spinynorman99 wrote:Come on, boycotting a store because they didn't accommodate your bagging preferences?
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:Come on, boycotting a store because they didn't accommodate your bagging preferences?
Yes, of course. If I have the choice between shopping at a store with friendly employees who cheerfully accommodate a simple request vs. snitty behavior and having to repack everything in the parking lot, absolutely. You would continue to patronize a store with rude employees if you had an option not to?
spinynorman99 wrote:Suzy Creamcheese wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:Come on, boycotting a store because they didn't accommodate your bagging preferences?
Yes, of course. If I have the choice between shopping at a store with friendly employees who cheerfully accommodate a simple request vs. snitty behavior and having to repack everything in the parking lot, absolutely. You would continue to patronize a store with rude employees if you had an option not to?
Perhaps we have different perceptions of "rudeness"?
Suzy Creamcheese wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:Come on, boycotting a store because they didn't accommodate your bagging preferences?
Yes, of course. If I have the choice between shopping at a store with friendly employees who cheerfully accommodate a simple request vs. snitty behavior and having to repack everything in the parking lot, absolutely. You would continue to patronize a store with rude employees if you had an option not to?
Ms. Ingie wrote:I feel that I can comment on this topic because I was a bagger at the A&P while in college. One poster mentioned training. I personally feel that most stores don't spend enough time training baggers; it's cursory at best. My mother was a retail clerk, first at Deli Meyer and then National, which became A&P. SHE taught me to bag, and we didn't work in the same store. I used to pack a week's worth of groceries in the two-wheeled shopping carts that the neighborhood ladies wheeled to the store - it was an art. I listened to the customer. If they said it was O.K. to make them heavy, I did. If they wanted them light, I did that too. Cans were not thrown on top of loaves of bread, soap was kept away from anything that could absorb the smell. I had one lady who always sought me out because she said I treated her with respect and didn't look down on her because she used Food Stamps. It's all about customer service.
Rick T. wrote:sdbond wrote:
So let me get this straight: In NJ you have to bag your own groceries but you can't pump your own gas! I remember back in the earlier days of self-service, making a trip to NJ and hunting a while for a self-service pump not realizing there were none.
Siun wrote:I'm sorry but I really find respect for working folks as important as care for the environment. Perhaps you could hand them only the appropriate number of bags as needed to help them do a less than fun job rather than calling them names.
Sdbond - the first time I shopped in NC, on a trip visiting friends, I was horrified when the young man bagging my groceries took off with them! Then I figured it out and loved it. At one spot in NH, the kids who bagged would also bring your bags out for you and load your car ... dollar tip was standard and the service so appreciated.
sdbond wrote:Siun wrote:I'm sorry but I really find respect for working folks as important as care for the environment. Perhaps you could hand them only the appropriate number of bags as needed to help them do a less than fun job rather than calling them names.
Sdbond - the first time I shopped in NC, on a trip visiting friends, I was horrified when the young man bagging my groceries took off with them! Then I figured it out and loved it. At one spot in NH, the kids who bagged would also bring your bags out for you and load your car ... dollar tip was standard and the service so appreciated.
Siun,
I'm with you! And, I'm amused at your NC experience. I know that Dominick's (at least in Park Ridge) will always ask if I need help with my groceries, and tipping is not allowed, but somehow, it's different from back home. I very rarely take them up on the offer here.
The other option for groceries when we lived in Lakeview and Streeterville was to have groceries delivered. You would just tell the person at checkout that you wanted that option. Since I didn't have a car, this was great. Is that still offered at Treasure Island? We also used to shop at the Dominick's on Broadway at Wellington, which burned down quite some time ago; I don't know if another one was built in that part of Lakeview. But they also delivered.
If I wasn't having groceries delivered, having a good bagger was key, because I would be using one of those wheeled carts to get the groceries home. They would need to maximize the space in the cart.
Pie Lady wrote:[quote=quote]Pie Lady wrote:I could swear there was a general pet peeves thread. I didn't see it, but feel free to move this if there is one.
I have nothing against baggers in general. I always make sure to thank them when I leave. I make conversation if the bagger is chatty. Baggers are people too.
I have reusable bags to put my groceries in, as many of us do these days. I think I'm respectful by storing, say, 9 folded bags into one open bag, then handing this package to the bagger. Why, then, do they upturn the lot, dumping all the bags out on the counter, filling up two or three, then handing me a stack of 6-7 loose bags? This is incredibly irritating. Is it just me?
And what is the deal with putting things like dish soap in a plastic bag, then putting it into a reusable bag, with nothing else? What am I, 90?
What you're doing with the bags is for YOUR benefit, not the bagger's -- it's making his/her life more difficult. Why not spend a few seconds of your time to bring in only a few bags, then hand the bagger the stack of folded bags?
sdbond wrote:Rick T. wrote:sdbond wrote:
So let me get this straight: In NJ you have to bag your own groceries but you can't pump your own gas! I remember back in the earlier days of self-service, making a trip to NJ and hunting a while for a self-service pump not realizing there were none.
Rick T:
Yes, indeedy! I don't know if this is still the case there, but back when I lived in NJ, the gas station lobby was quite powerful. I think what they were trying to do (and succeeded in), was to keep gas pumps away from convenience stores.
bibi rose wrote:For one thing, it's amazing the stuff people will hand you when you are working in retail.
Yes, indeedy! I don't know if this is still the case there, but back when I lived in NJ, the gas station lobby was quite powerful. I think what they were trying to do (and succeeded in), was to keep gas pumps away from convenience stores.
The exception, as mentioned earlier, is Trader Joes. They reward you for bringing your own bags and do a good job packing them.
Ms. Ingie wrote:This discussion jogged a memory, the A&P where I worked also delivery groceries. Jewel and Dominick's would never do that now.
rickster wrote:The exception, as mentioned earlier, is Trader Joes. They reward you for bringing your own bags and do a good job packing them.
My last visit to Trader Joe's, the checker overpacked the bag and put a bottle of wine at the bottom. The bag broke in my garage and the wine smashed all over the floor.
Did you call or return to the store?
Pie Lady wrote:bibi rose wrote:For one thing, it's amazing the stuff people will hand you when you are working in retail.
Don't leave us hanging! What would they give you?
bibi rose wrote:Pie Lady wrote:bibi rose wrote:For one thing, it's amazing the stuff people will hand you when you are working in retail.
Don't leave us hanging! What would they give you?
Oh my god, anything they want to get rid of. Mostly partially eaten food or cups or shopping lists or whatever, but it could be any kind of crap. I've worked a lot in bookstores and I think the only thing I haven't been handed is a dirty diaper, though there have been a few of those left on the floor. It's weird enough when you're behind the cash register but when you're walking by with one hand holding a phone to your ear and the other hand holding a pile of books? Someone shoves something at you like you're supposed to grab it with your third hand.
Anyway, my point about bagging and stuff, based on these experiences in stores, is that even the most inept or casual worker has some kind of routine to help them get through a large number of transactions as smoothly as they can. And even the good ones will be momentarily boggled by a variation when they see it for the first time. I haven't run a cash register all that much, but when I have, I've been known to get confused by someone who has an unusual way of piling up or dividing their purchases, paying by multiple means etc. It's the worst when they just assume I'm going to understand what they're doing. Now, most people are pretty good natured when they realize that no, it was not immediately apparent. But some seem to think that since they've done it a hundred times I've seen it a hundred times, and I have a hell of a nerve not knowing immediately what to do.
My philosophy about working retail is that once you start expecting customers to understand the way you work, or the way things work in your store, you're doomed to a life of frustration. But it's the same thing when you're a customer. If you have a routine you like to follow and people aren't getting it, you're going to be continually frustrated unless you explain it up front.
mhill95149 wrote:Sure wish Mike Holiday was still hard at work here in Chicago!
AngrySarah wrote:mhill95149 wrote:Sure wish Mike Holiday was still hard at work here in Chicago!
You have made me remember the excretable Bob Greene. For that I cannot forgive.
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness...
Ms. Ingie wrote:Exactly. I can't stand when I'm given the currency followed by the coin. The other thing that bothers me is that many today can't make change on their own. They only know what the register tells them.
AngrySarah wrote:You have made me remember the excretable Bob Greene.