Because you need money that bad, Minky.*Minka* said:Because of University. Checkouts seriously make me want to remove my eyes with a rusty fork. Why oh why did I have to get this job?
So what is the true definition of 'Casual'? You definition seems inclined towards conditions you wish you had under this fantasy definition, not what is reality. The definitive condition a Casual gets is stated in it's contract; usually just the minimum hours guaranteed over a fixed time period declared. How crudely they allocate hours in regards to your personal schedule isn't relevant.MiuMiu said:Collin and Cyph don't seem to understand what these people are complaining about. I do.
In my brand, there are very few permanent part-timers. For the particular area I looked after, there were 3. The rest of the work was done by casuals.
Casuals in general in CML are not treated by the true definition of casual. You aren't just called in when someone is sick or there is an extra job to be done. Thats why CML casuals start to get upset when their shifts are reduced significantly.
No offence, but that's bullshit. Don't judge a book by it's cover. Officeworks doesn't look busy when you walk inside, but during peak hour you're overloaded with call parks and customer issues. And when it isn't peak hour you have to complete tasks assigned to you through your line managers, other customers and pre-determined to-do lists.MiuMiu said:Yeah that and the fact that officeworks is rarely 'busy' in the kmart/target/coles/bilo sense of the word.
Actually, I've done the tech section, stationary section aswell as POS/checkouts (on permanent basis). Sometimes I yearn to get away from tech and have a 'breather' at the registers (even when some customers decide to bitch at you because her stapler broke).politik said:Well Collin is at Officework's IT Department, which would make me happy also - he probably hasn't had to permanently work on the dreads of Registers.
Don't patronise me, and don't put words into my mouth.Collin said:So what is the true definition of 'Casual'? You definition seems inclined towards conditions you wish you had under this fantasy definition, not what is reality. The definitive condition a Casual gets is stated in it's contract; usually just the minimum hours guaranteed over a fixed time period declared. How crudely they allocate hours in regards to your personal schedule isn't relevant.
No, its not bullshit. Take everything you just said, and add on top of that twice (if not more) customer traffic....and there you have a typical casual's day at kmart/target/bilo/coles.collin said:No offence, but that's bullshit. Don't judge a book by it's cover. Officeworks doesn't look busy when you walk inside, but during peak hour you're overloaded with call parks and customer issues. And when it isn't peak hour you have to complete tasks assigned to you through your line managers, other customers and pre-determined to-do lists.
Correct and Correct.MiuMiu said:I was not displaying any feelings on the 'true' definition of a casual--I was merely stating that in general a casual is one who is called in fairly last minute, to fill in or assigned short periods of work when employees are on leave. However in many of the CML brands, this is not the case. Casuals are the very backbone of the store and are relied upon heavily to complete the great majority of work done.
Try working the service desk for 10 minutes trying to operate a register, look after phone calls on 8 lines, answering customer queries and cleaning up after people. ALL AT ONCE. And if you dare step away from the counter or turn your head to talk to another staff member you get yelled at by a customer who thinks it is their born right to recieve service the minute they walk through the doors.
Settle down. Had a bad day today? Seriously, take a chill pill. If anything, I should be asserting you as the one patronising me over the comment that Cyph and I don't seem to understand what these people are complaining about. Just because I don't agree with you means I didn't comprehend?MiuMiu said:Don't patronise me, and don't put words into my mouth.
I was not displaying any feelings on the 'true' definition of a casual--I was merely stating that in general a casual is one who is called in fairly last minute, to fill in or assigned short periods of work when employees are on leave. However in many of the CML brands, this is not the case. Casuals are the very backbone of the store and are relied upon heavily to complete the great majority of work done.
I do not have a 'fantasy' of what a casual should be...as a 2IC I chose my own hours and wasn't directly affected by the bureaucracy and budgeting issues--but I did see first hand how it affected others and its quite pathetic. With better training for line managers spending on staff could be far more effective and fair.
Doesn't matter now though, Im working as a para-legal part-time until I get my LLB next year, so once again, don't patronise me.
What's your point? That's the same with me, since like I said, I have a certain workload expected to be COMPLETED everyday, whilst having to maintain a robust level of IT sales customer service protocols (infact monitored by third-party 'mystery shoppers' employed by CML Head Office) and having numerous call parks from the service desk racking up ("BM Call Park 2.. BM Call Park 4, second call.. blah blah").. resulting in a heavy stack of multi-tasking. Some customers take up to 45 minutes to consult, and when you have 20 or so eager customers roaming around the tech floor looking for service when you also have a substantial amount of pre-assigned tasks from line manager(s) to complete by the end of your shift aswell as a consistent background of call parks with only 2-3 of you at most in your department at work at any given time, things get busy, thank you very much. The fact that you were willing to conclude workload of a brand you have minimal knowledge of simply based on how a few particular store floors seemed (in terms of 'busy-ness') shows inherent bias. I'm fairly displeased about things when people want to debate in this manner.MiuMiu said:No, its not bullshit. Take everything you just said, and add on top of that twice (if not more) customer traffic....and there you have a typical casual's day at kmart/target/bilo/coles.
Try working the service desk for 10 minutes trying to operate a register, look after phone calls on 8 lines, answering customer queries and cleaning up after people. ALL AT ONCE. And if you dare step away from the counter or turn your head to talk to another staff member you get yelled at by a customer who thinks it is their born right to recieve service the minute they walk through the doors.