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British Shoppers In Panic After Supermarket Websites Cancel Orders

Sainsbury’s and Asda customers in panic after websites cancel Christmas orders – and Waitrose shoppers complain about no deliveries

  • Angry customers complained of delivery slots being cancelled by retailers
  • Computer glitch scrapped slots chosen by those who had amended orders 
  • Many took to social media amid fear their Christmas food would not arrive
  • Panicked customers bemoaned not being able to phone customer services
  • Sainsbury’s website crashed for half an hour while Asda’s stayed live
  • The online retailers have assured shoppers their orders will arrive on time 

Shoppers ordering their Christmas groceries were left in a state of panic on ‘Mayhem Monday’ today as one major supermarket’s website crashed and two cancelled orders.

Sainsbury’s and Asda customers took to social media to complain about their delivery slots – booked weeks in advance – being scrapped.

The former’s website crashed for half an hour while a glitch in Asda’s website cancelled the delivery times allocated to around 40 customers who had amended existing orders online.

In addition, Waitrose customers also complained that their deliveries did not arrive yesterday.

Sainsbury's customers were outraged when allocated delivery slots booked weeks in advance were scrapped, with the retailer's website crashing for half an hour 

It came on one of the busiest shopping days of the year with consumers rushing to get hold of last minute Christmas essentials.

Father-of-three Peter Dunbar told Sainsbury’s in a tweet: ‘Had an email last night cancelling our Xmas shop delivery. Website glitch. No delivery slots left now. What will you do to fix?’

Meanwhile Matt Richardson said: ‘Sainsbury’s have let us down 100 per cent. Delivery slot booked two weeks ago – Sainsbury’s make a unilateral decision to delete our order. Merry Xmas!’

Vikki Fuller, of Frimley, Surrey, said she had lost her Sainsbury’s order after trying to amend it online, despite booking her delivery slot three weeks in advance.

She will now buy her groceries from the shop, saying: ‘I will have to go out and do my Christmas shopping now but do find doing it online much easier as it’s hard trying to do it with a baby.’

Another customer, Emma Mottram, from south-east London, said: ‘I tried to amend the order yesterday but the website crashed and wouldn’t let me access it.

‘When I tried to amend it today instead, the order disappeared completely from my account, which is why I panicked.’ But she said after speaking to customer services her problem was resolved.

Asda shopper Patrick Harper stated: 'Entire food delivery for our Christmas holiday just cancelled by Asda but they can deliver... on the 29th! Shocking service.’

Asda shopper Patrick Harper stated: ‘Entire food delivery for our Christmas holiday just cancelled by Asda but they can deliver… on the 29th! Shocking service.’

Asda customer Justine Webster tweeted: ‘A problem with your website has cancelled my order and delivery for tomorrow! I could cry'

Asda customer Justine Webster tweeted: ‘A problem with your website has cancelled my order and delivery for tomorrow! I could cry’

Matt Richardson said: ‘Sainsbury's have let us down 100 per cent. Delivery slot booked two weeks ago - Sainsbury's make a unilateral decision to delete our order. Merry Xmas!'

Matt Richardson said: ‘Sainsbury’s have let us down 100 per cent. Delivery slot booked two weeks ago – Sainsbury’s make a unilateral decision to delete our order. Merry Xmas!’

Asda customer Justine Webster tweeted: ‘A problem with your website has cancelled my order and delivery for tomorrow! I could cry.’

And Asda shopper Patrick Harper stated: ‘Entire food delivery for our Christmas holiday just cancelled by Asda but they can deliver… on the 29th! Shocking service.’

While Asda’s website did not crash and is still taking orders for Click & Collect shopping, around 40 customers were affected by the glitc.

An Asda spokesman said: ‘We’re contacting those customers today to reassure them they will be getting their orders, and to offer a little something extra for their inconvenience.’

Meanwhile Sainsbury’s confirmed that it experienced ‘a brief technical issue with our website last night which has now been fixed’.

A spokesman said: ‘We will be individually contacting the small number of customers affected to apologise and make alternative arrangements.

‘We would like to reassure all customers who have orders outstanding that they will receive their deliveries before Christmas.

Busy day: Shoppers on Oxford Street in central London today. Visa Europe expects some £1.3billion to be spent using its cards tomorrow 

Packed: Christmas shoppers make their purchases on Market Street in Manchester city centre this lunchtime

Packed: Christmas shoppers make their purchases on Market Street in Manchester city centre this lunchtime

Out and about: Shoppers pack Oxford Street, with today expected to be the most popular day for festive grocery shopping

‘We’d also like to reassure customers who did not experience issues on the website last night that their confirmed orders will be delivered as expected.’

A problem with your website has cancelled my order and delivery for tomorrow! I could cry
Justine Webster, Asda customer

Waitrose customers also took to Twitter last night to complain about Christmas deliveries that had failed to arrive.

Paul Mayo tweeted: ‘Appalling service from Waitrose. No delivery last night, no call to say it wasn’t calling – no call today to rearrange – Xmas stuff missing.”

Fiona Turner said on Twitter this morning: ‘Waitrose still waiting for my Christmas shop since 8pm last night. Not impressed as now have to sort out the shop with a six-month-old!’

Nadine Gibbs wrote: ‘Waitrose you cancel my Xmas food shop (inclusive of turkey) no notice and no one answering the phone to resolve. So angry, three days before Xmas.’

Waitrose said about 2 per cent of orders were seriously disrupted yesterday and have promised that all customers will receive their deliveries before Christmas.

Wish list: An hour at lunchtime tomorrow is believed to be the peak time for high street shopping

Wish list: An hour at lunchtime tomorrow is believed to be the peak time for high street shopping

A spokesman for the supermarket said: ‘All orders will be fulfilled in time for Christmas. The temporary IT problem yesterday was swiftly and successfully fixed.

‘We have been in touch with any customers who might have a slight delay to their order to apologise and to arrange a delivery time to suit them.”

‘We have contacted any customer affected to ensure we meet their needs in any way we can in time for Christmas (rescheduling delivery or, if they would prefer, collect from their local branch).

‘No orders have been cancelled. We are now back on track with orders today and tomorrow.’

Tesco sent emails to customers with more than one delivery slot, asking them if they could cancel one of them, although it was understood that this was a standard email often sent ahead of peak times such as ahead of Christmas.

A spokesman for the company told MailOnline: ‘We’re pulling out all the stops and are opening up more delivery slots wherever we can.’

It seems shoppers still leave their shopping to the last minute – with more than three million visitors leaving their shopping to the last 12 days of Christmas
Myf Ryan, Westfield director

Tomorrow, an hour at lunchtime is believed to be the peak time for high street shopping.

Supermarket aisles will be filled today as some 36 per cent of consumers plan to do their main Christmas food and drink shop, according to a survey.

This was followed by 35 per cent who are due to stock up on festive treats tomorrow. And from Saturday until Christmas Eve, £300million is expected to be spent in London’s West End.

Tablet computers and video games have been the biggest online sellers for Tesco, which expects to shift 175,000 turkeys and 1.5 million Christmas puddings in the run-up to Christmas.

This Christmas, Waitrose expects to sell enough ‘gingerbread activity kits’ to build a street of houses a mile and a half long, as well as more than 800,000 kilos of turkey, 2.2 million slices of smoked salmon and enough Brussels sprouts for every Briton to have six each.

In the four weeks before Christmas, Tesco expect to shift 2.5 million bottles of champagne and 55 million bottles of wine.

Some 15million Britons were said to have hit the high street at the weekend for last-minute shopping, with 12million planning to continue purchasing right up until Christmas Eve.

Christmassy: People take a photograph in front of a festive window display on Oxford Street in London today

Christmassy: People take a photograph in front of a festive window display on Oxford Street in London today

The figures came from multi-store gift card company One4all, which also found in a study of 2,000 UK that one in five people in Britain struggle to be creative with presents.

This weekend saw over 800,000 people visit Westfield centres in London and shopping hours have been extended until midnight on Monday and Tuesday to allow more last-minute shoppers the chance to purchase presents.

Westfield director Myf Ryan said: ‘It seems shoppers still leave their shopping to the last minute – with more than three million visitors leaving their shopping to the last 12 days of Christmas.’

Meanwhile Visa Europe expects some £1.3billion to be spent using its cards tomorrow, making it the busiest day on the UK high street in the run up to Christmas.

Some £916,667 will be spent every minute or £15,278 every second on Visa cards, the company predicts. The peak time will be in the lunch hour break from 1pm to 2pm.

Crowded: Christmas shoppers pass a '50 per cent off' sale sign on Oxford Street in central London today

Crowded: Christmas shoppers pass a ’50 per cent off’ sale sign on Oxford Street in central London today

Kevin Jenkins, Visa Europe managing director, said: ‘Black Friday kick-started Christmas on the high street and online this year but the busiest bricks and mortar day will likely remain in its traditional slot close to Christmas.

Across Tuesday we are likely to see £1.3billion spent in total
Kevin Jenkins, Visa Europe

‘Retailers’ multi-channel approach should cause a surge in footfall from click-and-collect sales too, with the opportunity for further shopping in-store when consumers arrive. Across Tuesday we are likely to see £1.3billion spent in total.

‘Lunch hour should prove the most popular time for a shopping trip, either for last minute gifts or final ingredients for Christmas dinner.’

Some 34million transactions are expected to take place which is 7 per cent higher than in 2013, while spending is predicted to rise 6 per cent.

Jace Tyrrell, deputy chief executive of New West End Company London, said: ‘The weekend got off to a strong start across the West end with footfall up 6.8 per cent year-on-year on Saturday and up 4.7 per cent year-on-year for the weekend as a whole.

Oxford Street: 15million Britons were said to have hit the high street at the weekend for last-minute shopping

Oxford Street: 15million Britons were said to have hit the high street at the weekend for last-minute shopping

Mayhem Monday: The peak for festive food treats like these

‘Retailers reported confident sales over the weekend hitting the expected £150million spend mark with menswear, accessories and technology proving popular purchases.

‘We are expecting shoppers out in force as the countdown to Christmas begins with 75 per cent of shoppers on Christmas Eve set to be men for the traditional last-minute “Man Dash”.’

The Mail also reported today how traditional Boxing Day sales could become extinct following a rise in pre-Christmas discounts, with shops starting their sales earlier every year.

The British retail ritual on December 26 is coming to ‘the end of its life cycle’, experts said, with footfall on Boxing Day falling by four per cent between 2011 and 2013.

Amazon is expecting Christmas Day to be its busiest day ever for sales of digital books, music, television, films and video games – and said its Boxing Day sales will start at 4pm on December 25.

LAST ORDER DATES FOR RETAILERS TODAY (MONDAY) 
STORE TIME (IF SPECIFIED) CHEAPEST DELIVERY PRICE AFTER AND FINAL ORDER DATE CLICK & COLLECT IN STORE UNTIL
Argos (small items) 6pm £3.95 N/A Wed 24 Dec
Cath Kidston 3.30pm £7.95 N/A N/A
Ernest Jones 2pm £3, free over £100 £5 until Tue 23 Dec (3pm) Mon 22 Dec
Figleaves 12pm £3.75 £6.95 until Tue 23 Dec (3pm) N/A
M&M Direct 2pm £3.99, free over £50 N/A N/A
Next 10pm £3.99 N/A Mon 22 Dec
Reiss £3.95 N/A Mon 22 Dec
Tesco Wine 3pm £6, free over £50 N/A N/A
TM Lewin 1pm Free N/A Mon 22 Dec
LAST ORDER DATES FOR RETAILERS TOMORROW (TUESDAY)
STORE TIME (IF SPECIFIED) CHEAPEST DELIVERY PRICE AFTER AND FINAL ORDER DATE CLICK & COLLECT IN STORE UNTIL
Asda (groceries, if you can get a slot) Book a slot Varies N/A Tue 23 Dec
Ocado (if you can get a slot) Book a slot Varies N/A N/A
Rubbersole 2pm Free N/A N/A
Sainsbury’s (if you can get a slot) Book a slot Varies N/A N/A
Tesco (groceries, if you can get a slot) Book a slot Varies N/A Tue 23 Dec
Waitrose (if you can get a slot) Book a slot Varies N/A N/A

Tables provided by MoneySavingExpert 

More than 1,600 offers will be available, with an average of 35 per cent off current Amazon UK prices. Offers will include £37 off a £170 Sony smart-watch and £15 off a £40 Philips blender.

75 per cent of shoppers on Christmas Eve [are] set to be men for the traditional last-minute “Man Dash”
Jace Tyrrell, New West End Company London deputy chief executive

Discounts will also include £129 off a £259 Briggs & Riley cabin trolley bag, £44 off a £144 Makita cordless drill, £172 off a £633 Yamaha piano and £301 off a pair of £500 Clogau glod earrings.

Some 88 per cent of Britons plan to hit the Boxing Day sales – although 54 per cent will buy items or styles they would not purchase at full-price, according to a study by retailer B&Q.

The poll also found 43 per cent of people think they will later regret purchases, with an estimated £14billion of post-sale regret on ‘big ticket’ items such as kitchens or cars in Britain this Christmas.

Other research, for online marketing firm Webloyalty, found one in 20 people will spend Christmas Day shopping on the internet and more than half of Britons plan to shop in low-cost supermarkets.

HOW 12 DAYS OF CHRISTMAS COST AVERAGE BRITISH FAMILY ALMOST £650

The ‘12 Days of Christmas’ will cost the average British family about £650, a study revealed today.

And when the bill for Christmas Day to January 5 is added to the £750 households are expected to spend on gifts, decorations and food in the run-up to December 25, the total is £1,400.

The average bill of £642 per household during Christmas includes £109 on post-Christmas food shopping, £97 on drinks and trips to the pub and £195 on eating out.

Also included are £120 on January sales shopping and £121 on travel and visiting family, according to the survey of more than 2,000 people by First Direct bank.

Zoe Shore from First Direct said: ‘Christmas becomes a two-week holiday for a lot of people, and that means extra expense, which we found 85 per cent of people haven’t budgeted for.’

Sourced from: www.dailymail.co.uk

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By

6 Alarming Facts About Retail Workers

6 Alarming Facts About Retail Workers

Millions of Americans will flood stores around the country on the most holy day of the year for retailers. Black Friday, now an event that begins Thanksgiving Day for many businesses, has grown into such a frenzied ritual that the U.S. Occupational Health and Safety Administration advises stores to staff their entrances with guards and monitor objects that could be used as projectiles.

While people elbow their way through crowds to get discounts on big-screen televisions, they should be mindful that many of the employees have little or no choice but to be working instead of spending time with loved ones.

Here are six things you should know about Black Friday workers:

The average retail sales worker makes less than $22,000 per year.

Source: Getty Images

The average retail sales worker makes $21,410 a year; the average cashier makes $18,970 a year.

MIT’s research on the minimum pay needed to meet the cost of living in a location suggests that retail sales workers’ pay generally hovers right around the living wage threshold for a single adult without children — far from sufficient for a single parent. Keep in mind this is an estimate of what’s needed to meet basic costs and doesn’t account for substantial emergency funds, savings, investments or leisure.

45% of service sector workers don’t get paid holidays.

Source: Getty Images

The U.S. stands alone among affluent capitalist nations in its refusal to legally mandate that companies offer their employees paid vacation and holidays. Of service sector workers, which includes retail workers, 45% do not get paid holidays.

Over a quarter of low-wage retail workers live in poverty.

Twenty-six percent of low-wage retail workers live in total or near-poverty. A study by nonpartisan public policy center Demos found that a new wage floor of $25,000 a year would pull millions of Americans away from the most dire economic hardship and give them purchasing power to boost the economy.

Retail workers have extremely unpredictable schedules.

A survey from Retail Action Project found that nearly 40% of retail workers don’t receive a set minimum of hours, and 25% receive on-call shifts hours before they’re needed in the workplace.ThinkProgress reported research showing close to 50% of part-time workers and close to 40% of full-time workers are given seven days’ notice or less for their schedules.

Erratic schedules make other life commitments such as child-rearing or pursuing other educational or employment opportunities extremely difficult. It’s also a documented source of wage theft, as workers work with such irregularity they lose track of their compensation.

Sales is one of the least unionized industries in the country.

Source: AP

Part of the explanation why retail workers face the work conditions they do is because they lack organization and collective leverage. Among occupational groups in the U.S.,, the retail industry has one of the lowest unionization rates. Efforts by retail workers to organize have generally been squashed by aggressive anti-union campaigns.

Black Friday is becoming an occasion for fighting for workers’ rights.

Source: Getty Images

This is the third and potentially biggest year of coordinated strikes and protests by Walmart employees across the country. Actions are planned at over 2,000 stores, united by a call for access to full-time hours and a $15 wage. That number isn’t just picked out of thin air: In 2014, $15 per hour has become a rallying cry, the target wage for low-wage workers across the country. It’s also not a purely fantastical notion. Seattle and San Francisco have already passed measures to roll out a $15 minimum wage in the coming years.

This Thanksgiving, let’s remember that many are excluded from the holiday and live lives that could be made much easier if their workers were reasonably compensated, given better schedules and were able to organize so they could negotiate for a fairer workplace. Or if you’re still awake after your fill of turkey, get involved.

Sourced from mic.com

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McDonald’s Complaint Redefines The Meaning Of “Employee”

Mike Blake / Reuters

They wear the company’s logo on their shirt, but does a worker at a franchised McDonald’s restaurant really work for the McDonald’s corporation?

It’s a big, important legal question with huge ramifications for the company and its industry, and today rhe National Labor Relations Board dived further into thet debate, releasing a complaint against McDonald’s that declared the company a “joint employer” of the workers in its franchises, and at least partially responsible for their treatment.

An administrative judge’s ruling on the complaint in the weeks to come will likely set a precedent for companies that operate under the franchise model, and determine their level of responsibility when it comes to their employees. Franchisees own about 90% of the 14,000 McDonald’s restaurants in the U.S.

The decision, if it affirms the NLRB’s claim, would hit home particularly hard in the restaurant industry, which employs nearly 10% of the U.S. workforce. Restaurants are the country’s second largest private sector employer, and have been one of the largest creators of new jobs since the recession.

The NLRB believes that McDonald’s as a corporation and its franchisees are joint employers of the people who work at the fast food chain, and should therefore both be held accountable for any employee rights violations. The complaint released today alleges certain employees were persecuted for advocating for higher wages.

Some McDonald’s employees have been at the forefront of a national campaign to raise the minimum wage, and the NLRB complaint says they experienced retaliation from their employers over the activism.

In a statement, the NLRB said its complaint alleges “that McDonald’s USA, LLC and certain franchisees violated the rights of employees working at McDonald’s restaurants at various locations around the country by, among other things, making statements and taking actions against them for engaging in activities aimed at improving their wages and working conditions, including participating in nationwide fast food worker protests about their terms and conditions of employment during the past two years.”

McDonald’s spokeswoman Lisa McComb said the NLRB’s actions “improperly and dramatically strike at the heart of the franchise system – a system that creates economic opportunity, jobs and income for thousands of business owners and their employees across the country.” The company will contest both the designation as a “joint employer” and the underlying allegations, she said.

More vocal opposition to the NLRB coming from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the National Restaurant Association, the National Retail Federation, and the International Franchise Association, which held a joint call shortly after the complaint’s release to express their objection to the NLRB’s claim that McDonald’s can be seen as an employer of workers in its franchises.

“It’s a sad day,” Angelo Amador, Vice President & Regulatory Counsel at the National Restaurant Association said on the call. “It’s going to upend the franchise model and resolutions to do business in the economy.”

The IFA’s Executive Vice President, Government Relations & Public Policy Robert Cresanti was the most critical of the NLRB’s statement, as well as the timing of the move.

“For us this is the nightmare before Christmas,” Cresanti said. “A group of non-elected bureaucrats have joined up with the unions while Congress has left for the holidays, it’s a devastating blow.”

When pressed by media listening in on the call for specific examples of how the NLRB’s complaint would negatively affect franchisees, as Cresanti also alleged over the course of the 45-minute call, Cresanti said it would limit their control of employees.

“This pierces the corporate entity of the small business owner in an attempt to go into a national chain,” Cresant said. “It creates uncertainty and increased risk for franchisors. There are significant threats that pile on as a result of that. It takes away franchisees’ control to operate independently.”

The IFA’s Labor Counsel, Michael Lotito, added it is prohibitively expensive for franchisees to do battle with the NLRB in court, and said today’s complaint “is part of a corporate campaign to put pressure on the franchisor by constantly attacking the franchisees”

Franchisees “have to hire counsel when faced with a complaint and do not have the resources to undertake this kind of fight,” he said. “The franchisees are at a tremendous disadvantage to figure out these complex rules and regulations.”

Sourced from buzzfeed.com

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