I'm sure those of you who have posted and related to stories about employees receiving unwelcome personal comments or questions can appreciate that customers deserve the same courtesy, even from other customers. Of course the first customer shouldn't hold up the line when it can't do any good-but the husband didn't have to add insult to injury by belittling his desire for the cheese he'd just learned he couldn't get. Asking if the line can proceed doesn't require criticizing the transaction in frustration, which is no more justified than the first customer taking out his disappointment on the counter person; this wasn't a typical SC who would have been rude had the business provided what he had reasonably expected it could, or who was trying to fulfill what would normally be considered an outrageous demand.
While I understand shortages occur, as you might guess from this post, I can be picky about things myself, and while I vent my frustration quickly (if at all) in such situations, I have far more sympathy for those who get melodramatic about having their reasonable expectations shattered than I do for those who'll accept any old thing and suggest that others have no life for not doing the same. Condemn the outburst if you must, not the person's tastes.
Perhaps a more natural way for a customer to avoid risking needlessly hurting feelings when wanting to confront another customer would be to ask the employee for service-which would be my inclination, unless I really wanted to vent at the customer. Anyway, I expect asking the employee to make the call would be faster and more pleasant, and while I can understand the counter person being too flustered to cut the complainer off, I otherwise see no reason why politeness should keep him from gently pointing out to the customer that the complaint regretfully served no purpose other than to delay others at this point (and thanking him, if applicable, for being a great regular customer)-or why any company would want a policy that didn't permit this.
While I understand shortages occur, as you might guess from this post, I can be picky about things myself, and while I vent my frustration quickly (if at all) in such situations, I have far more sympathy for those who get melodramatic about having their reasonable expectations shattered than I do for those who'll accept any old thing and suggest that others have no life for not doing the same. Condemn the outburst if you must, not the person's tastes.
Perhaps a more natural way for a customer to avoid risking needlessly hurting feelings when wanting to confront another customer would be to ask the employee for service-which would be my inclination, unless I really wanted to vent at the customer. Anyway, I expect asking the employee to make the call would be faster and more pleasant, and while I can understand the counter person being too flustered to cut the complainer off, I otherwise see no reason why politeness should keep him from gently pointing out to the customer that the complaint regretfully served no purpose other than to delay others at this point (and thanking him, if applicable, for being a great regular customer)-or why any company would want a policy that didn't permit this.
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