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#1
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Me and JH went on a service call today at a women's clothing store to
repair a point of sale cash register. After I finisher swapping out the whole chassis and hard drive in the NCR register, I was in the back of the store waiting on JH to call dispatch and close out the service ticket when I saw on the wall something that caused the "WTF". It was a shrinkage report for the store, a report about the cost of lost or stolen merchandise. For the year 2012 it was $38,675.00 and 3.08% of store revenues. I suppose that was considered a good year, WTF! O_o TDD |
#2
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On Thursday, August 1, 2013 8:31:07 PM UTC-7, The Daring Dufas wrote:
Me and JH went on a service call today at a women's clothing store to repair a point of sale cash register. After I finisher swapping out the whole chassis and hard drive in the NCR register, I was in the back of the store waiting on JH to call dispatch and close out the service ticket when I saw on the wall something that caused the "WTF". It was a shrinkage report for the store, a report about the cost of lost or stolen merchandise. For the year 2012 it was $38,675.00 and 3.08% of store revenues. I suppose that was considered a good year, WTF! O_o TDD That’s a good example of the disadvantages of a big company. The bigger they are the harder it is to control who is stealing what. The next time someone complains about those big box stores putting the small stores out of business remind them of this. |
#3
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The once or twice I've been in womens clothing stores for repairs, they
have made effort to count the number of items that go in to the fitting rooms. Still, they appear to lose a lot of items due to theft. That's a real shame, that peoples morality is going down hill like that. .. Christopher A. Young Learn about Jesus www.lds.org .. On 8/1/2013 11:31 PM, The Daring Dufas wrote: Me and JH went on a service call today at a women's clothing store to repair a point of sale cash register. After I finisher swapping out the whole chassis and hard drive in the NCR register, I was in the back of the store waiting on JH to call dispatch and close out the service ticket when I saw on the wall something that caused the "WTF". It was a shrinkage report for the store, a report about the cost of lost or stolen merchandise. For the year 2012 it was $38,675.00 and 3.08% of store revenues. I suppose that was considered a good year, WTF! O_o TDD |
#4
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On Friday, August 2, 2013 7:36:40 AM UTC-4, Stormin Mormon wrote:
The once or twice I've been in womens clothing stores for repairs, they have made effort to count the number of items that go in to the fitting rooms. Still, they appear to lose a lot of items due to theft. That's a real shame, that peoples morality is going down hill like that. Shoplifting has been going on as long as there have been shops. In fact it's probably not as prevalent now as it has been in the past because of surveillance and electronic security devices. The key is not spending more on security than you lose in theft. If you spend $50,000 a year to prevent the loss of $38,000 of product, you may as well let them take the stuff. You can take the moral indignation high road but sometimes the moral indignation high road leads to bankruptcy. |
#7
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On Friday, August 2, 2013 4:56:36 PM UTC-7, The Daring Dufas wrote:
On 8/2/2013 6:08 PM, Frank wrote: On 8/2/2013 3:48 PM, wrote: On Friday, August 2, 2013 7:36:40 AM UTC-4, Stormin Mormon wrote: [...snip....] I won't even hire a smoker because they're addicted to a very powerful albeit legal drug. Besides I'm very allergic to the smoke as are many employees of my customers. ^_^ Got a call the other day out of the blue from a friend I had worked with in the non-smokers' rights movement -- must be at least 2 decades ago. What we had to go through, between the all-powerful tobacco lobby and the freaking politicians who were too scared or too venal to vote in the public interest!!! People today who can breathe freely in restaurants, movies, stores, etc. don't realize what it was like back then -- threats, insults, sometimes physical violence. There are STILL problems we hear about all the time from apartment dwellers who are suffering like hell from smoke drifting into their space from another unit or from a balcony. The smokers are indignant that they can't do what they like in their own space. The victims -- perhaps with a medical condition that could be life-threatening if they inhale smoke -- are equally indignant that they have to live with windows closed in all weather, can't go out on their porches/balconies, and even so, smoke finds its way into their space. Some newer construction is dedicated smoke-free, but that doesn't help people stuck in an unbearable situation in older housing. How would Solomon render judgment? HB |
#8
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![]() "The Daring Dufas" wrote in message ... On 8/2/2013 6:08 PM, Frank wrote: On 8/2/2013 3:48 PM, wrote: On Friday, August 2, 2013 7:36:40 AM UTC-4, Stormin Mormon wrote: The once or twice I've been in womens clothing stores for repairs, they have made effort to count the number of items that go in to the fitting rooms. Still, they appear to lose a lot of items due to theft. That's a real shame, that peoples morality is going down hill like that. Shoplifting has been going on as long as there have been shops. In fact it's probably not as prevalent now as it has been in the past because of surveillance and electronic security devices. The key is not spending more on security than you lose in theft. If you spend $50,000 a year to prevent the loss of $38,000 of product, you may as well let them take the stuff. You can take the moral indignation high road but sometimes the moral indignation high road leads to bankruptcy. Before I retired, the company was employing more and more contract workers at the lab site I was at. Real PITA. Even though they increased security, theft losses doubled. Night janitors were a real problem and even though they had to walk through the gate and open their lunch boxes, stuff disappeared. I'm told of spotting tracks in the snow on either side of the fence where stuff was tossed over. I was waiting for a lock to be put on a lab balance (also contractors) and forgot to lock it up and it was stolen. Cost me a half day with the paperwork and investigation. Contract electricians, millwrights and painters caused me lots of grief but I guess the company thought it was worth it. I've had problems with guys who worked for me even after I told them "Don't take anything without permission from someone in charge. Don't even take a dirty snot rag unless someone gives you permission." I had a guy working for me who knocked out communications for a hamburger chain by taking a souvenir which was a wall wort power supply for a modem. I told the guy not to take any of the abandon phone equipment in a telephone room without permission. My admonition was in front of an employee of the company I was doing work for. The moron couldn't help it, he just had to take something and he was a former convict I was trying to help. I learned my lesson after I lost that account. No more convicts, no more alcoholics and no more pot heads. I won't even hire a smoker because they're addicted to a very powerful albeit legal drug. Besides I'm very allergic to the smoke as are many employees of my customers. ^_^ TDD At the Hoover washing machine manufacturing plant. (Merthyr Tydfil) Washing machines were disappearing but how? Went on for years. It finally trnspired that the guys who loaded the trucks figuered out how to pack in two extra machines in every truck. |
#9
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The Daring Dufas wrote in
: On 8/2/2013 6:08 PM, Frank wrote: On 8/2/2013 3:48 PM, wrote: On Friday, August 2, 2013 7:36:40 AM UTC-4, Stormin Mormon wrote: The once or twice I've been in womens clothing stores for repairs, they have made effort to count the number of items that go in to the fitting rooms. Still, they appear to lose a lot of items due to theft. That's a real shame, that peoples morality is going down hill like that. Shoplifting has been going on as long as there have been shops. In fact it's probably not as prevalent now as it has been in the past because of surveillance and electronic security devices. The key is not spending more on security than you lose in theft. If you spend $50,000 a year to prevent the loss of $38,000 of product, you may as well let them take the stuff. You can take the moral indignation high road but sometimes the moral indignation high road leads to bankruptcy. Before I retired, the company was employing more and more contract workers at the lab site I was at. Real PITA. Even though they increased security, theft losses doubled. Night janitors were a real problem and even though they had to walk through the gate and open their lunch boxes, stuff disappeared. I'm told of spotting tracks in the snow on either side of the fence where stuff was tossed over. I was waiting for a lock to be put on a lab balance (also contractors) and forgot to lock it up and it was stolen. Cost me a half day with the paperwork and investigation. Contract electricians, millwrights and painters caused me lots of grief but I guess the company thought it was worth it. I've had problems with guys who worked for me even after I told them "Don't take anything without permission from someone in charge. Don't even take a dirty snot rag unless someone gives you permission." I had a guy working for me who knocked out communications for a hamburger chain by taking a souvenir which was a wall wort power supply for a modem. I told the guy not to take any of the abandon phone equipment in a telephone room without permission. My admonition was in front of an employee of the company I was doing work for. The moron couldn't help it, he just had to take something and he was a former convict I was trying to help. I learned my lesson after I lost that account. No more convicts, no more alcoholics and no more pot heads. I won't even hire a smoker because they're addicted to a very powerful albeit legal drug. Besides I'm very allergic to the smoke as are many employees of my customers. ^_^ TDD Besides I'm very allergic to the smoke... So why are frequently blowing smoke outta your ass? :-) |
#10
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Frank wrote:
On 8/2/2013 3:48 PM, wrote: On Friday, August 2, 2013 7:36:40 AM UTC-4, Stormin Mormon wrote: The once or twice I've been in womens clothing stores for repairs, they have made effort to count the number of items that go in to the fitting rooms. Still, they appear to lose a lot of items due to theft. That's a real shame, that peoples morality is going down hill like that. Shoplifting has been going on as long as there have been shops. In fact it's probably not as prevalent now as it has been in the past because of surveillance and electronic security devices. The key is not spending more on security than you lose in theft. If you spend $50,000 a year to prevent the loss of $38,000 of product, you may as well let them take the stuff. You can take the moral indignation high road but sometimes the moral indignation high road leads to bankruptcy. Before I retired, the company was employing more and more contract workers at the lab site I was at. Real PITA. Even though they increased security, theft losses doubled. Night janitors were a real problem and even though they had to walk through the gate and open their lunch boxes, stuff disappeared. I'm told of spotting tracks in the snow on either side of the fence where stuff was tossed over. I was waiting for a lock to be put on a lab balance (also contractors) and forgot to lock it up and it was stolen. Cost me a half day with the paperwork and investigation. Contract electricians, millwrights and painters caused me lots of grief but I guess the company thought it was worth it. I used to work with a HVAC maintenance guy who wore one of those blue denim shop jackets with big pockets, every day, rain or shine, hot or cold. His reason: On the days he wanted to take small items from the "open parts bins" (nuts, bolts, etc.) it wouldn't look weird if he suddenly wore a jacket. If he wore the jacket everyday, no one would suspect him of stealing like they would if he showed up wearing it on a random 90 degree day. Think about that. He wasn't planning on stealing stuff everyday, but he was dressing so that he could do so whenever he wanted to without raising suspicion. What a strange way to go through life. |
#11
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On 8/2/2013 10:42 PM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
Frank wrote: On 8/2/2013 3:48 PM, wrote: On Friday, August 2, 2013 7:36:40 AM UTC-4, Stormin Mormon wrote: The once or twice I've been in womens clothing stores for repairs, they have made effort to count the number of items that go in to the fitting rooms. Still, they appear to lose a lot of items due to theft. That's a real shame, that peoples morality is going down hill like that. Shoplifting has been going on as long as there have been shops. In fact it's probably not as prevalent now as it has been in the past because of surveillance and electronic security devices. The key is not spending more on security than you lose in theft. If you spend $50,000 a year to prevent the loss of $38,000 of product, you may as well let them take the stuff. You can take the moral indignation high road but sometimes the moral indignation high road leads to bankruptcy. Before I retired, the company was employing more and more contract workers at the lab site I was at. Real PITA. Even though they increased security, theft losses doubled. Night janitors were a real problem and even though they had to walk through the gate and open their lunch boxes, stuff disappeared. I'm told of spotting tracks in the snow on either side of the fence where stuff was tossed over. I was waiting for a lock to be put on a lab balance (also contractors) and forgot to lock it up and it was stolen. Cost me a half day with the paperwork and investigation. Contract electricians, millwrights and painters caused me lots of grief but I guess the company thought it was worth it. I used to work with a HVAC maintenance guy who wore one of those blue denim shop jackets with big pockets, every day, rain or shine, hot or cold. His reason: On the days he wanted to take small items from the "open parts bins" (nuts, bolts, etc.) it wouldn't look weird if he suddenly wore a jacket. If he wore the jacket everyday, no one would suspect him of stealing like they would if he showed up wearing it on a random 90 degree day. Think about that. He wasn't planning on stealing stuff everyday, but he was dressing so that he could do so whenever he wanted to without raising suspicion. What a strange way to go through life. There is an old story most likely apocryphal about a factory worker who rolled a wheelbarrow filled with sand out the gate every day he worked at the factory. The guard always stopped him and dug through the sand slinging the sand every where but never found anything hidden in the sand. On the factory workers last day on the job, he exited the gate without his customary wheelbarrow. Upon seeing this, the guard stopped him and said, "I know you were stealing something all these years, so tell me before I go nuts." The factory worker answered, "wheelbarrows". ^_^ |
#12
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On Sat, 3 Aug 2013 03:42:47 +0000 (UTC), DerbyDad03
wrote: Frank wrote: On 8/2/2013 3:48 PM, wrote: On Friday, August 2, 2013 7:36:40 AM UTC-4, Stormin Mormon wrote: The once or twice I've been in womens clothing stores for repairs, they have made effort to count the number of items that go in to the fitting rooms. Still, they appear to lose a lot of items due to theft. That's a real shame, that peoples morality is going down hill like that. Shoplifting has been going on as long as there have been shops. In fact it's probably not as prevalent now as it has been in the past because of surveillance and electronic security devices. The key is not spending more on security than you lose in theft. If you spend $50,000 a year to prevent the loss of $38,000 of product, you may as well let them take the stuff. You can take the moral indignation high road but sometimes the moral indignation high road leads to bankruptcy. Before I retired, the company was employing more and more contract workers at the lab site I was at. Real PITA. Even though they increased security, theft losses doubled. Night janitors were a real problem and even though they had to walk through the gate and open their lunch boxes, stuff disappeared. I'm told of spotting tracks in the snow on either side of the fence where stuff was tossed over. I was waiting for a lock to be put on a lab balance (also contractors) and forgot to lock it up and it was stolen. Cost me a half day with the paperwork and investigation. Contract electricians, millwrights and painters caused me lots of grief but I guess the company thought it was worth it. I used to work with a HVAC maintenance guy who wore one of those blue denim shop jackets with big pockets, every day, rain or shine, hot or cold. His reason: On the days he wanted to take small items from the "open parts bins" (nuts, bolts, etc.) it wouldn't look weird if he suddenly wore a jacket. If he wore the jacket everyday, no one would suspect him of stealing like they would if he showed up wearing it on a random 90 degree day. Think about that. He wasn't planning on stealing stuff everyday, but he was dressing so that he could do so whenever he wanted to without raising suspicion. What a strange way to go through life. What do you have against planning ahead?? |
#13
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On 08-02-2013 19:08, Frank wrote:
Before I retired, the company was employing more and more contract workers at the lab site I was at. Real PITA. Even though they increased security, theft losses doubled. Night janitors were a real problem and even though they had to walk through the gate and open their lunch boxes, stuff disappeared. I'm told of spotting tracks in the snow on either side of the fence where stuff was tossed over. I was waiting for a lock to be put on a lab balance (also contractors) and forgot to lock it up and it was stolen. Cost me a half day with the paperwork and investigation. Contract electricians, millwrights and painters caused me lots of grief but I guess the company thought it was worth it. At one place I worked, a rather small lady took a large empty box. I suppose she needed it for moving. I was leaving the plant right behind her. She tossed the box over the ten-foot fence, and CLICK, the turnstile locked and the speaker spewed, "What's in that box?" I'm thinking, "If there were anything of any size in that box. she couldn't have thrown it like that, and if it were of any value, it isn't after falling ten feet onto the parking lot." But before I could say that, the guard said something like, "Hold it where we can look inside." Now I'm thinking, "Odd to ask her to do anything with the box after you locked the gate between her and it." -- Wes Groleau He that complies against his will is of the same opinion still. €” Samuel Butler, 1612-1680 |
#14
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Wes Groleau wrote:
On 08-02-2013 19:08, Frank wrote: Before I retired, the company was employing more and more contract workers at the lab site I was at. Real PITA. Even though they increased security, theft losses doubled. Night janitors were a real problem and even though they had to walk through the gate and open their lunch boxes, stuff disappeared. I'm told of spotting tracks in the snow on either side of the fence where stuff was tossed over. I was waiting for a lock to be put on a lab balance (also contractors) and forgot to lock it up and it was stolen. Cost me a half day with the paperwork and investigation. Contract electricians, millwrights and painters caused me lots of grief but I guess the company thought it was worth it. At one place I worked, a rather small lady took a large empty box. I suppose she needed it for moving. I was leaving the plant right behind her. She tossed the box over the ten-foot fence, and CLICK, the turnstile locked and the speaker spewed, "What's in that box?" I'm thinking, "If there were anything of any size in that box. she couldn't have thrown it like that, and if it were of any value, it isn't after falling ten feet onto the parking lot." There are lots of very light, yet valuable items. In addition, value is in the eye of the beholder. A small, relatively unbreakable item, cushioned with lots of bubble wrap, could easily survive a ten-ten foot fall. But before I could say that, the guard said something like, "Hold it where we can look inside." Now I'm thinking, "Odd to ask her to do anything with the box after you locked the gate between her and it." Now I'm thinking, "Odd that someone could throw a large empty box over a ten-foot fence." I would have liked to have seen her technique. |
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