Life as a Barista Archives - Page 15 of 20 - I Hate Working In Retail

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30 problems only people that work in retail will understand

1. When a customer asks how something looks and it’s NOT good…

2. Being given a zero-hour contract which should really be renamed the ‘zero rights’ contract.

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3. When a customer tries to return something and insists the food stains and B.O stench were part of the original design. SURE.

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4. SALE SEASON.

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5. When a customer asks if something’s in stock and you know it’s not but they just think you’re being too lazy to check.

6. When your overuse of your staff discount essentially means you’re putting your wages back into the company and working for free.

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7. When you have to smile, like, all day. #Effort

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8. Having to leave your phone in your locker

9. When you phone in sick and you can feel your boss’s hateful glare burning through the phone with the power of a thousand suns.

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10. When someone wants something off a mannequin. On a Saturday afternoon. And everyone’s on lunch.

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11. Tidying sale.

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12. When you have to do standards.

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13. When you’re too nice to a customer and they start rattling off their life story to you.

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14. When it’s your turn to cash up which means you get to stay later than everyone else. YAY.

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15. Getting called in to work a shift at the last minute. Bye bye, weekend.

16. When you get stuck on fitting room duty with a colleague you hate

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17. Doing standards on an item that has loads of buttons. :|

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18. When you’re forced to to greet people at the door even though everyone knows ALL customers detest this.

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19. When it’s your turn to sort the hanger bins

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20. When you’ve put the receipt in the customer’s bag and they THEN ask for it in their purse instead of just taking it out of the bag themselves which would’ve been easier for all involved. Ahem.

21. Getting told off by your boss for chatting on the shop floor

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22. When someone hands you back a bundle of clothes in one hand, and five empty hangers in the other.

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23. When you want to close the shop and one customer is browsing soooooo sloowwwlllyyyyyy.

24. When someone leaves a disgusting souvenir for you in the fitting room.

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25. When your rota gets changed without anyone thinking to inform you.

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26. When you’re REALLY hungover and have to interact with humans all day. Ugh.

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27. When you have to work New Year’s Day even though NOBODY shops on New Year’s Day.

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28. When someone says they have 6 items and are ‘accidentally’ concealing an extra two.

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29. When you have a rude customer and you have to be nothing but nice when you’re really thinking:

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But on the bright side…

Enduring all of the above DOES teach you to never shop like a dickhead.

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Soured from cosmopoliton.com

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21 problems only retail staff can understand

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A new law should be put in place: ‘Before you can complain about your retail experience, you have to work in it first’. People who’ve never worked in a shop simply can’t get a handle on what an absolute ballacheit is. There are some good things about it, the camaraderie, the staff discount…that’s probably it.

To be fair, no two days in retail are alike, every day comes with a new raft of problems to deal with. So when you’re settling down for a 9-hour shift on checkouts, take comfort in the fact that you’ll probably be facing a fresh bunch of idiots than every day. Yippee.

People complaining about how expensive things are

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Then trying to haggle with you

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Being the only one on tills when there’s a mile‒ long queue

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…next please.

Pretending to be sorry when you really couldn’t care less

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Having to stay after the shop shuts because some idiot can’t decide what to buy

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People misusing the phrase ‘false advertising’

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If an item has the wrong price on it, there’s no legal obligation for the store to sell it at that price. It’s not false advertising, it’s just human error, all they have to do is correct the price.

People asking you if they have ‘it’ in stock in another store

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Being late for your lunch because some other chump was late for theirs

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Having to deal with the capitalist riots that are sales

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Looking high and low for a barcode you know doesn’t exist

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Dealing with head office under any circumstances

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Having your cheery greeting met with utter indifference

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Hearing the ‘I just printed it this morning’ joke for the millionth time when checking a £50 note

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Being blamed by a customer for their own inability to read several VERY clear signs indicating that this is a cash‒ only till

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Checking the rota and seeing you’re down for Sunday…again!

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Doing a short shift that feels like a full day

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Seeing that regular pain‒ in‒ the‒ arse customer walk through the door

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Customers thinking they know more about YOUR JOB than you

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Being called by your first name and getting thoroughly creeped out

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Having to maintain composure in the face of overwhelming stupidity or rudeness

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You know what? Customers. Customers are the problem

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Things Your Barista Wants You to Know

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3. To those of us who work in the coffee industry, and every Italian in the world, an “espresso macchiato” is a single or double-shot of espresso “marked” with a small amount of steamed milk, not a bucket of cold sugar. Also, please notice it’s called “espresso”, not “expresso.” You will get an eyeroll, and deserve one, for saying “expresso.” It’s even written on the damn menu board. Or can’t you read through your diabetes?

4.  And speaking of scalding liquids, do you know what tastes awful when you boil it and combine it with espresso? Milk.You will also get an eyeroll and a groan if you don’t know this: “mocha” is coffee mixed with chocolate. It is not a third thing. It is not a plant. So when you say “can I get more mocha in that?” we contemplate tossing a pitcher of boiling water in your face so you will never be loved, and thus, never be able to procreate.

5.  Milk contains several proteins which denature (i.e. unfurl and break apart) as the milk gets hotter. Things get dicey above 140F, and above 160F, the proteins are denaturing so fast they are no longer so much proteins as amino acids. This is called ectoplasm and it’s not fun to drink. So please stop ordering your latte “extra hot”. Want to impress your barista? Order it “on the cool side”. Milk tastes sweetest when it’s just above body temperature. Afraid your latte will get cold in the car? Order a smaller one so you drink it faster. Or better yet, sit still for five minutes and enjoy it from a porcelain cup in the shop.

6. Here’s another thing: espresso does not have more caffeine than a cup of coffee. It does by volume, but not by serving. In fact, a small cup of coffee may have as much as SIX TIMES the caffeine as a single shot of espresso. We don’t mind making you a redeye (or the quad-shot “black eye”), but we think they’re gross, and probably bad for your heart.

7′  You may also be surprised to learn that not all professional baristi hate Starbucks. In fact, many of them began their careers there. Starbucks did a lot to make craft coffee popular in the US, and years ago their machines were all manual and their baristi, skilled. But gradually, shareholders and capitalism intervened, as often happens when a company gets that large and goes public. They still crush most independent stores for cleanliness, customer service, and employee benefits. So no need to hate just to impress us.And yet, despite our constant eyerolling and groaning, baristi don’t mind your ignorance. In fact, one of the pleasures of the job is helping to educate customers, and introducing people to new things that make them happy. What we hate is your arrogance. We work with coffee all day. We read about it. We talk about it. We taste it. We experiment with different ways to prepare it. Therefore, we know more than you. Moreover, we like when you ask questions. Treat us like professionals and we’ll treat you like human beings instead of cattle to be herded quickly out of doors.

8.  However, we’d appreciate you not using terms like “skinny” and “tall” in our stores. “Skim” and “small” have never not worked. And while I’m on the subject of marketing gimmicks, you should probably know that real coffee doesn’t come in flavors (i.e. “hazelnut”), and there is no such thing as “bold”. Dark coffee, which is probably what you mean, is dark because it is roasted longer. The longer a coffee bean is roasted, the more the carbohydrates and acids that compose it break down into components that taste bitter (look up “phenols”). The lighter the roast, the more you will taste the terroir of the bean, exactly like a fine wine. The darker the roast, the more you taste the roast. But a coffee that’s been roasted and roasted is like ordering a steak “blackened”. You won’t taste the meat any more, just the flames and the grease on the grill, and perhaps the cook’s sadness.

9.  If you want to taste the terroir (and better yet, smell it), order a pourover. It might seem intimidating, and the price often is too, but it’s actually the simplest method of making you a drink, and baristi love to do it. This is a slow-food method of preparing a single cup of coffee, custom-made for you with freshly-ground world-class beans. There are many methods, such as the Hario V-60, Beehouse, Clever Dripper, Chemex, Aeropress, the crowd-pleasing siphon pot, and even the humble Melitta. Any reputable shop will have at least one or two of these ready to go. Prepared correctly, a pourover is meant to be consumed black, and should not be bitter, but more like a strong cup of tea. Don’t know what to get? Ask.And this is why you’re so used to loading your coffee with milk. Big coffee companies over-roast their beans (often a simple business calculation ñ over-roasting hides defects in cheap beans and increases uniformity) so the coffee on its own is pretty unpleasant. The proteins and fats in the milk are very good at masking this fact, as is sugar.

10.  If the barista makes you something you don’t like, though, please don’t complain and tell him he did it wrong. But do tell him it wasn’t right for you, and ask what you might try next time. You may be surprised how much he wants to help if you’re polite about it.

11.  And don’t forget the tip. The guy likely isn’t making much per hour. He may be doing it because he likes it.

12.  One last thing: when you order an espresso over ice, we know exactly what you’re up to. The plan is to amble your fat ass over to the condiment bar, empty the milk canister into it, and gain an iced latte while only paying for the shot. This is called a “ghetto latte”, and if we catch you doing it, you may get an earful, or at least may be looking for a new coffee shop. We’re not stupid. Pay for the drink you want.

Caffeine is your god, and god loves you

Sourced from mancave.cbslocal.com

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