kevschickee
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2007
- Messages
- 1,185
she asked,we told!! (we tell it like it is around here...)![]()
thats how it should be lol I just noticed you are on etsy I LOVE that site
she asked,we told!! (we tell it like it is around here...)![]()

thats how it should be lol I just noticed you are on etsy I LOVE that site

I was a Store Director for BRU once upon a time and I would have wanted to know to just coach the associate on customer interaction. The one thing BRU strives for is their team to have excellent product knowledge. At one year she should have been offering you several toys to help develop motor skills. No matter what, everyone is going to buy their kids toys for their 1st Birthday and her dismissing your need to do this was poor service, it sounded like she thought it was stupid.
I can't believe you reported her! Would you had rather she walked you over to the most expensive toys in the store and told you that all the cool one year olds were getting them for their birthdays? You reported her for having an honest conversation with you and not treating you like a walking dollar bill. Shameful!![]()

The manager said that the employee has done this QUITE a few times. She's not a "people person" and probably should be moved to a stock-type position, not one on the floor.
I do NOT feel guilty about this at all. If someone's going to tell me what I do or do not NEED to do for MY child, I'm going to get a manager involved. Nobody can tell me what my baby can or can't have.
No, the employee did not sound like she was trying to be helpful. She was snippy when she said what she did.
I did tell her "Thank you for your advice", she gave me a "whatever" hand wave and disappeared behind a door.
Thank you, MamaBear, for your comment...
I would have just ignored her "advice".The manager said that the employee has done this QUITE a few times. She's not a "people person" and probably should be moved to a stock-type position, not one on the floor.
I do NOT feel guilty about this at all. If someone's going to tell me what I do or do not NEED to do for MY child, I'm going to get a manager involved. Nobody can tell me what my baby can or can't have.
No, the employee did not sound like she was trying to be helpful. She was snippy when she said what she did.
I did tell her "Thank you for your advice", she gave me a "whatever" hand wave and disappeared behind a door.
Thank you, MamaBear, for your comment...
The manager said that the employee has done this QUITE a few times. She's not a "people person" and probably should be moved to a stock-type position, not one on the floor.
I do NOT feel guilty about this at all. If someone's going to tell me what I do or do not NEED to do for MY child, I'm going to get a manager involved. Nobody can tell me what my baby can or can't have.
No, the employee did not sound like she was trying to be helpful. She was snippy when she said what she did.
I did tell her "Thank you for your advice", she gave me a "whatever" hand wave and disappeared behind a door.
:And you sound like someone who has never worked in a customer service position, retail or otherwise.
Your description of the employee's body language and tone seem exaggerated now to defend your actions. She treated you like a human being, and you treated her like dirt.
Reporting her is outrageous. You should be ashamed.
Point is, I can't believe that in this day and age, when stores are closing on a daily basis because of NO sales, that a salesperson would suggest not to buy something. And I thought the manager might like to know that's why people aren't buying much, because their employees are encouraging people not to buy.
Wow I can't believe you actually reported this woman. Sorry but if anyone was rude , IMOP I feel it was you.
Yes, I can't believe in this day and age with so many people losing their jobs, you would deliberately try and get someone in trouble who in turn might be reprimanded for being nice and making light conversation.
All I could say is Wow.![]()
No matter what, everyone is going to buy their kids toys for their 1st Birthday
I was a Store Director for BRU once upon a time and I would have wanted to know to just coach the associate on customer interaction. The one thing BRU strives for is their team to have excellent product knowledge. At one year she should have been offering you several toys to help develop motor skills. No matter what, everyone is going to buy their kids toys for their 1st Birthday and her dismissing your need to do this was poor service, it sounded like she thought it was stupid.
The manager said that the employee has done this QUITE a few times. She's not a "people person" and probably should be moved to a stock-type position, not one on the floor.
I do NOT feel guilty about this at all. If someone's going to tell me what I do or do not NEED to do for MY child, I'm going to get a manager involved. Nobody can tell me what my baby can or can't have.
No, the employee did not sound like she was trying to be helpful. She was snippy when she said what she did.
I did tell her "Thank you for your advice", she gave me a "whatever" hand wave and disappeared behind a door.
Thank you, MamaBear, for your comment...
I'm sorry, Carriemel, but this I just don't buy. I worked as a retail manager years ago and as a few have pointed out, there is a bond between employees and supervisors. There is NO WAY that a manager would have disclosed that type of information to a customer. For one thing, making that type of statement gives legs to something which was no big deal in the first place, and it also gives the customer room to take his complaint further up the chain. Managers a trained to diffuse volatile situations: listen to complaints, offer apologies, and possibly tangible restitution for real problems. Then it becomes a training issue for the employee.The manager said that the employee has done this QUITE a few times. She's not a "people person" and probably should be moved to a stock-type position, not one on the floor.
You say you don't feel guilty? You should. It sounds to me like you got defensive over an innocuous comment and acted without thinking. Let me ask -- is this your first child? A lot of first-time parents can be very resistant to any advice given about their child. And as far as telling you what your baby can/cannot have, did she specifically forbid you from purchasing anything? If she had, would you have listened? This boggles the mind.I do NOT feel guilty about this at all. If someone's going to tell me what I do or do not NEED to do for MY child, I'm going to get a manager involved. Nobody can tell me what my baby can or can't have.
I'm not calling you a liar, but it's possible that you attached some tone to this encounter which really wasn't there. Sometimes when relating a story we embellish without meaning to in order to make our position more relatable. Since none of us were there, we can only go on your word, but this sounds like a direct response to some earlier criticisms made regarding your disproportionate response to her comment.No, the employee did not sound like she was trying to be helpful. She was snippy when she said what she did.
Again, this strikes me as a detail added in order to make your position more sympathetic. Did it happen? Only you know, but it doesn't fit in with your original post.I did tell her "Thank you for your advice", she gave me a "whatever" hand wave and disappeared behind a door.