@Niner wrote:
I have seen this too. I saw one of them actually flip their tag.
I wish ALL grocery shops had that rule...it sure would help me when I'm on a shop!!@kryswyn916 wrote:
In the grocery shops I do, it is an infraction if the name tag is not worn, worn under an apron, lab coat or anywhere other than on the right chest.
@Shop-et-al wrote:
What good is a visible name if the name is wrong? To this day I doubt that the apparent dude with the 'Cindy' (or Jan, or Marsha) name tag was wearing the correct name tag. We cannot compare shops or go back in time, but when next I saw the apparent dude at a different location, he was wearing 'Alan' or some such male-seeming name. He responded to that name.
@Shop-et-al wrote:
What good is a visible name if the name is wrong? To this day I doubt that the apparent dude with the 'Cindy' (or Jan, or Marsha) name tag was wearing the correct name tag. We cannot compare shops or go back in time, but when next I saw the apparent dude at a different location, he was wearing 'Alan' or some such male-seeming name. He responded to that name.
@tcurione wrote:
@Shop-et-al wrote:
What good is a visible name if the name is wrong? To this day I doubt that the apparent dude with the 'Cindy' (or Jan, or Marsha) name tag was wearing the correct name tag. We cannot compare shops or go back in time, but when next I saw the apparent dude at a different location, he was wearing 'Alan' or some such male-seeming name. He responded to that name.
In that situation once with a male wearing a name tag with an always female name on it, I asked an unsuspecting co-worker what the guys name was, and sure enough, I got his real name, and not the female name on the name tag.
@shopper8 wrote:
Banking is a problem with either no name tags, long hair covering the tag, sweater. No name, no pay. I usually say, "Is your name John?" Most of the time they give you their name. I say, "You look just like one of my grandson's friend ", or something like that. I hate asking.