Hello all ... long-time reader, first-time poster here. A little background info on me: I work every now and then for a regional supermarket chain in the Midwest. I did this full-time for a few years during my undergrad coursework, and now grab a few occasional shifts during down times at my normal job, which is seasonal. Right now it's the offseason and things are slow, so I've been spending a fair amount of time in the store lately.
I mainly work at the service desk, but spend some odd time out on the sales floor when needed. What follows is a list of helpful tips for our customers, inspired by my extremely long list of pet peeves and annoyances. Most of these, I'm sure, are nothing new to you guys, but here they are anyhow.
I'm sure there are others ... feel free to pile on with your own peeves. Hopefully this is at least a little entertaining to read. In any event, it makes me feel a little better to unload them here, so thanks for letting me vent.
I mainly work at the service desk, but spend some odd time out on the sales floor when needed. What follows is a list of helpful tips for our customers, inspired by my extremely long list of pet peeves and annoyances. Most of these, I'm sure, are nothing new to you guys, but here they are anyhow.

- Don't come to the desk or to my line while on your cellphone, unless you can handle simultaneous conversations. I'm not a talkative person, but I will ask you 8 billion questions just to piss you off.
- When you hand me a stack of bills, instructing me to "count it just to be sure" is 100% unnecessary. They pretty much pay me to stand here and count money -- I'm not just going to take your word for it.
- If your order is $7.03 and you hand me a ten, I'm perfectly willing to wait for you to hand me three pennies as long as it won't take you six months to find them. You have about five seconds to convince me that you aren't going to make me wait an eternity. After that, you're getting 97 cents whether you like it or not. Your time is not the only factor at play here.
- We use the word "express" to describe the express lane for a reason. If you aren't prepared to finish the transaction quickly, go stand in line somewhere else.
- Yes, I realize that the credit/debit reader is a little different everywhere you go. I also realize that everywhere you go, they have instructions to guide you through the process. Read the instructions, please. I'm not going to do it for you just because you're too lazy to put out a token effort.
- If we're sold out of postage stamps, don't sigh and ask me where you're supposed to go to get stamps. I hear the U.S. Post Office carries them these days.
- We're a supermarket, not a bank. No, I will not accept your $100 bill for a $7 order, and no, you're not getting a roll of quarters with your change. There's a bank thirty yards away.
- Don't ask me to scratch off your lottery tickets because you think I'm good luck. If I wanted to play the lottery, I'd do it on my own time, not at work.
- Don't ask me to interpret your lottery scratch-offs either. If you're not bright enough to figure out whether or not you won, you probably shouldn't be wasting money playing the lottery in the first place.
- If I put your order in plastic bags because you weren't paying attention when I asked, don't expect me to resack everything in paper after I finish.
- Every week, we have some items in the store that are on sale if you present your store card to the cashier. In that sense, the card is just like money as far as we're concerned. You wouldn't expect me to pull cash out of my wallet if you forgot to bring money, so don't expect me to give you the sale price if you can't be bothered to carry a 20-gram card in your wallet or on your keychain.
- If you're going to write a check, have it filled out beforehand. The name of the store and the date aren't going to change while you're in line -- make yourself useful and fill that stuff in rather than reading National Enquirer.
- Here's how the transaction works: I tell you how much money you owe to walk out the door with the products you chose, you pay me, and I give you a receipt to prove that you purchased the items you're leaving with. The receipt is yours -- don't leave your trash at my register, and don't tell me that I can keep it. It's not thrilling for me at all, I promise. If you don't want it, get rid of it yourself.
- If you brought your own bags today, give those to the sacker at the beginning of the order, not the end. Otherwise he just stands there useless for a few minutes, which is really fun for him, but not terribly useful.
- If you need something specific, try to find it on your own first. Do not walk in the door and ask me "where are the eggs?" We've surreptitiously hidden them in the aisle directly under the enormous sign marked with the word "EGGS" ... see if you can crack our code, detective.
- No, I don't know if that gallon of milk is $2.50 before I scan it. We carry about 30,000 items ... surprisingly, I'm not required to memorize the prices of all 30,000, so I don't bother memorizing any of them.
- If I'm looking for the PLU for watercress so I can ring it properly, don't say "It's watercress ... $1.79 a bunch." Yes, thank you. We have a computer system for a reason ... I'm not going to just enter the price you quote and call it a day, and believe it or not, I can identify watercress without your help. Is there any other useless information you'd like to share, or can I go back to doing my job now?
- Do not, under any circumstances, put your money on the belt. Hand it to me directly. Anything else is just rude, and if you're dumb enough to put it on the belt and it ends up in the magical place where flat things go when the belt moves, tough cookies.
- Policy is policy. All of ours are clearly posted at the service desk, and as long as I'm running the store, we're going to follow them. I don't care if you think it's stupid or if somebody else let you do it once before ... I'm not somebody else, and there's a good reason for the policy even if you don't possess the mental agility to understand it.
- Insulting or abusive behavior is a one-way ticket to Good Luck With That City. Surprise, we don't leave $3000 in cash just laying around on the off chance that someone comes in to pick up a $3000 Western Union transaction. I'll work with you any way I can, but if you yell at me because I can't pay out $3000 in cash right this minute, well ... here's your form back, sir. Good luck with that. We're done here.
I'm sure there are others ... feel free to pile on with your own peeves. Hopefully this is at least a little entertaining to read. In any event, it makes me feel a little better to unload them here, so thanks for letting me vent.

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