I noticed something while doing some shopping today. Stores are being affected by the economy and seeing fewer shoppers coming in ready to spend. As a result, sales are down. To cut back expenses, they reduce their sales staff. However, that makes the remaining shoppers upset and less willing to shop there because of the lousy service.
I went to the craft shop today. When I approached the check-out, there were at least 20 customers in line. The store has 8 registers. Three were open. And this was mid-day on Saturday, peak time there. Plus all week they were distributing 50% off coupons good today only, so they had to know to expect a crowd. I heard lots of people complaining in line that they hate coming to the store lately because they never have enough registers open.
Later, I was at a department store and went to look in the shoe department because I need a new pair of brown shoes. There were quite a few customers in the department. I found a pair I wanted to try on, only to realize that there was exactly one clerk handling the entire shoe department - men, women and kids. I wasn't about to stand there for 30 minutes waiting my turn so I left, and they lost a potential sale, and I'm sure I'm not the only one.
It just made me wonder if stores cutting staff really saves them any money. If a $10/hour clerk would allow them to make $100/hour more in sales, seems like it would be a good deal.
I went to the craft shop today. When I approached the check-out, there were at least 20 customers in line. The store has 8 registers. Three were open. And this was mid-day on Saturday, peak time there. Plus all week they were distributing 50% off coupons good today only, so they had to know to expect a crowd. I heard lots of people complaining in line that they hate coming to the store lately because they never have enough registers open.
Later, I was at a department store and went to look in the shoe department because I need a new pair of brown shoes. There were quite a few customers in the department. I found a pair I wanted to try on, only to realize that there was exactly one clerk handling the entire shoe department - men, women and kids. I wasn't about to stand there for 30 minutes waiting my turn so I left, and they lost a potential sale, and I'm sure I'm not the only one.
It just made me wonder if stores cutting staff really saves them any money. If a $10/hour clerk would allow them to make $100/hour more in sales, seems like it would be a good deal.
Comment