Great frackin' story!

I just think retail workers have better stories. One of my best friends is a financial advisor, and his work stories are boring.
Is that even legal? Seems highly unethical.I used to be the night manager at a fast food place and stuff like this used to happen all the time. I actually had huge family groups come in 5 minutes before closing and order feasts. Well, we got sick of that pretty quick, and learned to lock the dining room doors at around 10 minutes before closing. Customers still inside could leave, but no new customers could come in. Then I'd turn off the outside floodlights a few minutes early so no new cars would pull into the drive-thru. After we started doing that, we almost always closed on time. So what did we do with the time we saved? We cleaned up real fast and sat out back for an hour drinking beer.![]()
I just think retail workers have better stories. One of my best friends is a financial advisor, and his work stories are boring.
I mean, really, how many times can you hear about a colleague that jumped out the window because he lost 50% for his clients before it gets boring?
Is that even legal? Seems highly unethical.I used to be the night manager at a fast food place and stuff like this used to happen all the time. I actually had huge family groups come in 5 minutes before closing and order feasts. Well, we got sick of that pretty quick, and learned to lock the dining room doors at around 10 minutes before closing. Customers still inside could leave, but no new customers could come in. Then I'd turn off the outside floodlights a few minutes early so no new cars would pull into the drive-thru. After we started doing that, we almost always closed on time. So what did we do with the time we saved? We cleaned up real fast and sat out back for an hour drinking beer.![]()
The law has nothing to do with fast food operating hours. There is no law that states that a business can't close down early. It's not illegal. The only way I could see it being unethical is if you lock the doors specifically because you see someone walking in. Even then, it's not really unethical, it's just kind of a douchebag move.Is that even legal? Seems highly unethical.I used to be the night manager at a fast food place and stuff like this used to happen all the time. I actually had huge family groups come in 5 minutes before closing and order feasts. Well, we got sick of that pretty quick, and learned to lock the dining room doors at around 10 minutes before closing. Customers still inside could leave, but no new customers could come in. Then I'd turn off the outside floodlights a few minutes early so no new cars would pull into the drive-thru. After we started doing that, we almost always closed on time. So what did we do with the time we saved? We cleaned up real fast and sat out back for an hour drinking beer.![]()
^^^ Unless after drinking any of them drove home.
Tech Support stories are always good.![]()
If there is a set of posted hours, I would imagine there may be legal issues.
If there is a set of posted hours, I would imagine there may be legal issues.
Story a family friend told me:Tech Support stories are always good.![]()
Sorry, but that isn't entirely true.There is no sane reason to not be as polite as possible, and there is no good reason to tell a customer "No".
I used to work at a video rental store. We had a customer with a very large fee on her account. She had rented 3 or 4 New releases a month before and had never bothered to return them. She wanted to rent 3 more without paying for her previous rentals. Should I have said "yes"?![]()
I have never gone anywhere that did that.Not read the thread it's too long but i'll give my own pennys worth.
All the shops I know of, if they close at a certain time such as 9pm then they have somebody at the door at 8:40pm stopping any more people coming in because the shop is closing in 20 minutes.
It's as simple and straight forward as that.![]()
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