Life, in general.
Why I don't trust online systems.Out of Stock items the grocery store has listed as available.
It continually surprises me.People who have a lack of empathy and/or understanding.
Along with the frustration, it can be disappointing and surprising.
How f*ckin lazy do you have to be to walk into the store right as we're closing, drop two license plates down on the counter and ask us to install them for you; and then complain that you're a customer of 15 years and you've never been turned away. It's five o'clock and the open sign was off and we're turning off the lights. The answer is No.
I ... what? Are we talking license plates as in for motor vehicles?
They get affixed with two screws each and the job takes about 60 seconds total, how fucking lazy can one be to ask a store to install them?
That's what Karisa and I said. Even Paul the assistant manager almost lost it when the customer started to complain.
Grocery stores with printed signs announcing WE OUR OPEN.
I agree on a wide number of points, especially with the work ethic.American businesses in general don't seem to know how (or care) to use a spelling/grammar checker.
You wouldn't believe the amount of errors in emails from my old job where both spelling and grammar was terrible. It took longer to figure out WHAT they were saying than it did to actually implement whatever the email said.
The sad part? At Whole Foods, a vast majority of those emails with errors were from people whose primary or only language was english. In my current job, a vast majority of the emails I get are from people that speak english as a second (or third or fourth... in fact, two Japanese women that work here speak five languages, so I'm literally working with two Hoshis), and their spelling and grammar are nearly perfect almost every time. And I know they aren't using those spelling/grammar checks.
I wonder if it's a cultural thing... the company I work for is based in Japan, and there is definitely a different mentality to work ethic and precision than at my previous jobs. I personally love that, because it's more in line with my thinking. If my experiences are any indication, American companies could learn quite a bit from Japanese companies.
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