09-25-2020 06:13 PM - edited 09-25-2020 06:15 PM
An observation from selling in my B&M store.
Customers will come in. I'm sure they know what they came there for. If nobody approaches them or asks them if they need help, they will leave. Some times they will leave bad reviews online saying they came in the store nobody helped them.
We just don't have enough staff to meet and greet every single customer that comes through the door.
We have 2 "cashier" windows that are always staffed which most customers will come to if they need help.
If i walked into a widget store and nobody approached me or asked me for help, i wouldn't just walk out. I would ask the first employee i see for help. Is that unreaonable? Is that asking too much of todays customer?
09-25-2020 06:26 PM - edited 09-25-2020 06:28 PM
When I go into a store, the last thing I want is someone all over me wanting to "help" me. If I need help, I'll ask. That said, a simple acknowledgment like "hello" is fine.
If I want someone hovering over me "helping", I'll go put on my good clothes and go to a snooty department store.
I'm having flashbacks of Captain Peacock lol
"Madame, are you being served?"
09-25-2020 06:34 PM
I second that. If I need help, I'll ask. I prefer it that way. Sometimes I feel annoyed if an employee asks if they can help me find something.
09-25-2020 06:41 PM
I wonder if someone asked if they needed help if they would leave negative reviews that they were bothered, or no social distancing. We are living through a very crazy time. Some people it brings out the worst in, and in others, it brings out the best.
I hope that you are doing okay there, I'm assuming that you are in Hawaii. I know that it has been hard for so many, due to the lack of tourist traffic.
Best to you,
Grandma
09-25-2020 08:11 PM
I work a part-time retail gig.
The shop owner read an article on how to greet/assist customers, and we put it into practice. It makes perfect sense to me, and, as a customer, it really hits home.
When a customer walks in the door, we give them a couple of minutes to orient themselves; i.e., put away their sunglasses and keys, get used to the lighting, glance around the shop, just sort of get their bearings, as it were. We don't say a word to them other than "Hi!"
Then we say, from behind our big, open, checkout counter, "Can I help you find anything today?" They usually say, "No, just browsing," and we say, "Great! I'll be here if you have any questions."
It's a small shop, so there's really no need for us to approach them again. If they happen to be looking at a specific item, we might say, "Oh! I just love those! I bought one for my sister/mom/daughter and she loves it!" Or "Aren't those just the thing?" Or maybe walk over and show them how something works, if that's an issue.
But it has really made me realize how much I dislike being accosted immediately upon entering a shop. (I tend to shop small, local businesses--pre-COVID.) Give me a minute to adjust!
Whatever.
09-25-2020 08:13 PM
@southern*sweet*tea wrote:I'm having flashbacks of Captain Peacock lol
"Madame, are you being served?"
LOL! Wonder how many people will get that reference?
And thanks for the earworm--all I can hear is:
First Floor - something something
Second Floor - blah blah
GOING UP!
And the sound of an old-fashioned cash register.🤣
09-25-2020 08:55 PM
For those who have been deprived of Captain Peacock's merry band.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XjsJ2A2DME
09-26-2020 08:46 AM
I tell people if they need anything holler or throw something at me. I'm used to both. That usually gets a chuckle. Andrew