Re: Your "I Won't Say Anything, but this Customer Needs a Brain" Momen
Ok, this one I can relate to, but in the exact reverse. I work for a merchandising/vendor company, and reset teams comprised of my and other people's companies comes in to do these resets. I can't tell you how many times, being in the same position as Flux Capacitor describes, shelf or products in hand, and customers walk up asking me, in jeans and usually a flannel shirt, "where is so and so?" Also, while on a Winn Dixie reset team, a WD employed reset clerk WOULD be wearing a WD uniform, but being as she was not an employee of any specific store, even she, someone who looks just all other store employees, might not have a clue where certain items are. So for me, I wish more often, in a store's uniform or not, customers would ask this question before just assuming the person works at the store (and then proceeds to at times get mad when I tell them I don't where *insert product here* is).
Here's a questions I get asked constantly, and I've never understood it.
"Do you work here?"
I've been awfully tempted to reply with "No ma'am/sir, I'm just a really big fan of this store and in my free time I like to head over here wearing a polo with their logo on it and a name tag, with a radio and an access card with the store's logo on it clipped to my belt" Its at its most ridiculous level when I am actually performing a task. For example the last time I was asked, I had a large metal shelf in my arms and was positioning it on an aisle. Dude comes around the corner and asked me if I work there.I could see if I worked at a department store where there is no uniform but only name tags, and someone didn't see the name tag...but I don't...
Ok, this one I can relate to, but in the exact reverse. I work for a merchandising/vendor company, and reset teams comprised of my and other people's companies comes in to do these resets. I can't tell you how many times, being in the same position as Flux Capacitor describes, shelf or products in hand, and customers walk up asking me, in jeans and usually a flannel shirt, "where is so and so?" Also, while on a Winn Dixie reset team, a WD employed reset clerk WOULD be wearing a WD uniform, but being as she was not an employee of any specific store, even she, someone who looks just all other store employees, might not have a clue where certain items are. So for me, I wish more often, in a store's uniform or not, customers would ask this question before just assuming the person works at the store (and then proceeds to at times get mad when I tell them I don't where *insert product here* is).