Life as a Server Archives - Page 15 of 23 - I Hate Working In Retail

By

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.

nicki minaj gif

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

working in retail problems

4. SALE SEASON.

working in retail problems

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.

working retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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.

selena gomez crying gif

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

working in retail problems

11. Tidying sale.

working in retail problems

12. When you have to do standards.

working in retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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

working retail problems

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

working retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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.

working in retail problems

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

working retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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

working retail problems

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

working in retail problems

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

working retail problems

But on the bright side…

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

working in retail problems

 

Soured from cosmopoliton.com

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

By

21 problems only retail staff can understand

Mean girls screencap mean girls 2319655 1600 900

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

Retailproblems1.gif

Then trying to haggle with you

Retailproblems2.jpg

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

Retailproblems3.jpg

…next please.

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

Retailproblems4.gif

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

Retailproblems5.gif

People misusing the phrase ‘false advertising’

Retailproblems6.gif

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

Retailproblems7.gif

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

Retailproblems8.gif

Having to deal with the capitalist riots that are sales

Retailproblems9.gif

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

Retailproblems10.jpg

Dealing with head office under any circumstances

Retailproblems11.gif

Having your cheery greeting met with utter indifference

Retailproblems12.gif

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

Retailproblems13.gif

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

Retailproblems14.gif

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

Retailproblems15.gif

Doing a short shift that feels like a full day

Retailproblems16.gif

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

Retailproblems17.gif

Customers thinking they know more about YOUR JOB than you

Retailproblems18.gif

Being called by your first name and getting thoroughly creeped out

Retailproblems19.gif

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

Retailproblems20.gif

You know what? Customers. Customers are the problem

Retailproblems21.gif
Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

By

80 Percent Of Female Restaurant Workers Say They’ve Been Harassed By Customers

If you’re a waitress, sexual harassment is just part of the job.

Eighty percent of women working in the restaurant industry report being harassed by customers at some point, according to a new report from Restaurant Opportunities Centers United, an organization aimed at improving conditions for restaurant workers.

A big source of the problem: tips. Servers rely on the generosity of strangers to make a living, so they need strangers to like them. Of the 688 restaurant workers ROC interviewed for the survey, women working in tipped eateries in states using the federal tipped minimum wage reported the highest rates of sexual harassment. In those states, restaurants only have to pay tipped workers $2.13 an hour and customers furnish the rest of their wages.

<img alt=

Female restaurant workers are subject to frequent sexual harassment.

The tipped minimum wage hasn’t gone up since 1991, and it currently sits at a record low 29.4 percent of the regular minimum wage, according to the Economic Policy Institute, a think tank focused on low-wage workers.

For female restaurant workers in this situation, the pressure to be sexy is intense. Oft-fickle managers will do whatever is in their power to encourage plum checks and that often means reserving better shifts and tables for servers willing to dress a certain way or flirt with customers, according to Susan Schurman, dean of Rutgers School of Management and Labor Relations. Two-thirds of female restaurant workers said they experienced some kind of sexual harassment from management on at least a monthly basis, according to the report. At the same time, capricious customers, who may feel entitled to more than they’re owed, have a huge say in how much servers get paid via tips.

“It is endemic in that industry,” Schurman said, noting that “hey baby” calls that were part of her waitressing experience decades ago haven’t disappeared. “There’s an assumption that if you’re in that job, you’re probably not making a lot of money and maybe you’re interested in earning something else.”

The harassment problem isn’t exclusive to women — more than half of male serversreported being sexually harassed by customers as well. But the fact that waitresses are so frequently subject to sexual harassment is particularly alarming given the way the part-time, low-wage recovery has pushed many women into these kinds of jobs. Jobs in low-wage sectors such as retail and restaurants have boomed in recent years, while middle-income work has slowly eroded.

And women are more likely to hold these jobs: Two-thirds of minimum-wage workers are female. Between 2009 and 2013, 35 percent of women’s job gains were in low-wage work compared with 18 percent of men’s, according to the National Women’s Law Center. Women also make up two-thirds of tipped restaurant workers, the ROC study found.

The kinds of inappropriate things customers say to these women run the gamut from sexual teasing and questions to pressure to go on dates. More than one-third of the women ROC surveyed reported being touched or pinched by a customer. Many of these women are hesitant to acknowledge the experiences as anything more than just part of the environment, the report found.

 

Laura Ramadei’s Facebook post about her experience with a customer went viral.

It’s easy to see why they don’t bring it up. Laura Ramadei made headlines earlier this year after calling out a man on Facebook for putting his hand “ever so gently — ON MY ASS” (emphasis hers) during a bartending shift. The man denied touching Ramadei to The New York Post, but did acknowledge quipping to her, “I would like you to go with nothing on it.”

He also described Ramadei’s post as “pretty ridiculous,” calling her a “f–king c–t.”

Still, after Ramadei posted her screed, she got scores of messages of support from servers who shared stories of even worse experiences.

“I think it went viral largely because so many people related to it,” she said in an interview. “There can be confusion around I’m serving you and I’m bringing you alcohol and I’m bringing you food and you think you’re entitled to more.”

In her Facebook post, Ramadei noted that she was wearing “a loose fitting, long-sleeve shirt, jeans and no makeup” and was still a target for harassment. But one thing that can increase the likelihood of unwanted sexual attention is when restaurants require workers to wear gendered uniforms, the ROC report found.

Those types of environments are pretty common. At eateries where workers have a dress code and not a strict uniform, women are often pressured “to wear something that’s a little more sexy,” Schurman said. Among workers with uniforms, nearly three-quarters of tipped employees reported that the women’s outfits were more suggestive than the men’s, the ROC report found.

In fact, the country’s fastest-growing restaurant chain, Twin Peaks, thrives on this sort of thing. Waitresses get graded on their hair, makeup and “slenderness,” according to Businessweek. Their uniforms consist of fur boots, short khaki shorts and belly shirts that accentuate their cleavage. They’re also expected to flirt with customers.

And that’s good for business. Darren Tristano, executive vice president of Technomic,told Businessweek of the chain’s success, “the results at Twin Peaks are higher because of the sexual appeal of its servers.” Adding, “The customers, who are almost entirely male, make their decision based on that.”

 

Sourced from huffingtonpost.com

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