life of a barista Archives - Page 5 of 7 - I Hate Working In Retail

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18 Confessions Of A Former Starbucks Barista

Flickr / sean_oliver

Flickr / sean_oliver

1. Dealing with customers is usually a pleasant experience, but occasionally, we would get someone who thinks we are dumb as nails and treat us like we were their butlers. A woman one time literally commanded me to put in three ice cubes into her drink. Three. No more, no less. Another time, this woman asked me to make her a whey protein shake using our blenders. She handed me a packet of the whey and said, “Put this into my drink.”

2. Good managers would actually be on the floor making drinks with the staff, but bad managers would hide in the back, doing what they do, and not build team camaraderie. (We hated those kinds of managers.)

3. Starbucks uses vanilla soy milk as the milk substitute. We don’t have control over what type of milk (or any ingredients that go into a drink) will be shipped to our stores. Plenty of people have asked, “When are you getting almond milk?” as if I have control over what comes and goes in the store. (Hint: we don’t!)

4. Markouts are really nice, especially if you have a cup of coffee every morning. It basically allows us to take a bag of coffee home for free.

5. You can use markouts at other Starbucks! And if you’re really nice about it, baristas will throw in something extra, because you’re part of the Starbucks family (and know all-too-well about the stuff you deal with as a barista).

6. We had to go through the Starbucks training regime even if we had previous experience with making drinks (and it is a boring, boring process). Also, the Starbucks espresso machine is actually a pseudo-espresso machine. The machine steams the milk for you until it gets to the proper temp and all you have to do for the espresso is push a button.

7. The amount you were paid per hour depended on the location of the store. I have some friends who made $7.90 per hour to $9.25 an hour — and they were both baristas. That’s a fairly large discrepancy, if you ask me.

8. Okay, so you might say, “You guys make tips, you can make up the rest with that,” but tips, my friends, are variables. It’s based on how long you’ve worked and the tip is distributed amongst the staff at the end of the week. So theoretically, if you worked 30 hours, you might get away with $30 to $60 in tips. But that all depends on the location of the store. If you’re in a highly tourist area, you might get no tips. I have friends who got $7 in tips for the entire week. We can’t live on this. Simply put, Starbucks makes it seem like tips are this huge added bonus, but they are so variable that it would be ridiculous to work there just for that.

9. At the Starbucks I worked at, on Black Friday, we would be in the store 2 hours before the Black Friday open time to get ready for the rush.

10. Holiday rush is probably one of the most frustrating and flustering times at bar. Long lines, irritated and stressed customers, means rushed drinks and crowded stores. We’re really trying to help you relieve your stress! Stop taking it out on us!

11. The “trainings” were kind of dumb. We really didn’t learn a whole lot about coffee. It was just memorizing what kind of flavors the coffee would pair with mainly to sell the food items with the coffee.

12. Sometimes, we had to meet a quota to meet to sell in-store items and occasionally, coffee. It was always a push to sell things.

13. At bad stores, employees that came to work regularly would not get written up, leaving the ones that actually came on time to run the floor by themselves, and this really sucked during morning rush. This led to really unmotivated coworkers and widespread disgruntlement. Knowing there were no repercussions to tardiness meant people came and went as they pleased.

14. When we get really long orders, we will do them one-by-one, as to not get confused with the order. It would be really appreciated if people would stop adding to the order when we are in the middle of making drinks.

15. We were frequently told to kick out loiterers (especially the homeless). It really sucked, because you know they have no place else to go, and they’re only at the store because it’s warm. Some were really hostile to the patrons, which obviously was bad for business.

16. The Starbucks hat had to be worn at all times, even though they really didn’t do anything to prevent hair from falling into the drinks 100% of the time.

17. I can’t remember a time a barista has said, “I don’t mind when the customer just stands in front of the register wondering what drink to get, even though they’ve been in line.” Because no barista has ever said that.

18. The turnover rate at Starbucks (where I worked) was very high, considering bad management, unhappy coworkers, bad customers and low pay. Some of us just stopped going, but that didn’t stop people from applying to that store.

Sourced from thoughtcatalog.com

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18 confessions from baristas brewing your coffee

So, what do the people behind the coffee counter really think of you? Whisper reveals confessions from baristas about their biggest pet peeves and why the coffee in this morning’s latte might actually be decaf.

For more barista confessions, check out Whisper.

BONUS: 7 Things You Didn’t Know About Starbucks

Have something to add to this story? Share it in the comments.

 

Sourced from mashable.com

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14 Things Baristas HATE But Will Never Tell You

Baristas see a lot of people during the day. They have to know all the different drink orders, remember faces, and always look happy. There are certain things that baristas hate though, but they’d never tell you that. Here’s the Top 14 Things baristas hate.

When somebody touches all of the cups when deciding what size they want

PLEASE STOP DOING THAT

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“What do you recommend?”

HOW DO I KNOW WHAT YOU LIKE

When people leave messes for me to cleanup

Stop that. Clean up after yourself

Waiting for the customer to decide what they want.

Do I go work on something? Should I wait?

Timers

STOP THE BEEPING

Forgetting a Regular Order

I’M SORRY DON’T HATE ME

When somebody asks for a Breve.

NO.

Pinterest *Secret Menus_

THESE ARE NOT REAL

When people change their orders

STOP IT

Spilled Milk

I hope I clean it all before it smells.

5am Shifts

I am not happy to be here, even if I’m smiling.

Teenagers

STOP GET OUT NOW

When someone calls it a “frappe”

THIS ISN’T MCDONALDS

“Is this mine?”

YES THERE IS NO ONE ELSE HERE

 

Sourced from trends-addict.com