Come to Ireland, where we have €500 notes! ($665 apparently). They're pretty rare and only used by tourists because banks here don't deal with them and they're actually banned in a few eurozone countries. But yes, about 5 times this has happened to me, €500 note for a €40 and under transaction. Three times I could cover it easily, the other 2 times I had to go to the safe and change it...because it's really amazing that I don't have €460 odd in my till at 10 ON A SUNDAY MORNING (ie. opening time). €200's and €100's are more common. But even two people handing in 50's for a transaction of €20 or less will wipe out the till..
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I remember once on a Sat morning I opened up the store, and two minutes later I get a customer who tries to pay for a 50 cent newspaper with a 100 dollar bill! I looked at him and said "Sir. We have been open for two minutes. Do you honestly expect my register to have that kind of change this early in the morning?" He looked at me and opened up his wallet and gave me a one dollar bill. I thanked him and wished him a good day. I just wanna shake people sometimes! We are a store, NOT a bank! Hell there are TWO across the street from the store! And another right up the road!
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Quoth malmalthekiller View PostWhen I was cashiering, people got back whatever I gave them, and whatever I had.
I wasn't being contentious, mind; just that on a Friday morning in the supermarket, there would be tons of people asking for cashback which can decimate a £100 float in minutes. It was worse after some genius decreed we have a £50 float. Thank goodness I work in petrol now, where we can choose how much float we have.
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Quoth Bella_Vixen View PostI'd love to. Seriously.
But anyway, I've had people buy a newspaper, which over the last 5 years have gone from .70c to $1.10 (people hate it when the paper pric goes up, especially since it was a nice easy $1 not that long ago), and break out the $100. A couple of times I've been lucky enough to have had a $50 not already in the till because someone has bought say $40 worth of stuff, but still.
If you have been a really nice customer and you ask me to upgrade your two $20s and a $10 to a $50 I will probably do it, but I probably won't if you aren't! (nice customer was wanting it for a gift, so much nicer to get a single note than a few of them )
Oh, and my spending of them, I tend to put them in a secret stash I had to get a passport. Now I would be tempted just to go bank them. I tend to use my debit card more than cash these days. Being a student and/or getting the right bank accounts gets me zero fees for using itBegan work Aug as casual '08
Ex-coworkers from current place of work: 26ish
Current co-workers at current place of work: 15ish - yes he just hired 3 more casuals
Why do I still work there again?
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Quoth seigus View PostBack before I had direct deposit, my bank ALWAYS gave me 100s when I cashed my paycheck, without fail.
The last time I went into a bank to get cash (2 years ago, when I moved), they asked how I wanted it without pulling anything out first. But when it's over $2000 going to one place, I opted for $100's.
When I've cashed checks inside (last time I lost my bank card, which was about 4 years ago), they've always given me $20's.
Quoth TTAZ View PostToday I went to target and got $10 back off my debit card. This is to do laundry for the next week and a half or so. When the cashier asked me if a 10 dollar bill would be okay I asked her on the off chance if she had a roll of quarters she could spare. She did not, I smiled, said that was fine, took the ten and went along my merry way. No. Big. Deal.
We ask for quarters from cashiers all the time, but if they say no, we accept that and move on. After all, it's our responsibility to have change for the laundry, not theirs.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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Quoth Mark Healey View Post
It's not a customer problem it is a management problem.
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