So I was hired in as a GM (General Merchandise) Clerk. It involved stocking shelves and being yelled at.
What no one told me (and was actually against corporate policy) was that I would be trained on the register and forced up there pretty often.
Let me tell you, I am not a people person. I don't like people. Helping customers is bad enough, but force me up on lane and make me do nothing but help jerks? Yay. I always took a break after to calm down. And, you know, didn't clock out for it. Here's my recurring fun and how I dealt with it. I always said that if they wanted someone to run it correctly, they could stop calling me. But they didn't stop, so they screwed themselves.
Bad situation #1: Price Checkers
These people stare at the screen while I'm ringing their crap up. If anything comes up at the wrong price, they'll be sure to stop me, berate me for ripping them off, and tell me how much the sign in the back said it was.
Solution: Make any change that wasn't over, let's say, five bucks.
Bad situation #2: Foreigners
Do I have a problem with people who aren't from the good ole' US? Hell no. I hate Americans, if anything, more than other types of people. But these people would come in and buy a ton of produce. The problem? Produce doesn't have a scannable bar code. And I don't know bok choi from cilantro. But guess what? They don't know what it's called in English either. Great.
Solution: Fine if a regular cashier is close to me. Otherwise, ring it up as something and hope for the best.
Bad situation #3: Unfamiliar with Plastic
Ok, so you're old and don't use a credit card much. Whatever. But you have to swipe it somewhat quickly. And the menus are pretty easy, really, if you'd just read them. But no, let me swipe your card for you and then navigate all the menus.
Solution: Grin and bear it.
Bad situation #4: I'm in a hurry
So, you have a doctor's appointment in fifteen minutes, and that didn't stop you from coming in here to buy a heaping cart of chips and cookies. Maybe that doctor's appointment is for your sky-high cholesterol. I've got an idea, buy less crap.
Solution: Go really slow without looking like you're trying to
Bad situation #5: WIC
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special...s_and_Children)
WIC is fine. I really think it's a good program. However, it's very specific about what you can and can't buy. Deli cheese is fine, kraft singles are not. Most people on WIC have learned this (probably the hard way), but not all of them. Of course it was my fault they couldn't buy what they wanted.
Solution: Learn what WIC will and won't take. Be resolute.
Bad situation #6: Paying with three types of currency
So you've got a gift card. And a credit card that's almost maxed out. And some cash. Maybe you don't really need these five DVD's.
Solution: Think thoughts of violence.
Bad situation #7: I have my light off, but you'll waltz in anyway
Where I worked, the cashiers had lighted posts. If the light was on, you were open, if not, you weren't. I wanted to get the hell off lane as fast as possible. As soon as it slowed down, the light goes off (if it was ever on). But you, SC, don't look at things like that. Sure, bring your heaping cart through my lane just as I was about to escape. That will provide a lot of time for other people to do the same thing while I'm ringing your crap up.
Solution: Murder
Moral of the story: running a cash register is the most awful job I have ever done in my life. Be nice to those people. Their jobs are really really hard.
What no one told me (and was actually against corporate policy) was that I would be trained on the register and forced up there pretty often.
Let me tell you, I am not a people person. I don't like people. Helping customers is bad enough, but force me up on lane and make me do nothing but help jerks? Yay. I always took a break after to calm down. And, you know, didn't clock out for it. Here's my recurring fun and how I dealt with it. I always said that if they wanted someone to run it correctly, they could stop calling me. But they didn't stop, so they screwed themselves.
Bad situation #1: Price Checkers
These people stare at the screen while I'm ringing their crap up. If anything comes up at the wrong price, they'll be sure to stop me, berate me for ripping them off, and tell me how much the sign in the back said it was.
Solution: Make any change that wasn't over, let's say, five bucks.
Bad situation #2: Foreigners
Do I have a problem with people who aren't from the good ole' US? Hell no. I hate Americans, if anything, more than other types of people. But these people would come in and buy a ton of produce. The problem? Produce doesn't have a scannable bar code. And I don't know bok choi from cilantro. But guess what? They don't know what it's called in English either. Great.
Solution: Fine if a regular cashier is close to me. Otherwise, ring it up as something and hope for the best.
Bad situation #3: Unfamiliar with Plastic
Ok, so you're old and don't use a credit card much. Whatever. But you have to swipe it somewhat quickly. And the menus are pretty easy, really, if you'd just read them. But no, let me swipe your card for you and then navigate all the menus.
Solution: Grin and bear it.
Bad situation #4: I'm in a hurry
So, you have a doctor's appointment in fifteen minutes, and that didn't stop you from coming in here to buy a heaping cart of chips and cookies. Maybe that doctor's appointment is for your sky-high cholesterol. I've got an idea, buy less crap.
Solution: Go really slow without looking like you're trying to
Bad situation #5: WIC
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special...s_and_Children)
WIC is fine. I really think it's a good program. However, it's very specific about what you can and can't buy. Deli cheese is fine, kraft singles are not. Most people on WIC have learned this (probably the hard way), but not all of them. Of course it was my fault they couldn't buy what they wanted.
Solution: Learn what WIC will and won't take. Be resolute.
Bad situation #6: Paying with three types of currency
So you've got a gift card. And a credit card that's almost maxed out. And some cash. Maybe you don't really need these five DVD's.
Solution: Think thoughts of violence.
Bad situation #7: I have my light off, but you'll waltz in anyway
Where I worked, the cashiers had lighted posts. If the light was on, you were open, if not, you weren't. I wanted to get the hell off lane as fast as possible. As soon as it slowed down, the light goes off (if it was ever on). But you, SC, don't look at things like that. Sure, bring your heaping cart through my lane just as I was about to escape. That will provide a lot of time for other people to do the same thing while I'm ringing your crap up.
Solution: Murder
Moral of the story: running a cash register is the most awful job I have ever done in my life. Be nice to those people. Their jobs are really really hard.
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