I did not see the post for shopping the blue-apron sample people at the warehouse club for October. Did I just miss it (I hope) or are they gone?
@JASFLALMT wrote:
Well some of those samplers I feel really bad for,...
And I knew an older woman who took this sort of job. She had to actually go somewhere and pick up the table each day and drag it from where ever it was to the store she was at that day. They would have let her keep it at her home but she lived in an apt and there was no way she could wrangle that table from her parking spot to her apt thru the hallways and elevators every day. The table transporting part of it was unpaid time for her. She quit that job quickly as it made no financial sense at all.
@Shop-et-al wrote:
My favorite sampler (to date) never smiled and never gave anyone extra attention or extra samples. Everyone got one sample and was expected to move along and make room for others.
Some people did not like this policy. Others loved it. Her 'sales' numbers were consistently at the top or near the top of the charts. Something about her was... Credible? Fair? For whatever reason, people bought the products that she presented.
I don't know if there is room for this type of strong personality in today's sampling world. (On the other hand, if she were alive, she might create a niche for her unsmiling self.)
@Shop-et-al wrote:
How many of your older persons need careers, anyway? Surely some of them have completed their careers and don't even need these jobs.
@GMooneyhan MBSC wrote:
I had one shop where the sampler manager told the sampler to not "Push the product so much. We only have 3 cases laft and the rate you're selling it, we will run out before the store closes." That quote went into the report. The next time I was there they had a different sampler manager.
@Shop-et-al wrote:
How many of your older persons need careers, anyway? Surely some of them have completed their careers and don't even need these jobs.
@Chix wrote:
I could never never never take a job being a sampler. I have watched at BJs where people hoard over the freebies, and come back time and again, while other customers who are polite and waiting in line don't get any. Why, just the other day they were sampling coffee and had available cream and sugar for customers. The young chick in front of me grabbed the entire supply of sugar from the cup, less two of them. The nice sampler lady asked her to please not take so many, and girlie walked away saying, 'hey, I like my coffee SWEET'.
Ach, I would not be able to stand it! lol!
@GMooneyhan MBSC wrote:
I was a coffee shop manager at one time. We had a customer who would take all the sugars. I finally caught them and made them put all the sugars in their coffee. They complained to corporate. When I explained how much they were costing us a month in sugar, corporate saw things my way and disinvited the customer from coming into any of our stores.
I know it doesn't seem like much, but any product in those individual packaging is 4 to 5 times more expensive than in a grocery store. In the above case, I calculated that the sugar in the individual packaging was costing about $4 per pound and she was taking the equivalent of 3-4 pounds a month.