Right! Plus I saw six employees (chipotle style line of employees making bowls) and none of them had one.@Deedeezthoughts wrote:
That's terrible! If they NEED a name so badly then they NEED those employees to wear tags. Not having one on should result in THEM being marked as not dressed appropriately, not the person checking being penalized!
I don’t think I can bring myself to do that I’m just gonna stop doing shops that require a name lol@mystery2me wrote:
I know it's awkward, but sometimes you just have to straight up say,, "What is your name? Thank you, (name.)" I guess it helps if you are older and they figure it's just a boomer thing.
Exactly, that has an "old fashioned manners" feel about it and works well if you are at least a couple decades older than the cashier.@juliak18 wrote:
I don’t think I can bring myself to do that I’m just gonna stop doing shops that require a name lol@mystery2me wrote:
I know it's awkward, but sometimes you just have to straight up say,, "What is your name? Thank you, (name.)" I guess it helps if you are older and they figure it's just a boomer thing.
@juliak18 wrote:
I just got totally scammed by CX Orlando. I was doing a shop for a local restaurant in my area, not a chain. Maybe that was my first mistake. Anyway, guidelines specifically state they will not reimburse without the server’s name (mind you this is fast casual so there are no “servers”). None of the employees at this establishment wear name tags. The receipt does not have the cashier’s name. Did they think I was going to randomly ask an employee for their name as if that wouldn’t be suspicious? It also says they will not reimburse if food is ordered to go. Well, the cashier didn’t ask if I wanted my food for here or to go and packed it up to go, so my receipt says take out. I just didn’t even fill in the survey because they don’t deserve real answers when they aren’t going to refund me. I just completed required boxes and wrote about how I will never go back to this local restaurant based on this experience.
Agreed, the directions were clear but I understand the frustration of being surprised by something unusual, too. The guidelines really should be worded "ask the name of the person you are ordering with". They know that this is necessary but IMO, they leave it out to get more people to take the shop.@sestrahelena wrote:
I feel for you, juliak. But you really can't say you were scammed by an MSC when the directions were clear and you didn't follow them. Sorry to be harsh. That's not a scam.
@jgardn02 wrote:
I think I've seen you at my church...is your name Jeff?
@NinS wrote:
I once had an "eat dinner at the bar" shop for a now-defunct MSC (think: also Florida based, and actually did scam shoppers by not paying them). The instructions very clearly stated that I needed the bartender's name. No name tags. No introduction (ie "if you need anything else I'm Wendy". Receipt comes and it just says "PM Bar." Keep in mind I'm a middle-aged guy and the bartender is a 20-something female so I'm trying to figure out the least creepy way to ask. When she hands back the change I say "If I decide to write a Google review who should I say took such good care of us?" and she smiles and tells me both her name and her colleagues name. Report accepted (and paid -- I think I got in just under the wire before the MSC started stiffing shoppers).