlights in our search for the Ultimate in Customer Service Gone Bad.

The Genius Bar Breakdown

While Apple Stores are often held up as the golden child of brick and mortar retail practices, I’m sure this lady isn’t alone in reaching the end of her tether after being told she needs to make an appointment before she can have her iPhone looked at by a ‘Genius’. Blasted bureaucracy!

Of course, these scenes probably reoccur in Apple stores on a daily basis – just substitute the complaint with any of: “Why are these Apple earphones so bloody expensive?”, “You’re telling me I have to pay $200 to get my iPod’s screen replaced?” or “This brand is going to the dogs without Steve Jobs around”.

Road Rage: When Filing a Complaint Isn’t Enough

Tesco supermarket car attack

According to Car Dealer Reviews, a Tesco store in the UK became the subject of one angry customer’s drunken rage when he ploughed through its front window in his 1983 Rolls Royce Silver Spirit.

The male customer was angry after the bedroom set he ordered via telephone arrived without a mattress. Upon raising the issue with his local store, the man became irate when staff told him they would not be able to assist because the order had been made through their online/phone service division.

I guess some guys really don’t like shopping after all.

The Wrath of the Entitled

This young woman is styling herself as some kind of fast food vigilante as she interviews, films and attempts to shame the staff at her local Dunkin’ Donuts outlet.

Her complaint? The cashier had forgotten to offer her a receipt for her purchase the night before.

Personally, I’d be more ashamed about my apparent need to maintain paper records of all my fatty, fried confectionary intake. Or the fact that I’m so keen to get my racist rant published on the internet.

“Well, guess what? This s–t’s about to go live, b—h. Right on Facebook,” she says after recognising the employee that served her previously. “‘Cause I already posted what your dumb ass did last night. So I hope you’re happy with your little f—-g sand n—-r self. Cause I’m about to nuke your whole f—-g planet from Mars. You think ya’ll are tough big fat Arabs bombin’ the Trade Center? I’ll show you tough.”

In this case, the customer had apparently been enraged not just by the fact the cashier forgot her receipt, but that she then offered to provide her next meal free of charge by way of recompense for the honest mistake.

How dare she?

The Anti-Bag Lady

Not Always Right retail story

This story comes from Not Always Right – a website where employees share their tales of badly behaved customers getting up to no good. In this example, the employee in question apparently dealt with the situation with marked aplomb. Well played, sir.

There are many and myriad different ways for dealing with each one of these customers correctly, but usually a retailer must rely on the experience of its staff to make the right decision on a case-by-case basis.

Read more: http://www.powerretail.com.

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