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Back to school shopping ... yay! |
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07-20-2006, 10:40 PM
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Unfortunate Department Manager
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 150
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Back to school shopping ... yay!
Ladies and Gentlemen, my store now has back to school stuff in the seasonal department!
The kids just got out of school, but extremely soon, us retail employees can look forward to the following:
- Customers throwing their back to school shopping list at you, expecting you to find every item on the list NOW! NOW! NOW! Don't mind the other SCs and running/screaming kids doing the same all around you.
- Extreme outbursts & temper tantrums by grown women when you suddenly get sold out of red markers, composition books or #2 pencils ... especially when school starts the next day. I mean really, how could you SERIOUSLY be out of composition books, I mean there can't be THAT many children who need them in this area, and its ONLY a RED MARKER ... how hard would it be to keep it in stock?
- As a cashier, having to ring up cartfulls of pink erasers or 3-packs of pens. No, I cannot hit '100' on the register and not scan each item individually just because you say you only have 100 erasers ... I know you would complain if you really had 99 erasers and I blindly charged you for 100 since you asked me to!
- Utter chaos when a local school doesn't give my store their back-to-school list until later in the season, of course after repeated calls since its important we have it. Complain to the school for their slowness, not us!
- Parents of high-school students / college students who get their school lists *after* the first day of school, only to come in and find the department baron and empty since the younger kids got their stuff. Yes, we understand some people don't get the lists until its too late and we *MUST* accomodate every one by telling parents who get the list early that they can't buy the items you need! Of course these are the idiots who fail to realize that as a high school or college student, you can easily get basic stuff like pens, paper, folders and a binder and probably be fully set for all of your classes.
- The idiots who cannot grasp the reason why we have back-to-school items in the seasonal department (the main BTS area) and *also* in its regular spot in the Home Office department.
There is surely more, but I can't think of them now. Please add on to this list with anything I have forgotten!
__________________
"In cases of customer bathroom emergencies, the toilet itself becomes less of a goal and more of a loose suggestion." - Shamus
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07-20-2006, 10:55 PM
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Job Search Ninja!!!
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Central Florida, US
Posts: 417
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In Florida, we have tax-free week for back to school clothes and select supplies. I *love* dealing with the people who want to know why A, B, and C ring up tax free, but then X, Y, and Z don't. The register is set to not tax the tax-free items, but tax the other ones. It's so frustrating when they think EVERYTHING is tax-free!
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Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old he will not depart from it.
Proverbs 22:6
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07-20-2006, 11:11 PM
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forgot what 8 was for
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: burning dumpster
Posts: 11,709
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And now, from the overnight stock point of view...
-Having to open a box and painstakingly place 36 packs of pencils or erasers or 36 boxes of crayons on the shelf, being careful not to let them spill into the spaces for other items, because the geniuses at corporate decided to abandon one of the few good ideas they've had lately, which was to have the vendors place these items in PDQ boxes than can just be cut out of the bottom of the shipping case and placed on the shelf.
-Having to straighten everything before you fill, because the people working on the salesfloor that night were too busy screwing around to keep the school supplies department looking neat.
-Having to pick up empty boxes that once held notebooks or 2-pocket folders because the people on the salesfloor were too lazy to throw them away.
-A tidal wave of backpacks. Jesus H. Christ, what are kids carrying in their backpacks these days that they need a new one every year? Rocks? Explosives? My backpack lasted me all throughout high school and my first two years of college. Every year we get an obscene amount of backpacks in, which are impossible to fill and keep neat because they aren't really planogrammed, and then half of them don't sell and we have to mark them down and watch our margins go straight into the toilet.
-Leaving work 15 to 30 minutes late every truck night because filling school supplies bogged you down (they have to be filled in the regular department, located at the front of the store, and in the seasonal BTS set at the back of the store), so therefore you have to leave early Sunday morning so you don't get overtime.
__________________
Knowledge is power. Power corrupts. Study hard. Be evil.
May your shit come to life and kiss you on the face-- Frank Zappa
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07-21-2006, 07:26 PM
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Goa'uld System Lord
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 6,800
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Quote:
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Quoth Irving Patrick Freleigh
And now, from the overnight stock point of view...
-A tidal wave of backpacks. Jesus H. Christ, what are kids carrying in their backpacks these days that they need a new one every year? Rocks? Explosives? My backpack lasted me all throughout high school and my first two years of college. Every year we get an obscene amount of backpacks in, which are impossible to fill and keep neat because they aren't really planogrammed, and then half of them don't sell and we have to mark them down and watch our margins go straight into the toilet.
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I had to get a new backpack every year grades 1-12, and a couple replacements mid-year besides. Most backpacks are made so cheap they can't carry the standard 40 lbs of crap students need to haul around and the shoulder straps break, or the bottom rips out, or the zipper fouls and won't work anymore. I went through 4 backpacks in grade 7 because my parents tried to make me use old ones we had in the house.
Now that I'm in college and don't need to carry everything with me everyday, I got myself I nice messenger bag that carries my laptop, notebook, writing supplies, and a textbook. The thing's lasted me for over a year already, beating all previous carrying devices.
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07-21-2006, 09:00 PM
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Moderated Poster
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 928
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Quote:
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Quoth Irving Patrick Freleigh
Jesus H. Christ, what are kids carrying in their backpacks these days that they need a new one every year? Rocks? Explosives? My backpack lasted me all throughout high school and my first two years of college.
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Appearantly you were never the school bully's personal bitch in school.... Tear the back pack off, toss it around play keep away.... Whoever said that high school is the best years of your life was probably a bully....
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07-23-2006, 02:41 AM
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is your savings place
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Japan
Posts: 40
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Quote:
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Quoth Irving Patrick Freleigh
And now, from the overnight stock point of view...
-A tidal wave of backpacks. Jesus H. Christ, what are kids carrying in their backpacks these days that they need a new one every year? Rocks? Explosives? My backpack lasted me all throughout high school and my first two years of college.
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Here in Japan, most elementary school students get a very specific backpack, called a randoseru. It's either red or black, made out of very thick leather, with padded straps and back, and it's sturdy enough to last the entire six years. And, after that, they're still in good enough shape to be given to another child, although many keep them as mementoes.
They start at around ¥11,000, and the really high quality ones can be over ¥20,000. (That's from $100 to over $200, USD.)
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thank you for shopping our Kmart
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07-20-2006, 11:16 PM
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Cashier
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 141
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Okay I guess I'm the customer in this situation:
- College textbooks are rediculous. I think there should be a law against a teacher writing his own book for a class and making a new edition so he keeps making money. I think the government should step in and investigate the cost of college textbooks. The workers at the bookstore try to explain the costs, but they don't do a good job at it. Well what make's the fourth edition different from the third. On page 238 it's is changed to it is....rediculous.
-Picky professors about the supplies you get for their class. "I need you to get Top Flight 2 1/2 inch binders, anything else and you fail the class." "No don't get 3x5 index cards, get the 7x42 ones instead" Might be an exaggeration, but still.
-Professors who make you buy a book, but it's never opened all semester. Any attempt to sell it back is futile thanks to NEW EDITIONS. Or the professor who uses a workbook, has you tear one page out and now it's no longer able to be sold back.
I guess I'm the SC in this situation, but still the cost of college is too much for someone who is putting themselves through school. It's not like my mom and dad can hand me a check everytime I need money. I guess I've learned a thing called responsibility.
__________________
--AmericanZero8503-- Telling Stories from the Front Line a.k.a Customer Service at a Grocery Store
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07-21-2006, 12:57 AM
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Bagger
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 5
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Quote:
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Quoth AmericanZero8503
Okay I guess I'm the customer in this situation:
- College textbooks are rediculous. I think there should be a law against a teacher writing his own book for a class and making a new edition so he keeps making money. I think the government should step in and investigate the cost of college textbooks. The workers at the bookstore try to explain the costs, but they don't do a good job at it. Well what make's the fourth edition different from the third. On page 238 it's is changed to it is....rediculous.
-Picky professors about the supplies you get for their class. "I need you to get Top Flight 2 1/2 inch binders, anything else and you fail the class." "No don't get 3x5 index cards, get the 7x42 ones instead" Might be an exaggeration, but still.
-Professors who make you buy a book, but it's never opened all semester. Any attempt to sell it back is futile thanks to NEW EDITIONS. Or the professor who uses a workbook, has you tear one page out and now it's no longer able to be sold back.
I guess I'm the SC in this situation, but still the cost of college is too much for someone who is putting themselves through school. It's not like my mom and dad can hand me a check everytime I need money. I guess I've learned a thing called responsibility.
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the Internet is your friend. $150 textbooks suddenly cost $30. I made a small mint buying books on the net and selling them to my fellow students.
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07-21-2006, 02:20 AM
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Bagger
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 8
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AmericanZero's post is exactly why I get all my books either on Half.com or from friends. If it's the wrong edition, I just borrow from a friend whenever my book's different. My professors don't really care; most of them expect a bunch of people to have different editions from ordering online.
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07-21-2006, 06:57 AM
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Bagger
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 299
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i don't know what course you do, but the reason that most new editions are brought out, is because of changes in the subject. it's the same reason you should read the monthly journals, because of changes.
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