CASHIER PROBLEMS Archives - Page 2 of 3 - I Hate Working In Retail

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Customer Service: Why you should be nicer to retail workers.

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At some stage in an individuals lives, there will come a time where you have a testing job in customer service. Whether it be serving Happy Meals to ungrateful children crying about the toy they got, or patiently biting your tongue while yet another customer gripes at you about something that is out of your control, many customer service and retail jobs may not always be the absolute highlight of our days.

Now we all have bad days – there’s been times I’ve rolled my eyes at terrible customer service, and times I’ve been on the receiving end of rude or tired customers. Either way, it’s not fun. But here’s a list of reasons why we should try and remember to be nice to retail workers. After all, they probably already got 99 problems, and yours is just another one.

1) Retail workers could also be doing better things with their day.

You might be annoyed you have to ruin your Sunday by going grocery shopping, so when the checkout chick (or dude) is scanning your items, you’re probably rolling your eyes, checking your watch and snorting impatiently through flared nostrils. “How are you today?” The checkout assistant will ask in a monotone voice. That monotone isn’t anything to do with you so don’t take it personally. While you’re probably annoyed you’ve wasted an hour of your time buying mundane things like toilet paper and washing powder, this assistant has probably already scanned those items numerous times over the last few hours and is ready to go home. After all, who willingly wants to be spending their Sundays serving cranky people who are mad that the weekend is almost over? No one.

2) Retail workers have to smile and act like the customer is always right. Even when they are clearly not. 

Ahh this one is an old favourite. ‘The customer is always right!’ Whoever coined that phrase is clearly wrong. Any retail worker that’s good at their job, knows there is nothing more infuriating than a know-it-all customer acting like they are superior.

Scenario: A lady came storming up to me in my workplace (a cinema) the other day.
“Do you enjoy making people wait out in the cold? You opened the doors late today!”
Regardless of the fact I’m not God so I don’t have control over the weather, nor am I Satan who would receive enjoyment out of making people suffer, I had to politely let her know we open our doors at 9.45 am. She was complaining to me inside at 9.46am.
“Well you should advertise that!” She replied huffily. I pointed towards the door where I said it was indeed written down.
“WE ALL CHECKED, NONE OF US SAW IT!” She shrieked, her face bright red.
In this case the customer is wrong. But you have to nod along, pretend you lied about the opening times being on the door and try and serve her with a smile that probably looks more like a grimace.

3) Retail workers have to deal with cranky people ALL DAY.

Following on from the above point, sometimes there are days, where every person in the city is in a bad mood, and they just happen to enjoy taking it out on the poor soul working behind the counter. Okay this may be a slight exaggeration, but working in retail or customer service can sometimes make you feel like you’ve got a flashing neon sign above your head stating: “Please yell at me. Call me a moron. Throw any other insults my way. Blame me for everything that’s going wrong in your day. No, seriously, that’s what I’m here for.” 

That’s a very big flashing neon sign.

Would you personally want to keep smiling, talking to and dealing with a person who’s blatantly rude to you and probably just insulted you because they’re having a rough day? I’m going to take a wild guess and assume probably not. So there’s no reason to take it out on the wrong person. They may be getting paid to help you, but their pitiful wage does not even begin to cover all the panadol they’ll need for the headache cranky customers are giving them.

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4) Retail workers do not make the rules/prices:

Things are always going to be too expensive no doubt. When taking a family to the movies (2 adults, 2 kids), you’re already looking at $50 and that’s not including popcorn or drinks.

Just like I don’t decide what time doors open at the residence where I’m working, I also don’t decide on prices. In fact 9 out of 10 times, I’m probably feeling bad about charging you what seems like a ludicrous amount of money. And here’s another tip: complaining to me, and then demanding me to tell my boss to change prices is still not going to work. My boss gives about as much fucks as you give about how long it took me to get out of bed that morning. Which is none.

If you’re going to a shoe shop to buy a new pair of heels, you’re probably going to expect to be spending a bit of money. You won’t be going up to the counter, having the shoes scanned, and then upon hearing the price,  throw a tantrum that would make a two year old proud. Because you know when you purchase those shoes, it’s hardly the fault of the person serving you. If you want to blame anyone, blame the designer. Or you know, yourself for buying the shoes. Likewise if you go to the movies don’t blame the random person behind the candy bar for the price of a bag of Malteasers. Chances are they already agree with you that $6 a bag is ridiculous, and chances are they are also secretly thinking you’re a moron for not stopping at the Woolies up the road first and buying a $3 bag. Just sayin’. The staff are not food nazi’s. If you buy your confectionary from another place and then go into the cinema, I’m not going to go all Gandalf on you and not let you pass.

5) When you can, help make their job easier.

Is it necessary to tip you popcorn over the floor? I don’t think so. Is it really hard to put your used tissues in the bin on your way out instead of leaving them for someone else to clean up?  I mean, really. That’s just gross.

When you walk through a clothes store, and you’re rifling through shirts and one falls, does it make you feel better just casually kicking it under the rack for a worker to find later? DOES IT? DOES IT REALLY?  Is it worth yelling at a worker because something doesn’t fit you/something broke/something was manufactured wrong etc? It may be a good way to release your own personal rage, but chances are you just made someone else angry or feel like shit.

I used to also work at Factorie, a clothing store. One time a lady came up with me, furious her new jumper had a hole in it.
“WHAT IS THIS?” She yelled, shaking it in my face.
Biting my tongue to stop myself from pointing out the obvious (‘It looks like a jumper to me’), I told her she could exchange it. She did, and was about as ungracious as Amanda Bynes is to the rest of humanity. Handy tip: The people at the clothing stores don’t make the clothes, nor design them. The damage to your new jumper was NOT DONE ON PURPOSE. How about a polite ‘thanks for your help’ and everyone can be on their merry way.

Customer service workers aren’t peasants put on earth to listen to your griping, deal with your anger, and politely agree with your insults. Do not underestimate the simple gesture of kindness and what a polite ‘thank you’ or smile can do to turn someone’s day around.

Article by Tahlia Pritchard who has been working in customer service jobs for about five years too many. You can watch her daily mental breakdowns after a shift at the cinema unfold on her twitter. 

Sourced from bullshit-blog.com

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23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True

1. You take out hundreds of pieces of jewelry for the customer and they almost always go with the first piece they looked at.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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Oh, you want the stud earrings? The very first pair we looked at two hours ago? Right. Let me just wrap those up for you.

2. Or worse, they try on everything and leave with absolutely nothing.

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Oh, really, nothing? I mean, I showed you like 40 pairs of earrings, but still nothing? K.

3. Customers think that they can return a piece of jewelry without you realizing that it’s been worn for months on end.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True

That is tarnished, missing a stone, and the clasp is loose. Did you participate in a triathlon with this ankle bracelet on?

4. The idea of personal space is completely foreign even with a glass counter between you and the customer.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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If you lean any further over the counter, the glass will probably actually shatter.

5. When you tell the customer a price and they say, “I’ll definitely be back,” you know they’re lying.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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Hahahahaha, no you won’t, these prices are ridiculous.

6. You start to question whether people understand the difference between a sales associate and a therapist.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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I’m really sorry that your sister is getting divorced. Are you going to buy this necklace for your daughter or not?

7. Taking out heavy trays of jewelry over and over again to the sound of the store’s playlist starts to make you feel like you’re doing a bad workout tape.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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And after a while you start to choreograph your own to your favorite store songs.

8. You can’t even begin to explain your frustration when you’re helping a customer and someone interrupts you to ask to see something in a case all the way across the store.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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Seriously? Do manners and patience mean absolutely nothing to you? I’m going to take so much longer to get to you now, if ever.

9. Your customer gets genuinely upset when you don’t have a piece of jewelry that they have come up with in their head.

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Pandora didn’t decide to make a charm with a monkey holding a heart with “Happy Birthday” on it this year, I’m so sorry.

10. And they think that when you don’t have something you can just go into the back and whip it up for them.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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Unfortunately, no, I cannot go into the back and create this item that you wish existed. Also, we get this stuff shipped to us, we don’t have people working in the back making branded jewelry.

11. There are different keys to each display case and you can never figure out which goes to which, despite labels.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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I’m sorry, I’ll show you that necklace just as soon as I find the one key out of 36 that could fit into this lock.

12. You constantly forget that you are wearing the store’s jewelry and come back to work the next day with the guilt of having it overnight.

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But you’ll be damned if you don’t admit how classy you looked with that tennis bracelet on at the dive bar last night.

13. Once you take out a tray of jewelry, the customer thinks that everything is available for picking up and trying on.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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Nope. Stop, please.

14. When you ask a customer what size ring they are, they usually lie.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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“I don’t know why this won’t go on, this must be wrong. I’m always a size 6, never an 8!”
Classic denial, constantly wasting everyone’s time.

15. Or they have no idea and you have to measure every single one of their fingers.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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“I totally want this for my pointer finger, but can you measure my pinky, too?”

16. You know that hearing the words, “I’m just looking” really means “I’m about to ask you a million questions in just a minute, so get ready.”

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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3…2…1…

17. Inventory is your idea of hell.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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Especially if you sell charm bracelets. Counting those little suckers takesforevvvvverrrrrrrrr.

18. You’re constantly asked if you work on commission.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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Why yes, I do, so can you please buy all of the stuff you just looked at and never, ever return it?

19. Every morning there’s a customer screaming for you to open the store because they NEED to see a piece of jewelry right this second.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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You know what, I’m not going to open. It’s 8:58 and I’m going to sit here and sip my coffee for two full minutes and pretend that you don’t exist.

20. And when closing time is fast approaching, there’s always one customer who makes you take out several trays of jewelry at once.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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The policy is one tray out at a time and you, sir, have managed to make me take out twelve trays with three minutes until closing. What is this black magic?

21. Customers think they’re sly when they try to haggle prices with you.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
NBC / Via media.giphy.com

May I remind you that we’re in a shop in the mall, not at a street market? Pay the $200 or byeee.

22. Customers don’t understand that you help hundreds of people just like them every day.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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About once a week someone comes in and swears you helped them last month with a piece of jewelry and you know exactly which one it was and who she was and where is the jewelry because now she wants to buy it.

Nope.

23. You’ve heard the phrase, “So it’s free then, HA!” in response to an item missing its ticket so many times you want to cry.

23 Things Every Jewelry Store Employee Knows To Be True
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YEAH HAHA GOOD ONE! TOTALLY FREE, YES.

Sourced from buzzfeed.com

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10 Surefire Ways To Piss Off Your Cashier


As promised, my list of 10 surefire ways to piss off your cashiers. I have worked a cash register for almost 30 years. my first cashier consisted of a cash drawer that went ding when you pulled it open and a adding machine. despite my bitching, I do enjoy the work. cashiering is mindless work, but its NOT easy work. your standing on your feet 8 hours a day. lifting , pulling, counting, cleaning, etc. we are professionals, we have knowledge of all sorts of things but not all things. so, with that being said, here goes…..I’m gonna do the david letterman style!

Number 10….. Don’t ask the cashier if they are open. They are standing there behind the counter or at the end of it aren’t they? Is the light on? is the gate open? I will stand behind my counter, knowing that if I move to the end of it I will have to turn around and go back to the register. Not being slack, I really don’t like walking back and forth like the duck in the shooting gallery. Also, if the light is OUT, gate is pulled or chain is UP, that is a sure sign that the cashier is closed, don’t go into that line thinking she/he is opened. and don’t get mad when they tell you they are closed.

Number 9…..Get off your motherhumping cell phone!!! good lawd! no one is impressed with the fact that you have a cell phone! Not only are you being rude to the cashier, to the customer behind you and the customer behind them. We are so not interested how drunk you got last night or how friendly your date was (ewwwwww!). If you are in MY line, I will interrupt your phone call to communicate with you. You are on MY time, we are short handed as it is, I dont have time to be polite. Go ahead and get mad with me, your not going to screw up my metrics because you want to impress your peeps. If I am on the sales floor and you answer your cell phone in the middle of our chit chat and you turn your back on me, I will walk away. The majority of the people I have contact with do let their voice mail kick in, but there are those who think the world will end if they dont answer that phone. (whispering) I got news for ya….it wont!

Number 8…….do not interrupt the cashier while she is conducting business with a customer. That is just plain RUDE. Didn’t your parents teach you that is not nice to interrupt a conversation between 2 people? if it is all that important (which is not, your too lazy to read the signs posted where products are located) at least say…excuse me, can you tell me where a certain product is? not…..where is this? call someone to meet me there!

Number 7…..do not….I repeat do not yell at the cashier for ANY reason! Unless you have fallen, your bleeding, having a heart attack or someone has gotten hurt, there is no excusable reason to yell across the store (I’m younger than you and I hear fine), whistle (what the hell??? am I your dog??? screw you!), raise your arm, snap your fingers ( do I look like your damn waitress??sorry, that is NOT my table) or stand there yelling and demanding to see a manager because I chose to conduct business with the customer standing in front of me who has priority over you, instead of dealing with your ‘I am very busy, very important person, cow tow to my needs NOW’ attitude.

Number 6…….. keep up with your own kids! I am not your baby sitter dammit! If they get hurt its on YOU. Don’t think you can sue the store for money because your lazy ass refuses to keep an eye on them. And don’t get pissy with us when we say anything to you about the kids standing in the seat of a cart, doing their acrobatics on displays or chasing each other on their wheelees. Most of us are parents, we know how kids can get hurt if left unattended. we see this each and everyday. I can usually tell which kids are the home schooled ones, they lack much social skills when going out in public. don’t get me wrong, I think home school is a good thing. But I also believed kids should go to public or private school for the first 5 years to learn the much needed social skills.

Number 5……. learn to read the pricing labels! Be aware that other customers do not put merchandise back where they got it from and when you think an item cost this much but scans another, chances are it was misplaced. Don’t think you will get the lower cost, only time that will happen if the exact same product is on the shelf with old price tag that has not been changed to the newer price. Then we will gladly reduce the price to the shelf. If I see 2 products on the shelf in the same spot, I will look at the label and compare UPC code on the product and the label. Then I will know for sure what the price is. I too have gone to the check out line and discovered that its not scanning properly. I gently tell the cashier ( in a manner I would like to be spoken to) that the price is wrong and can we get a price check. I too have misread the label, and if I really want or need that product, I will buy it regardless of price.

Number 4……..learn to read the signs PERIOD! Don’t ask us how much something cost when the sign is right there! Don’t get mad at us when we point out a sign with the info on it. Retailers work very hard to make sure product is displayed and signed properly. Many of those signs a BIG, ya can’t miss them! We cashiers spend a good portion of our shift doing price checks because the people are too lazy to look for a sign.

Number 3……this one is for the guys. Do not leave your friggin‘ wallet in the damn truck! What is up with that? Your going into a store, you know your are planning on making a purchase, yet you leave to chance that some thief will see your wallet on the seat, break the window and STEAL it! Don’t expect the cashier to wait til you go to the truck to get your wallet to finish your transaction. We will suspend the transaction and go on to the next customer who has their wallet. If you come back in the middle of that transaction, you will have to wait til we are thru with said customer. It always amazes that you guys do this. Not only does this apply to wallets, but checkbooks too! and keep a pen in your checkbook, we are tired of loaning you a pen and you taking off with it~

Number 2….this one is for the ladies. Quit being so friggin‘ vain and wear your damn glasses!! do not get pissy with the cashier when you can not see the pen pad or the screen because you refuse to wear your glasses. This part applies to male and female, you do not look that cool walking into a store wearing your high dollar sunglasses. Do not complain that you cant see an item on the shelf, of course you cant, its hard to see product when your wearing sunglasses. especially hard to SEE the screens when your wearing them too. We really don’t want to see your hungover eyes, but if that what it takes for you to see the screen so be it. don’t expect us to be your seeing eye dog and tell you what is there when you are very capable of see it with the proper visual aids!

Number 1…...YES WE DO WORK HERE!! What part of our dorky uniform tells you that we do not work here???? The big ass name name plate should give it away! Or the gawd awful apron that make us look jaundice? Or maybe, just maybe…….its the fact we are standing in front of our registers processing a sale……..

OK…this list is really a small part of what gets us cashiers riled up. please refrain from telling me that if those things get us mad, maybe we shouldn’t be cashiers. This list is a few of the things that make or break good cashiers. I am GOOD at what I do. I enjoy what I do. I refuse to let a few jerks run me off like they have to so many other potentially good cashiers. We cant keep good ones because cashiers have to have a really thick skin. Yes, I know…..there are some really bad cashiers out there. I suspect they have job security because of the ‘diversity’ factor involved. If what I wrote has mad you mad, big whoop. Most people couldn’t handle being a cashier.
Ciao baby!
(mauh Liz)

 

Sourced from erzebat2.blogspot.co.uk