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How to shoot a legitimate complaint straight to hell
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Quoth Irving Patrick Freleigh View Post1. Cop an attitude from the get-go.
2. Complain that the letters on the shelf tag are too small and you shouldn't be expected to read them anyway.
3. Remind the clerk helping you that you once worked in retail, and none of the things we do would've been acceptable in your time.
*snip*
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Yeah, two products with the same price can work out ok, but two different prices can cause a real headache.
Where I live, she'd have gotten one free and the rest, if more than one, at sale price.
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Quoth Irving Patrick Freleigh View Post
1. Cop an attitude from the get-go.
2. Complain that the letters on the shelf tag are too small and you shouldn't be expected to read them anyway.
3. Remind the clerk helping you that you once worked in retail, and none of the things we do would've been acceptable in your time.
4. Abandon your cart of stuff for somebody else to have to re-shelve.
If she'd worked in retail she'd know how to behave herself, be polite even in complaints, and not leave carts of stuff to cause extra work for employees. She'd also know that stores don't provide someone to walk around and read shelf tags for you, nor is there technology for them to read themselves to the customers. And finally, even if she did work in retail, things do change. The first time I worked as a cashier, there were almost no shelf tags, as every item had to have it's own price tag, since scanners didn't yet exist (and no, we did not give change in rocks
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How to shoot a legitimate complaint straight to hell
1. Cop an attitude from the get-go.
2. Complain that the letters on the shelf tag are too small and you shouldn't be expected to read them anyway.
3. Remind the clerk helping you that you once worked in retail, and none of the things we do would've been acceptable in your time.
4. Abandon your cart of stuff for somebody else to have to re-shelve.
So what was the complaint?
Every so often, due to our buyers' inability to know when to say when, we'll sometimes end up with more merchandise than can fit cleanly into its allotted space. This will result in the planogram calling for two different items to be stocked one in front of the other in the same space. The shelf labels for the two items will be right next to each other.
The items in question were a couple pieces of children's plastic dinnerware that were planogrammed the way described above. One of them had gone clearance and was totally gone, but we still had the other. The customer thought she was going to get something for $1.79 on clearance, but had an employee check the price for her, and threw a raging bitchfit when she found out it was actually $5.99 on sale, and nobody had gotten around to removing the clearance tag for the other item.
This is a legitimate complaint, and I wish corporate would stop doing this because it causes customer confusion and headaches when stocking, but I'm just a peon and nobody listens to me anyway.Tags: None
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