Life as a Cashier Archives - Page 21 of 30 - I Hate Working In Retail

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16 Insane Confessions Of A Former Limited Too Employee

limited too

Limited Too was (and maybe still is?) the fashion mecca store for kid, pre-teen, and tween girls. It’s a sparkly, candy-colored wonderland full of bedazzled overpriced everything and toys that are the stuff of parents’ nightmares. I got my first job there when I was 16 and quickly learned that it was very much like Willy Wonka’s Chocolate factory, in the way that there were some crazy things happening behind the scenes. In the spirit of Usher, these are some of my confessions from my time as a sales girl at Limited Too.

1. Guys work there, but they’re mostly unseen elves.

My store had one male employee who would mainly chill in the back room and process shipment, meaning that he took clothes, accessories, and toys out of boxes and made them ready for the sales floor. One time, he came out of the back and tapped one of the sales girls on the shoulder and said “I can’t do this anymore.” When she asked what he was talking about, he held up a bag of panties: “Can you please process these? I just really don’t feel comfortable folding little girls’ underwear for the next two hours.”

2. M.A.G.I.C moments happen every day…sort of.

Make a friend! Ask questions! Get information! I…forget what the rest of the acronym stands for, but you get the idea. There was a deck of MAGIC cards that had different selling scenarios on them. As the employee, you’d pull one from the deck and then your manager would role play the scenario with you. Some managers had a sense of humor about it (MAGIC cards!) but others would take it so seriously that I once was told, “do not come to work unless you’re ready to work your MAGIC! Seriously.”

3. Sex offenders (and other creeps) harass the store in creatively disturbing ways.

Yes, sex offenders and borderline sex offenders do hang around outside of children’s stores. They would sometimes come in alone and ask you to show them different items for their ‘niece,’ and you would catch on pretty quick to the fact that there was no ‘niece’ involved. No, there is not much mall security can do about it, unless the person is actually committing a crime or has a legitimate ‘safe distance’ order placed on them for a former crime. One time, a guy tried to videotape a Girl Scouts tour from a bench in front of our store. Mall owners later removed that bench. The creepiest incidents were the phone calls. “Thank you for calling Limited Too! This is Christina, how can I help you?” I’d hear heavy breathing, and then something like, “yes, could you tell me more about what ages your store carries clothing for?” or worse, “are….you…a…high school student, Christina?” Before you could realize what was happening, they line would go dead. Nightmares for days.

4. ‘Damaged’ candy gets ‘damaged’ out.

Little kids steal. Little kids love candy. Little kids love to steal candy. Most of the time, parents would tell us and return it to us, half-eaten. Oftentimes, half-eaten candy would end up back on the shelves and we’d have to find it at the end of the night during cleaning. We’d have to damage this candy out by listing it on a form and mailing it back. But why mail back half-eaten packs of gummy bears when you can just eat the rest of the gummy bears and then say that the perp only left the wrappers?

5. Webkinz are part of an evil empire.

At one point in my LTD2 career, my official title was ‘Webkinz Master,’ and it was literally my job to keep track of which Webkinz we had, what the stuffed animal’s name was, who it’s ‘friends’ were, and which Webkin was selling the fastest. Easy, right? No. Try explaining to a disgruntled parent or crying child that you do not have any more of the Elephant and you have no idea when you are going to get more. It is my personal belief that Webkinz were designed by the United States government to tear families apart, cause divorces, and stimulate the economy by forcing newly single parents to buy more Webkinz in order to placate their emotionally disrupted children.

6. The store is actually the destination for raging tween hormones of doom.

The Jonas Brothers, the High School Musical Cast, and Hannah Montana were the sexual awakening for many. Kids would run away from their parents just to stare at a poster of Zac Efron or Miley Cyrus for two straight minutes, and employees would have to just look away because we knew what has happening there, and it was not our job to have ‘the talk.’ Unless the ‘the talk’ was about ‘Too Bucks.’

7. ‘Too Bucks’ were the most sinister marketing tool in the game.

‘Too Bucks’ were a coupon that allowed you to take $25 off of every $100 you spent, or something. For every $200 (or something) you spent, you would get another Too Buck. Imagine the kind of roofie circle this creates, with every parent spending more just to use their ‘Too Buck,’ and then having to spend even more to earn the next ‘Too Buck,’ and then having to return to spend more to redeem that ‘Too Buck.’ TL;DR, the cost of ‘Too Bucks’ is Too. Damn. High.

8. LTD2 was (sometimes) the ideal ‘chill’ employer for buckwild high schoolers.

One of my earliest memories of LTD2 is going in by myself when I was twelve and overhearing two employees talk about getting fake ID’s while they ate pizza, right on the sales floor in front of all the customers. And by all the customers, I mean just me. Depending on the management, LTD2 could be paradise for a high school girl who’s just looking to make a couple dollars while gossiping. Before I started at my store, the previous manager would let the girls order mall food delivery to the sales floor, and they would close the gate 20 minutes early to smoke bowls at the back deliveries door, blast their own profanity-laden music, and straighten up to get rid of any evidence.

9. LTD2 was also (sometimes) run like a cult.

Right before I started at LTD2, though, a new manager took over and said the glory days had past. It was time to sell some goddamned camis and capris. She left no pair of rhinestone-encrusted jeans unturned, no clearance item un-bought. A ruthless manager made for good sales, and it was no time before I defined my own self-worth by the ability to turn a two item sale into a five item sale by encouraging customers to purchase ‘charms’ to adorn the little holes of their Crocs.

10. Teenage employees are encouraged to wear the tweenage clothes.

When you work retail, you’re almost always ‘encouraged’ (read: forced) to wear the clothes you’re trying to sell. Makes sense. But for a 5’10” sixteen-year-old girl trying to be cool and kick it with the seniors in high school, it makes a lot less sense. That didn’t stop everyone from telling me that our new dresses were ‘so on-trend’ and ‘wearable as babydoll-style tunics with leggings.’ We bought the camis with our employee discounts and rocked the leggings under long H&M tank tops and no one could tell the difference. No one, that is, besides your boyfriend, who points to the dress on his bedroom floor in horror and says, “oh my God, my kid sister definitely has that in blue.”

11. ‘Joe Baggs’ is a retail arch-villain that they pretend exists.

Every retailer has a loss prevention video that is so cheesy and detached from reality, it makes the plots on Scandal look reasonable. The LTD2 video featured a guy in a trench coat named ‘Joe Baggs,’ who would come into your store and (somehow? A trenchcoat? A man in a trenchcoat in LTD2?) go unnoticed and steal all of your stuff. After you watch that video, certain, more ‘driven’ managers would constantly ask you what you would do in a ‘Joe Baggs’ situation. To be fair, shoplifters are creative as hell. I’ve seen them go into fitting rooms wearing a loose-fitting dress and come out with thousands of dollars rubber-banded to their bodies underneath, only to be caught at Auntie Anne’s pretzels five minutes later, before they could even get the cinnamon sticks.

12. Fitting rooms are cesspools.

Bikini liners. Urine. Menstrual blood. Boogers. You name it, it ends up on the floor, walls, mirrors, and benches of a store’s fitting rooms. And employees are left to assess the damage and salvage it in ways that no one should ever have to go through. I never did find condoms on our fitting room floors, though, so that was a blessing. I’ve heard some shit goes down in Victoria’s Secret.

13. Stockholm Syndrome is real with Disney pop music.

At first, I would get off work, get into my best friend’s boyfriend’s car, and make them blast Atreyu for a solid fifteen minutes before I could even think of doing anything else. I didn’t even really like Atreyu, but it felt like a cleanse. After a couple months, though, I’d catch myself singing the High School Musical soundtrack at the top of my lungs in the shower. It wasn’t too bad until I put on a mix CD at a party that contained Hannah Montana and woke up the next day to find the CD shattered on the tile floor with a note that read, “really Crissy?”

14. Negative personalities flounder or thrive in the Limited Too environment. There is no grey area. Literally.

One of the girls I worked with in my first few months at bright, pink, shiny LTD2 was an aspiring mortician. She wore nothing but black and refused to talk to customers. She didn’t last long. But mean girls who would never be caught dead babysitting are actually the perfect employees. They can turn on the charm with parents in an almost sociopathic way, oscillating from “Aw, she looks like a princess! You know what would look great with that? We have a jewelry set…” to “did you see that little brat? I got her parents to spend $55 on shoes that won’t fit her in six months. HA!”

15. Parents are more thankful when you don’t ‘help’ them.

Girls already roll up to Limited Too with the same enthusiasm they’ll one day have for rolling up on a ‘networking’ event with free food and an open bar. If you were at an open bar, would you need someone to tell you how good the drinks are? No. LTD2 was an open bar for these kids, because they lack any knowledge of the offensively audacious price of a pair of tiny cotton shorts. I once gave a particularly hyphy Girl Scout tour, in which I staged a fashion show and had each girl pick their favorite three things, only to be met by their parents at the register whose faces read “are you fucking kidding me?” After that, I realized that I was facing the sentence of having a bounty of grudges against me in a small town if I kept that shit up.

16. The impulse to create monochromatic neon outfits stays with you forever.

I cannot dress myself in a mature way to begin with. I’ve always wanted to wear leggings instead of pants, ever since I was a child and called jeans “jaggy,” which is a combination of “jean” and “baggy” that I’m still pretty on-board with to this day. Limited Too poisoned my sense of style for the rest of my life, given that I dedicated a year of my life to seeing the functionality and wearability of cheetah print, bright colors, and accessorizing oneself until one becomes at least a full pound heavier for that outfit’s portion of the day. Three weeks ago, I showed up at my hometown Applebee’s wearing a teal skirt with a dark pink leopard-print burnout tee and pristine white strappy sandals. My best friend took one look at me and said, “you working at the mall again, bitch?”

Sourced from thoughtcatalog.com

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25 things Cashiers hate….

As a cashier for a small grocery store….these are just a few of my pet peeves. They are all things I’m sure you’ve seen cashiers frown or rant over. Please share and elighten others on how to respect hardworking cashiers!

1. People putting their full cart of items up on the belt getting rung out only to realize they’ve forgotten their wallet or checkbook. As a courtesy to the customers and to the cashier, PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE look for your wallet BEFORE you leave home or get out of your car at the store!

2. Who even still WRITES checks?! It’s called cash or your debit/credit card that’s LINKED to your checking account! It’s 2014 people! Get with technology. Besides, most stores run your check electronically or will print it for you now so PLEASE! You don’t have to fill the whole thing out! Just sign it!

3. The one thing that irritates cashiers the most are the people who come up to the register and start yakking away on their cell phones or to someone they know while the cashier is ringing up their purchase. Please be courteous and get off your goddamn cell phone. Tell the person you’ll call them back or talk to them another time. It’s rude and impolite, especially when the cashier is trying to make friendly conversation with you!

4. Another thing that irritates me are old people that take their sweet ass time in line. They will give you their life story, while counting all of their items in their cart, while slowly proceeding to place their items on the belt, and also take FOREVER to count their money!

5. Okay so I will admit I have food stamps. But what irritates me are those that I’m pretty sure really don’t need them and are the ones who keep several large bills in their wallets, and/or don’t keep track of their balance on their EBT card. They buy buy buy and then get to the register and ask you to check their balance. Then they slow down the line by cutting off at a certain amount and the rest of the groceries have to go back on the shelf.

6. Registers that never want to cooperate with cashiers. Let’s leave it at that.

7. People who bring in loose change to use towards a purchase. PLEASE PEOPLE FOR THE LOVE OF GOD ROLL YOUR CHANGE OR USE A COINSTAR MACHINE OR TAKE IT TO THE BANK! I don’t want to count out twenty dollars worth of quarters!!!

8. Stock boys who don’t do their job and then you have to do double duty…

9. Parents who treat their kids like crap in the store. Seriously, if I see one more parents hit their kid…how would you feel if someone berated and degraded you?

10. People who expect you to bag your groceries for them when you work at a Bag-It-Yourself store. Don’t put the bags or boxes in the cart and expect me to fill them. Also, DONT stand there and bag or box your shit while I’m ringing you out. That’s what the tables are for.

11.People asking for directions, the date, or the time. Like I seriously have the time myself to tell you this?

12. People paying for a purchase below 20.00 with a fifty or hundred dollar bill when they clearly have the right amount of money in their wallet. Do I look like an ATM to you when I have little to nothing in my drawer? break your large bills elsewhere! preferably the bank!

13. Those annoying plastic bags for produce and meat. People tie huge knots in them and you cant scan the meat or count produce items individually.

14. People that leave their crap behind. Double check before you leave…i dont want to run after you Ninja-style to hand you something you forgot.

15. People that leave their shopping carts in the middle of the parking lot instead of properly placing them in the cart corral! Lazy and dangerous!

16. How stupid are to not notice that the box, bag, or container is leaking all over your stuff? Have you no decency?

17. When someone just had to go and mess up your stocking rotation. Take from the top box, NOT THE MIDDLE OR BOTTOM ONE. Old before new people.

18. I’m not your maid. Don’t ask me to throw shit away for you at the register. Do that with the garbage can that is sitting five feet away.

19. People who place their money on the register belt or little shelf instead placing it into the cashier’s waiting and open hand. It’s hard to pick change up off that shit!

20. If you change your mind about something, PUT IT BACK WHERE IT BELONGS. Lazy and stupid. If it’s a cold item, PUT IT BACK IN THE COLD SECTION.

21. I just hate stupid people in general. Like drunk and/or high people with the munchies.

22. People who buy in bulk and put everything on the belt instead of handing one of the items and telling you how many you have. It’s called a quantity button for a reason people!

23. Do not make jokes about having just printed off your fifty dollar bill that morning when we hold it up to the light or mark it with the marker. It’s not funny, we’ve heard it a hundred times, and if I’m pissed enough I can technically decline your bill since you’ve admitted to forgery.

24. When I’m looking for the produce code for a fruit or vegetable on my paper, don’t tell me “oh it’s a peach, or, they’re 99 cents a pound”. I know which goddamn fruit it is and/or how much they are, not only is that condescending but profoundly unhelpful.

25. When “trying to get rid of your change”, do not hold out a handful and tell the cashier to pick through it to find what they need. I feel like I shouldn’t have to explain how impolite this is, and you’re wasting everyone’s time.

That’s all I have to rant about for now! But believe you me, if you reblog this, you will open everyone’s eyes and maybe us hardworking cashiers will earn a little respect!

Sourced from cardinaire.tumblr.com

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8 Types Of Cashiers To Avoid. Which One Are You??

cashier (1)

When I go shopping I’m usually in a hurry to pay for my crap and get going onto my next errand. All I ask is for a cashier to be competent, friendly and efficient, and thankfully most are. Yet sometimes I’ll find myself standing in a checkout line in which the cashier is lacking in one or all of these qualities. If you ever see that you are dealing with one of these types, do yourself a favor and change lines!

1. Roboclerk

“Cash, check or charge? You have ten seconds to reply!” This cashier has become a cog in the big retail machine, so much so that he functions slowly and methodically like a mindless, mechanized part, with the personality of a fried circuit board. His robotic manner would be tolerable if he was an entertaining and flamboyant robosexual like C3PO or drunkenly outrageous like Futurama’s Bender. Instead, with his blank expression, emotionless interaction and monotone delivery of “hihowareyou?” and “thankyoucomeagain,” he’s more like the Terminator. He must have heard that he’s going to be replaced by a robot in the near future, so to avoid the inevitable he’s already turned himself into a one.

2. Bad Bagger

Watermelon on top of the eggs? Check. Apples and yogurt with the bleach? You bet. Clothing yanked off the hangers, wadded up and crammed into too small of a bag? Definitely. While you’re at it, why not put everything in one bag so I dislocate my shoulder on the way up to my apartment, just before it splits open and sends my $50 worth of groceries cascading down the stairway and into the grease-stained parking lot? Or go the anal opposite and bag each of my 47 items separately, making me look like a homeless person on my way to the bus. By the way, nice job increasing your carbon footprint by wasting all that plastic. You just killed a polar bear.

3. Company Spokesperson

I always get this gung-ho gal when I’m dashing in for a gallon of milk. She’s chugged the company Kool-aid and is onboard with every last ditch sales tactic and marketing ploy they have to offer. So before I get my change I have to listen to her brainwashed blathering about rewards cards, bonus buys, weekly promos, donation drives, online surveys (where I can win a $5000 gift card!), and did you know how much SpendMart gives back to the community? Oh, and can I have your zip code? It’s strictly for our own in-store demographic purposes. We don’t sell your personal info. Honest. At this point, the milk has gone sour and so have I.

4. Psyched Up Psycho

Opposite of the Roboclerks are these super-happy, mega-hyper balls of giddy energy. Apparently they had three Redbulls and a bag of meth for breakfast. All amped like a lonely puppy when his owner gets home. So overly upbeat with an enthusiasm that goes to 11, I don’t know if they’re trying to convince me, or themselves that this crappy, minimum wage dead-end trench work is the Best. Job. Ever. If they were anymore excited about ringing up my groceries they’d be humping the register. Don’t get me wrong, I appreciate people enjoying what they do, but I’ve done my time in retail and it ain’t no Disneyland. Heck, being a cashier at Disneyland probably ain’t no Disneyland.

5. Unmotivated Public Sector Drone

In the private sector, businesses strive to stay profitable and avoid losing customers to the competition. Workers are expected to be fast-paced and productive. Not so with places like the DMV or the county courthouse. They have no competition. You can’t say, “Well, this clerk sucks. I’ll just go pay my license fee at the DMV across the street.” That must be why so many of these office drones work at an excruciatingly slow pace that would make a snail cringe. Actually, to call this clerk a drone is an insult to all the diligent worker bees out there. Their pay raises aren’t tied to performance (or worse, their pay has been frozen), so they have no motivation to go above and beyond. Ever been so late on your gas or electric bill that you had to pay it in person? Or had to go downtown to pay a parking ticket? You better ask Siri to block out a big chunk of your daily schedule. But look on the bright side, now you’ve got an excuse to play Candy Crush Saga for 3 or 4 hours while you wait.

6. Cashier Creeper

I’m sure all you ladies out there have run into this dirty old clerk. I’ve seen him in action. When he’s not making some poorly conceived double entendre about your purchase of Sweet and Low, he’s staring down your scoop neck as you unload your cart. He doesn’t even try to be sly about it! Don’t get too distracted by the debit machine or you’ll miss him ogling your teenage daughter as well. There are also young creepers manning the registers. These 20-something dudes think that every female customer is a speed-dating opportunity, trying out pick-up lines as stale and cheesy as the popcorn balls in aisle 32. In either case, now you’re wishing you’d picked up some Dove, because you feel like you need a shower when you get home.

7. The Occasional Cashier

This situation occurs when a parking lot attendant, fitting room associate or some other employee who seldom runs a register is “volun-told” to help with cashiering during a rush (because management cut payroll to the bone and won’t schedule enough full-timers). After a bunch of people move to her lane, sure enough the first transaction goes horribly awry. Instead of a simple single item paid with cash, this one involves rain checks, coupons, some sort of complex rebate voucher and payment in Canadian money orders. She knows just enough about the checkout process to foul the whole thing up, pecking hesitantly at the keys, as if one wrong button press will cause the register to explode. All the while craning her neck frantically left and right like a panicked, lost ostrich, looking for a supervisor to bail her out. It’s not her fault and I feel her pain, but do I want to be stuck in her lane? Not so much.

8. Skeptical Scanner

This cashier missed the memo about employee empowerment and believes that the old adage says, “The Customer is Always Wrong.” He questions every price discrepancy and creates unnecessary delays as he calls to confirm if an item ringing at $29.99 is advertised for $27.99, constantly making a big deal about it, as if his personal paycheck will be garnished to cover the two bucks. He scrutinizes each coupon for several minutes, fearful that he might redeem one for Crest Fresh Mint Gel rather than Fresh Mint Paste and cost the company 25 cents. I get it. You don’t want to give away the store. Sure, lost profits do affect the employees. But unless I’m claiming that a 60” LCD TV is on sale for $13.99, just honor the price difference and move on to the hapless sap in line behind me.

Sourced from thoughtcatalog.com

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