- Joined
- Jun 11, 2015
- Messages
- 288
Unfortunately, most companies now have no clue how to retain employees.
I've trained new team members and watched as they job abandon within days of finishing their training. The whispers I've heard...too much work for what they get paid. I guess they expect an easy job.
I don't know why stores like Target try to push that commission mentality. As a shopper, I do not want sales people up my butt as I'm shopping. Greet me and go about your business; if I need you, I will let you know. I will avoid stores with salespeople that will jump on you as soon as you walk in and start rattling off the specials and hover around you. I don't know anyone who likes or wants that in their shopping experience, that crap is for rich people shopping at high-end stores. I thought the "mirrors on the fitting room" thing where TMs were supposed to start fitting rooms for guests and write their names on the mirrors was ridiculous. Target guests do not expect or want that from TMs, trust me.
Speaking of which, Nordstrom may expect less task-wise but if I'm being totally honest, customer service is probably my least favorite aspect of retail. LOL. I'm a tasker and like to keep busy. I don't mind helping guests when they ask me, but I would never want to work at a job where focusing solely on guests is all that you do all day. I would go nuts with boredom, because even in those types of stores, a lot of customers just want to be left alone to shop. And I definitely would never want to work on any type of commission basis, way too unpredictable.
ETA: Also, I suspect that the lax and carefree attitude of the past is why, when I was first hired, there were many carts of unsorted reshop and full racks of go backs at the fitting room, and the salesfloor was half empty and stuff was in the wrong place. As a newbie, it drove me nuts that people were standing around chatting or moving in slow motion when there was obviously so much work to do.
Nordstrom stores still have a lot of teams that aren't customer facing (logistics, stockroom, overnights) and they have some customer facing roles that aren't sales/commission based, I worked on their service experience team after leaving Target , and got paid more to do much less (wasn't commission based though). Don't need to get too far into the tasks there, but it's more of a support role, taking reshop to their respective departments (not putting it away, just taking it there) working at the OPU desk, sometimes being assigned to help areas with their reshop if they need help...
My store pre-modernization was much more organized and put together than it was afterwards, because we had teams to take care of everything. We kept more reshop in the FR back then, that is true, but we also had an assigned FR person back then. I agree with you that we kept less reshop at the service desk and at the FR, although we never had carts full and I never saw it get crazy like that except around the holidays, but I really think that was the one positive of modernization.