I have discovered that there are many little things that make moving to a new home a rich experience. Simple changes such as finding a new place to get your groceries can be an amazing journey of discovery. This was the case for me when we moved just far enough away from my favorite grocer to require a back up store closer to my new home. Welcome to Weis Markets.
My welcome to Weis was an unforgettable experience. As I stepped out of my car for that first visit and my foot touched the parking lot it landed in chewing gum. Gum in a parking lot can really happen to any business, but this lot looked grimy. I guess with 157 stores though, that is a âlotâ of parking lots to keep up with, and I am sure that Weis is too busy to care about one customer with gum on their shoes.
On my first and subsequent visits, I was amazed to find that all but one of the cashiers were bagging or teaching customers how to use the self-service scanning devices at every register forcing any customers not willing to wait for the one and only human cashier to check out their groceries themselves. I even asked a manager about this, but was told they could not find enough employees. I was really curious about the ones that were already working there, but this did not seem to go anywhere with the manager who seemed to have more important things to do than talk to customers. Perhaps I am old fashioned, but having a human at a register is one of the last few services left that I am ready to give up.
So, I wait in the long line with the one human who is paid to run the register. Opps, Can you help me? I forgot my âWeis Store Card.â What? You canât ring it on a generic store card like my favorite old store use to do for me? I have to wait in line at customer service so they can look it up? You canât even call them on your phone for me? Oh, you donât have a phone at your register, do you? Gee that makes it a bit hard to help customers doesnât it?
As I wait for ten minutes in the âCustomer Service lineâ staffed by one frazzled employee, who is providing a whole host of services, I realize that 9000 employees is far too many to train and besides they wonât work for Weis long enough to make the investment in training worthwhile. What does it matter if you loose customers like me who drop an average of $120 per weekly visit into the one register staffed by a human. Who cares if I refuse, even in an emergency, to go to Weis and instead drive 12-15 minutes to the Oregon Dairy, where there are always humans who will ring me up on the âstore cardâ and go out of their way to help me. Once they even sent me home with several bags of groceries and an IOU when I forgot to make a deposit and my bank card came up insufficient funds!! How does the Oregon Dairy do it anyway? They are a single store operation but charge the same prices as Weis and can actually afford to staff all those registers with humans? And where do they find all those employees just 15 minutes away? Something sure is fishy here. It must be the shrimp sale at the Oregon Dairy. I think I will stop by seafood and pick up a few pounds.
Susan Stamm joined her husband as a Partner in their firm "The TEAM Approach" - http://www.teamapproach.com 17 years ago and claims that they are still best friends! She and Rick Stamm offer many more articles on teamwork topics at their blog:
http://www.teamapproach.typepad.com/the_team_approach/2006/01/index.html
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