@Ronnie B. wrote:
I especially hate the editors who insist on a full description for every single no or NA response. What part of "NO they did not ask me that." is vague?
I could understand that for most questions, actually.The client doesn't just want to know if it's no, they want to know why it's no. "No, the area was not clean. There were x pieces of trash on the ground, 2 tables were not bussed for more than 20 minutes, and someone had spilled a drink which was not cleaned up for 15." "No, the employee did not verbally greet me. They did give me a nod, or they completely ignored me. This employee was or was not engaged with another customer at the time." "No, the item did not ring up correctly. The machine rang an incorrect number of times, or it did not ring at all." "No, the electronic signage was not working properly. Certain letters were burnt out, or it was not working at all. Or, there simply was no electronic signage visible at this location." "No, not all employees wore name badges and were dressed in proper uniform. 5 of the 7 employees I saw were wearing nametags and in proper uniform. Employee A was not wearing a company-issued shirt, and Employees A and B were not wearing nametags."
The worse the employees perform on an audit, in general, the longer it takes to write the report. It's an occupational hazard which comes with mystery shopping. I will say that as far as 'No, they did not ask me goes'---no, this usually doesn't require much explanation. However, I recently did one shop where the person I spoke with on the phone and the employee with whom I interacted on-site were the same person. In this case, I did answer 'No' for whether or not the person asked me such-and-such a question on-site. However, it was also important for the client to know that this was the same employee with whom I had spoken on the phone, she remembered our conversation, and she had already said something which implied that she remembered the answer to this question.
The client's reaction to something like "Were you seated in 5 minutes?" being no can be completely different depending on why it was. "No, I was not seated in 5 minutes because the employees were having a non work related conversation. I had to wait 7 minutes." "No, I was not seated in 5 minutes because there was some kind of emergency situation, and employee attention was focused on that. I waited for 7&1/2 minutes, and the employee who seated me sincerely apologized for the wait." "I sat for twelve minutes in the waiting area without even seeing an employee. When one finally entered, she handed me a menu, pointed towards an empty table, and left without saying a word."
And let's take bar shops as another example....I've heard some people say that they weren't carded because the employee claimed to remember them from another visit, and that is the kind of thing which the client would want to factor into their evaluation, as well.
There is always an elaboration for a no answer. Sometimes though, it does mean that you have to repeat things. It's just an occupational hazard of the job.
Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 09/08/2015 12:58AM by OceanGirl.