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Supermarket self checkouts (Read 5185 times)
Belgarion
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #75 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:27pm
 
Aside from the staffing issue, the self serve checkouts themselves are impractical. There is no space to park your trolley properly or unload your goods and then pack them into your bags. It takes far longer than a manned checkout and is an ergonomic nightmare, especially for someone with a toddler or two in tow or physically unable to manage.

But the supermarkets don't give a rats. All about saving money in the guise of making things better for the customer.  Roll Eyes
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John Smith
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #76 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 6:29pm
 
Sir Spot of Borg wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 7:45am:
Lisa ive figgered out what you are trying to do. I expect you are failing. You are trying to gaslight greggery

Spot



she's far to stupid to gaslight anyone successfully. Lisa thinks everyone else is as petty as she is and the idea that someone else might not prioritise money over people is simply beyond her abilities.
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Our esteemed leader:
I hope that bitch who was running their brothels for them gets raped with a cactus.
 
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UnSubRocky
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #77 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 6:36pm
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:10pm:
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:03pm:
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:04am:
No, not bullshit.

I have no problem paying more for goods and services, if it creates more jobs.


And in your economic hypothetical model, please explain to people how paying, say, 10% more for your groceries would have someone more sit on the registers waiting for you to load up your groceries. What is it now? $16/hr for an under 18-year-old to work on registers?


If a supermarket employs more people - to operate the checkouts - they'll probably need to increase their prices to cover the cost of the labour.

You can't seriously tell me you don't understand this basic principle?


I think my point was that you don't. And when they increase their prices, customers shop at places that are cheaper. And when customers shop at places that are cheaper, the supermarkets make less money to spend on labour to work those checkouts. And when they have less customers shopping at those better-manned checkouts, there is not much point having someone stand at the registers waiting for non-existent customers to come through their idle checkouts. And then there is the profit-cost ratios coming into play -- even though this is the main issue.

Here, I will give you an example of a place that I did work at over 20 years ago. I worked at a pizza store (one of the 5 main delivery places in town at the time). Back then, I would walk in at 5pm and see a front counter person answering phone call after phone call from a constantly ringing phone. We would jump on the phones to help out with the backlog of calls coming through. In the meantime, we would have a cut person and a dispatcher working to send out pick up and delivery orders. I worked as a delivery driver. I would deliver 10 deliveries per night on average. I would have to carry around $20 in change + whatever I would bring back from the customer. Sometimes I could not cash in whatever excess I would have on me and would walk around with more than $50 on me. That would make me a mugging risk and escalate the chances of other driver getting mugged. I recall having to stay back until 2 or 3am on a Saturday or Sunday morning doing washing up and floor cleaning as a close driver. I quit that job in 2001.

Cut to 2020, I know of someone who works a franchise in the pizza industry. He has greater sales from one store in terms of customer numbers than I had to contend with in 2001. The difference being that the phone is ringing about a third of the time I recall in my own work experience -- given that I have been in the store on a Friday night and watched this happen. The front counter people are helping dispatch a lot more. This is because of the online ordering and payment system. Customers order online, pay and then pick up at their convenience. In and out like it is nothing. Delivery drivers don't have to get payment off the customers as much as they would. That would lead to fewer issues about having too much money on them. The best thing is that he would have time to wash up have the store cleaned not long after closing time. And the kicker is that the customers could get a discount on their orders. AND the franchisee would still make a decent profit to pay his bills and labour.

So, you would be kind of a moron not to save a few hundred dollars a day to have better service in whatever industry you employ people.
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UnSubRocky
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #78 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 6:40pm
 
Belgarion wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:27pm:
Aside from the staffing issue, the self serve checkouts themselves are impractical. There is no space to park your trolley properly or unload your goods and then pack them into your bags. It takes far longer than a manned checkout and is an ergonomic nightmare, especially for someone with a toddler or two in tow or physically unable to manage.

But the supermarkets don't give a rats. All about saving money in the guise of making things better for the customer.  Roll Eyes


Are you going to go through a self-serve checkout with more than 10 items? I use self-serve because of the quick getaway. 10+ grocery items, I will go through a staffed checkout register. They exist. But, the lines are shorter because we do not have to wait behind the people checking out a couple of items.
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greggerypeccary
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #79 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 6:45pm
 
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 6:36pm:
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:10pm:
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:03pm:
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:04am:
No, not bullshit.

I have no problem paying more for goods and services, if it creates more jobs.


And in your economic hypothetical model, please explain to people how paying, say, 10% more for your groceries would have someone more sit on the registers waiting for you to load up your groceries. What is it now? $16/hr for an under 18-year-old to work on registers?


If a supermarket employs more people - to operate the checkouts - they'll probably need to increase their prices to cover the cost of the labour.

You can't seriously tell me you don't understand this basic principle?


I think my point was that you don't.


Okay, champ   Wink
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Belgarion
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #80 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 7:13pm
 
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 6:40pm:
Belgarion wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:27pm:
Aside from the staffing issue, the self serve checkouts themselves are impractical. There is no space to park your trolley properly or unload your goods and then pack them into your bags. It takes far longer than a manned checkout and is an ergonomic nightmare, especially for someone with a toddler or two in tow or physically unable to manage.

But the supermarkets don't give a rats. All about saving money in the guise of making things better for the customer.  Roll Eyes


Are you going to go through a self-serve checkout with more than 10 items? I use self-serve because of the quick getaway. 10+ grocery items, I will go through a staffed checkout register. They exist. But, the lines are shorter because we do not have to wait behind the people checking out a couple of items.


The supermarkets have policy of leaving the ordinary checkouts unmanned, in an attempt to force everyone into the self serve area. Only when lines really start to build up do they reluctantly staff them.
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UnSubRocky
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #81 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 9:42pm
 
I have a policy of showering everytime I am considerably dirty/sweaty. But, if I followed your line of thinking, I would never get out of the shower.
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Lisa Jones
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #82 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 9:55pm
 
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 9:42pm:
I have a policy of showering everytime I am considerably dirty/sweaty. But, if I followed your line of thinking, I would never get out of the shower.


Ahh so you don't have a Mediterranean wife then.

We force our husbands and kids to have 2 showers a day (1st thing in the morning and the other just before jumping into bed).

And all towels are only used ONCE. After that they go straight to the laundry 😎
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If I let myself be bought then I am no longer free.

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UnSubRocky
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #83 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 10:18pm
 
Lisa Jones wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 9:55pm:
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 9:42pm:
I have a policy of showering everytime I am considerably dirty/sweaty. But, if I followed your line of thinking, I would never get out of the shower.


Ahh so you don't have a Mediterranean wife then.

We force our husbands and kids to have 2 showers a day (1st thing in the morning and the other just before jumping into bed).

And all towels are only used ONCE. After that they go straight to the laundry 😎


That is interesting. I have two towels on the towel rack. One for drying the hands. The other to towel off after a shower. But, after toweling off after a shower, I swap the towels over so that I have a dry towel for 12 hours later. Then I wash the towels with my clothes once or twice a week.

Back in year 6, our teacher told us that we should shower in the morning before school. Arguments started that if we had a shower the night before, we should be clean enough before school. Now, it is a matter of rinsing over in the morning. Then showering before we go out to public places. Then scrubbing over before bed. I have also noticed that I cannot sleep if I have not brushed my teeth before bed. Mum has us baulked about not going to bed before brushing our teeth.
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Lisa Jones
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #84 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 10:43pm
 
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 10:18pm:
Lisa Jones wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 9:55pm:
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 9:42pm:
I have a policy of showering everytime I am considerably dirty/sweaty. But, if I followed your line of thinking, I would never get out of the shower.


Ahh so you don't have a Mediterranean wife then.

We force our husbands and kids to have 2 showers a day (1st thing in the morning and the other just before jumping into bed).

And all towels are only used ONCE. After that they go straight to the laundry 😎


That is interesting. I have two towels on the towel rack. One for drying the hands. The other to towel off after a shower. But, after toweling off after a shower, I swap the towels over so that I have a dry towel for 12 hours later. Then I wash the towels with my clothes once or twice a week.

Back in year 6, our teacher told us that we should shower in the morning before school. Arguments started that if we had a shower the night before, we should be clean enough before school. Now, it is a matter of rinsing over in the morning. Then showering before we go out to public places. Then scrubbing over before bed. I have also noticed that I cannot sleep if I have not brushed my teeth before bed. Mum has us baulked about not going to bed before brushing our teeth.


The bit about you washing the towels with the clothes....absolutely horrified me.

You never mix towels with other things as the lint will spread across the washing.

Loads of washing get sorted as follows:

4 plastic baskets from Big W up against the laundry wall.

Basket 1 : all whites/creams/light colours

Basket 2 : all darks ie navy blues and blacks

Basket 3 : all towels (mine are all white so I can put a bit of bleach in the water

Basket 4 : all socks


You choose the basket which has the most stuff in it for your next wash.

And that's how I taught my hubby and kids too.

The above system works ok.
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If I let myself be bought then I am no longer free.

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UnSubRocky
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #85 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 11:25pm
 
It was like 20 years ago that I learned not to use hot water for my washing. Not only does it cost electricity, but the clothes also shrink. Cold Power washing for me.

It does not matter if I mix up the washing with towels and socks. It is only me. The black socks I wear for work (el cheapo from Big W) have about a year's life. I have to replace the Tradies brand. I bought King Gee socks from Lowes. They look like they will last for a long time. And I use my old white socks for my walks in my running shoes during rucking. Slowly but surely, the socks are getting recycled for a couple uses as my wash cloth for my car washing.

I do, however, put new shirts as separate washes. I think I have had the misfortune of running colours into other shirts, before.
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Grappler Deep State Feller
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #86 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 11:35pm
 
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:10pm:
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:03pm:
greggerypeccary wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 5:04am:
No, not bullshit.

I have no problem paying more for goods and services, if it creates more jobs.


And in your economic hypothetical model, please explain to people how paying, say, 10% more for your groceries would have someone more sit on the registers waiting for you to load up your groceries. What is it now? $16/hr for an under 18-year-old to work on registers?


If a supermarket employs more people - to operate the checkouts - they'll probably need to increase their prices to cover the cost of the labour.

You can't seriously tell me you don't understand this basic principle?



I'd like to view the full figures on installation, cost of operation and extra staff needed anyway to keep them running smick..... I'd rather wait for a checkout than put up with the sh1t from those things, after waiting in a long line to even get to them....

When I go to K-mart I stand to the side of the checkouts, and say - anyone wants the machines, go ahead.
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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Grappler Deep State Feller
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #87 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 11:37pm
 
Towels separate - my socks and shorts and stuff all go together... who cares? I don't wear cheap red dyed things....
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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UnSubRocky
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #88 - Mar 17th, 2022 at 11:49pm
 
Anyway, how many times have checkouts closed as you line up for service, due to the staff member's shift finishing? Supermarkets won't keep a checkout open just because you don't want to use self-serve.
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Grappler Deep State Feller
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Re: Supermarket self checkouts
Reply #89 - Mar 18th, 2022 at 12:00am
 
UnSubRocky wrote on Mar 17th, 2022 at 11:49pm:
Anyway, how many times have checkouts closed as you line up for service, due to the staff member's shift finishing? Supermarkets won't keep a checkout open just because you don't want to use self-serve.

The customer is always wrong - this is progress.
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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