When you pull price change, is it necessary to put in the number of items you see?
Yes but you technically have more leeway since if you type in a number, it will delete the item from the location. If there are 100 items in the location and you only press 1, the item is deleted. You should type in the correct quantity just to save your own butt.
Did an empty location audit for the freezer today. 28 errors (!).
They scheduled 2 daysiders on super busy Sunday, backstock was a dumpter fire.
They scheduled 3 daysiders on super slow Monday, we came clean with incredible ease.
Come the fuck on, Target...
I've never done an ELA before. How does one go about it?
Go into the backroom menu in Store Applications on the signing PC and just mess around with it when you have a few minutes. That's how I learned to pull up empty location reports and backstock detail reports.I want to get some proof to "you got serve" my team lead on the backroom location accuracy. How do I look up the history of a specific location in the backroom? Can you also look up the location history of items?
when you have a few minutes.
I've been wondering this myself.The system is flawed when it comes to the backroom location accuracy right?
For example, if a morning backroom team member creates an error in a location but a dayside backroom team member is the last person on a given day to scan the location and the mistake isn't fixed, the dayside backroom team member is on the hook right? Since he/she was the last one to scan the location that day?
That doesn't happen at our store, although our accuracy is the best in the district and our "dayside team" is literally one person.Is this normal for other stores for the backroom team lead to harshly accuse the backroom day team instead of actually being objective and thinking of all possibilities?
Just keep in mind that no matter what you're doing you will be working retail, so guest service is part of everyone's core roles. As logistics you won't always be on the front lines, but everything we do should have a guest service perspective to it. After all, they're the reason any of us has a job to begin with.Any big difference between that and straight up "backroom team member"? Was looking forwards to just doing backroom not having to deal much with customers and any front room stuff.
When you guys have multiple people backstocking in the morning (hahahha) do you work together from pallet to pallet or split off on your own? Which way do you think is better?
Pulled up the detail report for beverage/snack today. Filled up 3 shopping carts of expired stuff, some going back to 2013.
Two with the shelf that wad being discussed. We probably have a dozen usable tubs. B volume.You only have 2?!?! We have around 20!!
You should input the quantity you pulled. That way the system can pull from another location. If it asks you to pull 12 and there's only 10 in the location when you tell it you pulled 10 the system will automatically delete the other two from the location and there won't be an error created. In any case I haven't seen a report that links team members to ghosts. Baffles are tracked but I don't think ghosts are.If I am pulling cafs and the quantity being asked for is let's say 12 and there are only 10 of the product on the shelf, do you just enter the quantity that you pulled? Or would an error be made if the system thought that 2 were still in that location? (ghost)
This is the case in my store. I think there's only 4 FDCs so it's probably a regionwide problem. I know we don't have the space for a lot of it frequently but I think part of the issue is payroll. I'll frequently get in and find the overnight FDC team barely managed to finish working the delivery, pulls, and old pallets in the cooler/freezer. They won't have touched backstock despite there being enough space to clear up at least half a pallet. There's work that can and should be done but nope we can't pay someone to finish the job.Apparently every store in District B13 or District 9(which fictional setting was worse) is having problems with way too much product in the dairy cooler. Overstock galore. And the DC is sending too much dairy product to stores. Never get caught up.
Welcome! Check out the Flexible Fulfillment thread if you need to vent or talk about SFS. Flexible FulfillmentGreetings fellow backroomers. And SFS peoples. 2 year vet here, been working BR and SFS the whole time. Well, SFS for nearly a year. I was the one that set it up at our store and I still do all the ordering.
Anyways, just saying hey. It's nice to read that people deal with the same shit our team sees all the time. It's all about just doing what's right and being logical about it. That and the accuracy. It's all about the accuracy! So yeah, hi. I have been the team trainer back there for a while now, and at this point have been there the longest, so... I'll be hanging out here to just chat a bit. Good to meet ya all!
Our bulk backroom TM pulls the pallets down to the main and then everyone else hits up one pallet at a time to put the labels on and bowl everything out as a team. Once everything in that section of the stockroom is bowled, we each take an aisle to backstock (packed aisles may have a TM throwing up to another TM on the ladder).When you guys have multiple people backstocking in the morning (hahahha) do you work together from pallet to pallet or split off on your own? Which way do you think is better?
You have to walk on the floor to get from backroom to TSC. You are wearing red and khaki (and hopefully a name tag). Guests know you work there and will stop you. They don't realize you are the bike builder and work 4hrs in the backroom and never shop at the store. Or are a cashier and got lost four times trying to find the backroom to take the hanger bin to dump in recycle...Just keep in mind that no matter what you're doing you will be working retail, so guest service is part of everyone's core roles. As logistics you won't always be on the front lines, but everything we do should have a guest service perspective to it. After all, they're the reason any of us has a job to begin with.