No, no, no—The customer is not always right! Ideally, everyone walking into any shop would be patient, polite, and well-versed in common sense. Unfortunately, those qualities are in short supply these days. This means that the staff has to smile, stay professional, and avoid facepalming, even when dealing with completely delulu shoppers.
The retail workers of the r/AskReddit online community recently opened up about the “dumbest things” that they’ve ever had to explain to their customers, and this is a whole other level of cluelessness. We’ve collected some of the most interesting stories to share with you. Scroll down to have a read, and don’t forget to upvote the posts that blew you away the most.
We got in touch with the person who sparked the interesting discussion, u/Fragmented-Rooster, and they were kind enough to share some thoughts about surviving in the retail world. They told us that it’s vital to remember that “no job is ruining your mental health over.” You’ll find We’s interview with them below.
#1
(Phone call when I worked in a hardware store)
“Good morning,
“Hi there. I’d like to refill my prescription”
“Oh, I’m sorry – I think you have the wrong number. This is a hardware store”
<5 second pause>
“So you won’t help me refill my prescription?”
“What sort of prescription?”
“My birth control pill”
“OK well we’re a hardware store, so we don’t have birth control or any other medication”
“You’re not being very helpful at all”
And then she hung up…
I might have done society a disservice by not helping prevent her from procreating, come to think about it…
“You do have to stay professional at all times, but at the end of the day, the customer ISN’T always right, and you’ve got to stick to policy,” the author of the thread, u/Fragmented-Rooster, told We how it’s best to react to clueless customers.
“Keep your remarks until your break later and laugh at their ridiculousness over a coffee,” they suggested.
#2
I didn’t make your drink wrong, Amy. You ordered a large hot drink, and immediately after paying the barista put out a small cold drink and yelled “Jennifer.” Then, Amy, you picked it up and *took a sip* before realizing it was not your large, hot drink.
Shift lead sent me on break before I had a chance to fully explode.
#3
Dumbest thing, or customer, I had to explain is that there is no such thing as “lo cal” or lo calorie honey. It’s f*****g “local” for cryin out loud. F*CK.
The author also had some practical advice for surviving in a retail job for anyone who’s completely new to this line of work. “Your first job probably isn’t going to be great. Stick at it, and if it’s bad, search for a new job while you’re still working. That way, there’s no dip in your paychecks,” they shared some practical advice.
They added that it’s always worthwhile to make some friends with the staff. “Always remember no job is worth ruining your mental health over. Stay chill and talk to someone about it. If it’s not for you, then it’s okay to quit,” they advised.
According to the OP, they were inspired to start the discussion after having a conversation with a friend about the very worst customers they both had ever dealt with. Even though u/Fragmented-Rooster hoped the thread would get attention, they never expected the question to get so much traction.
#4
“Why are you shut tomorrow?”
“Uhh…because its Christmas day?”
“But what if I need something?”
“You…youre in the store now? Just buy it now?”
“But I dont *need* it now!”
“……”.
#5
I used to run a feed store in an affluent area. We sold baby chicks, which were only females, for egg laying.
This guy comes in and is adamant about needing a rooster for more egg production.
That’s not the case. I explained how the reproductive, egg laying process was. He just wasn’t getting it. I was at my point, and plus, the fact I couldn’t order just 1 rooster, I could only order roosters in a batch of 50.
I had to put it extremely bluntly to him, and I asked him,
“Sir, does your wife need you around every month to get her period?” His jaw drops and says, “OH my, how foolish could I be. “
Another customer asking “Where is the mother chicken?”
Me, “They don’t need the mother hen.”
Her, “How can they survive without their mother? You buy chicken breast at the store. She needs to breastfeed!”
Me, “That’s not how it works.”.
#6
A chicken is an animal. Therefore it’s not vegetarian.
Worked in a vitamin store in college and was explaining to someone that vitamin D is extracted from lanolin in sheep’s wool, so it depended on if you were vegan or not.
And they hit me with fish and birds are not animals.
The specific thing she said: “What about a chicken? It’s not an animal, it’s a fowl!”
My assistant manager told her something like, “Oh well remember the 20 questions game? Is it animal, mineral, or vegetable? A chicken isn’t an a mineral or vegetable.”
They left in a huff and made huge complaints about us. Me in particular because I couldn’t believe how stupid they were (and I have no poker face).
I was not/am not cut out for retail.
If you’re working in retail, sooner or later, you will have to deal with someone who’s completely clueless, irritable, rude, or trying to pull the wool over your eyes. It’s part of the job. Any position that requires you to interact with a large number of people is going to show you just how varied humanity is. Sure, most of your customers are probably going to be decent folks. But a small handful of them are probably going to try to ruin your day, whether they mean to or not.
One important thing for retail workers to do is to try to figure out whether their problematic customer is simply having a bad day or if rudeness and entitlement are part of their character. To put it bluntly, after a bout of bad luck, many of us have probably snapped at a stranger when we didn’t mean to. An insightful employee who’s well-versed in empathy is going to be able to recognize that.
#7
Used to work in a computer store, someone asked me once if a mouse mat would work with Windows 7. I worry about some people on this planet..
#8
As a cashier when someone is paying cash: “hey if you can give me a penny, or a nickel I can give you a whole paper dollar back as change.”
If your total was $19.10 and you gave me a $20. Give me $20.10 and I can give you a dollar bill for change rather than you carrying pesky spare change around.
This was back in the late 90s or early 00s. I know this confused people back then, it would totally explode someone’s brain now.
#9
If you enter your PIN in wrong 5 times for an EBT card, it will lock up and you’ll have to call the number on the back to get it unlocked. This isn’t something the cashier does, or the store, it’s the cards way of protecting itself I guess.
The amount of people who would scream at me, insult my intelligence, swear at me and call me names, all because they locked their card up, was insane.
And there wasn’t anything I could do but void the order or let them pay with another form of payment. Sometimes I warned them after 2 or 3 tries, but that seemed to make them angrier when it happened.
F**k the public, man. People are so rude and hateful now days. .
Broadly speaking, when working in retail, it’s vital to stay professional, no matter what happens. Your company likely has a guidebook where it lists what it expects all its staff to do when faced with unhappy customers. There’s often a clear protocol. Some businesses also invest in training their workers, teaching them how to de-escalate tense situations. Though roleplaying some common scenarios can be a good teaching tool, it still might not prepare you for the real thing.
In real life, your customers can throw you some curveballs and behave in completely unexpected ways. They might be unwilling to hear you out, even if you’ve got the solution and you’re trying to help them. If the situation is getting out of hand and it’s too much to handle, there’s no shame in asking for some help from a senior employee or your supervisor. They likely have more experience with handling these super-niche scenarios with problematic customers.
#10
I’ve had to explain to customers that their coupon has to actually be for the product they’re buying. Yes, a $3 coupon for a skin care product is a good coupon, however I cannot apply it to your cereal purchase.
#11
Had an older (though not senior citizen) man who was 100% certain that were stealing money from his bank account because it kept showing $100 “charges” to the ATM at our location. After a series of questions he stated he sends his son in to pick up his prescriptions and gives him his debit to pay. Pointing out to him (from his own bank statement) that the $100 charges match the dates of the prescription pickups made him only more emphatic that someone from the store was using his card to steal his money.
Even pointing out that his bank statement specified the $100 as coming from an atm did nothing to sway his mind.
He stood at the front door staring at us for 20 minutes before finally leaving.
Sorry dude, your kids a d**k and you’re an idiot. I cant fix either of those.
#12
Back in the day I worked at Safeway and a woman walked up to my meat counter and started asking me where a specific sale item was, like $1 a pound chicken or something. I tell her that’s not sale we have. And she starts SCREAMING. ” YOU PEOPLE ALWAYS DO THIS! YOU BAIT AND YOU SWITCH! YOU ADVERTISE ONE THING AND THEN REFUSE TO HONOR THE PRICE! EVERYTIME SINGLE TIME I COME HERE AND IM SICK OF IT!”
She then shoves the store ad in my face and aggressively points at the $1 a pound chicken on sale.
” Ma’am this is Safeway. That’s a Kroger ad”
She looks at it and says ” oh. Oops” and walks out as I stand there just freaking baffled at what just happened.
Also working meat department every Thanksgiving morning I would have to explain to at least 5 people that you cannot thaw and cook and 20 pound turkey by this evening.
Once your colleague or manager steps in to help, pay close attention to what they say, how they say it, and what their body language is like. It’s very likely that they’ll exude an aura of confidence and calm. They’ll probably try to offer the customer some solutions, apologize a bit, and thank them for their concerns.
Politeness can be a very powerful tool in your arsenal, especially when facing overwhelming rudeness. You have to try to resist the impulse to raise your voice and insult the customer. That being said, if they are being abusive, you do not have to tolerate their behavior: you or your manager can ask them to leave. Good companies will have protocols in place to protect their staff in these scenarios.
#13
I spent 20+ minutes arguing with a middle aged woman trying to return a XXL stack of men’s underwear (against policy once opened). I explained that if her husband had a 32 inch waist like me she needed to buy him Medium size underwear.
She eventually and angrily shouted “Look, he’s got a huge c**k and he needs XXL pants for it but these keep falling down when he wears them!!!!”
She would not accept my explanation that the tag size related to his waist not his junk. she raged out of the shop leaving the stack of pants behind.
#14
I work in a deli. We’ve gotten some doozies. “What flavor are the plain breaded wings?” “Chicken.” -from my wife.
My personal favorite that happened to me, went as such:
Customer: “Hi, I’d like some sliced chicken lunch meat, what you got?”
Me: “We carry oven roasted, buffalo, and garlic & herb.”
Customer: You’re not understanding me boy! I want sliced chicken lunch meat, now what you got?”
Me: “Oven roasted, buffalo, or garlic & herb.”
Customer: “You’re still not gettin’ me son, I want sliced chicken lunch meat! Now tell me what you have, dammit!”
Me: “Oven roasted, chicken lunch meat. Buffalo, chicken lunch meat. Garlic and herb, chicken lunch meat.”
Customer: “Oh. Uhhhhh gimme some balogna.”
Still don’t know how I didn’t get in trouble for sassing that f****r.
#15
That the lamp she was trying to return did not have a defective cord, but had a protective plastic cap over the plug that needed to be removed.
#16
I actually have one for this.
Worked in car parking customer service for a few years.
Had to explain to a lady why she was being charged for an hour and a half, instead of letting her out for free under the “half an hour free” rate … When her vehicle had been in the car park. Parked. For an hour and a half.
Her reasoning ?
“I only intended to stay 20 minutes”
“My system shows me you were here for an hour and a half”
“Yes, but I only intended to be here for 20 minutes”
“But…..you were ACTUALLY here for an hour and a half…”
Ended up having to explain over 5 minutes how rates work, and how you get charged for the time in the park.
Wild.
#17
Back when I was in college I worked at a McDonald’s I spent tne better part of 30 minutes explaining to a person that a cheeseburger with no cheese was in fact just called a hamburger.
#18
You can’t return this TV because it has a cracked screen, if I can see the boot print.
Dude threw a punch at me over the counter in front of his wife and infant daughter.
#19
That watermelons don’t grow on trees. And this was back in the days before these personal-sized seedless watermelons…back when they were like 20lbs. A woman was complaining that all of the watermelons were flat on one side and kind of yellow. I told her that was the side that was on the ground. She looked angry and surprised and asked, “What do you mean, ‘on the ground’?!” like I was admitting to some secret that we leave the producing sitting on the ground out back, or something.
#20
I, as a Walmart stocker, do not control the chemicals inside kids’ toys.