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jpoc: You guys should see how they handle checkout queues in other parts of the world.
One supermarket in Munich takes the trophy as far as I am concerned.
The first checkout is always staffed and a few trolly lengths back from the checkout there is a sign which reads (in German) "if the queue gets back here, please press the button to let us know that we need to open more checkouts." You press the button and a bell rings. The door to the manager's office opens and out he comes doing a fine Basil Fawlty impression as he screams at you and says that if you ever press the button again, he will ban you from the shop forever.
Priceless.
The supermarket closest to the last place I lived in Munich does it better. They have lots of checkouts and every staff member is expected to be able to work in any role in the store. If an employee is working on a checkout and sees that they have two people waiting behind the one that they are serving, they turn on the mike on their workstation and just say "more staff to checkouts" causing the nearest shelf stacker to stop stacking and open up a checkout. If a checkout operator has nobody to serve then, unless they are the last person on the checkouts, they are expected to close the checkout and go stack some shelves. Works perfectly.
Aldo do that in their newer stores. I dream of the day when their Ozzie division feels that it has opened enough stores there and turns it sights on New Zealand. That will shock the existing operators.
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Geektastic:jpoc: You guys should see how they handle checkout queues in other parts of the world.
One supermarket in Munich takes the trophy as far as I am concerned.
The first checkout is always staffed and a few trolly lengths back from the checkout there is a sign which reads (in German) "if the queue gets back here, please press the button to let us know that we need to open more checkouts." You press the button and a bell rings. The door to the manager's office opens and out he comes doing a fine Basil Fawlty impression as he screams at you and says that if you ever press the button again, he will ban you from the shop forever.
Priceless.
The supermarket closest to the last place I lived in Munich does it better. They have lots of checkouts and every staff member is expected to be able to work in any role in the store. If an employee is working on a checkout and sees that they have two people waiting behind the one that they are serving, they turn on the mike on their workstation and just say "more staff to checkouts" causing the nearest shelf stacker to stop stacking and open up a checkout. If a checkout operator has nobody to serve then, unless they are the last person on the checkouts, they are expected to close the checkout and go stack some shelves. Works perfectly.
Aldo do that in their newer stores. I dream of the day when their Ozzie division feels that it has opened enough stores there and turns it sights on New Zealand. That will shock the existing operators.
Totally agree! Aldi and Lidl would wipe the floor here in NZ - as would Tescos if they ever head south from Asia!
kingjj: Hey come on, give them a break! They don't hold a sale every weekend like some retailers, they obviously aren't used to being that busy........
jpoc: Aldo do that in their newer stores. I dream of the day when their Ozzie division feels that it has opened enough stores there and turns it sights on New Zealand. That will shock the existing operators.
stevenk:jpoc: Aldo do that in their newer stores. I dream of the day when their Ozzie division feels that it has opened enough stores there and turns it sights on New Zealand. That will shock the existing operators.
They would probably burst out laughing... as I did the first time I shopped at Aldi.
4:30pm during the week (peak supermarket shopping time) at Braybrook (low-income area, good place for a discount supermarket, or so you'd think) and the shop was almost deserted. While they have some very good products, their range is so limited that you need to go to a full-service supermarket to get the other bits and pieces you need that Aldi don't stock.
That said, they do have some very good products, many of which seem to come from New Zealand.
I doubt that they would be competitive in the New Zealand market. Here in Victoria, they have a niche as the only discount supermarket chain (not counting the one Costco store in the middle of Melbourne) against Coles, Safeway/Woolworths and IGA. In New Zealand they would have head-on competition in the form of Pak'nSave, who apart from having a twenty-year head start, have a much stronger offering.
lxsw20: Lol @ complaining about the limited selection of shops in NZ but wanting Tesco to come over and kill the local market.
thecatsgoolies:
Ironically The Warehouse sold a lot of Tesco products a good few years ago! Our market is just too small to sustain such a huge selection sadly. I'm waiting for IKEA to come here just so I can get me some meatballs :-)
thecatsgoolies:lxsw20: Lol @ complaining about the limited selection of shops in NZ but wanting Tesco to come over and kill the local market.
Ironically The Warehouse sold a lot of Tesco products a good few years ago! Our market is just too small to sustain such a huge selection sadly. I'm waiting for IKEA to come here just so I can get me some meatballs :-)
jpoc:thecatsgoolies:lxsw20: Lol @ complaining about the limited selection of shops in NZ but wanting Tesco to come over and kill the local market.
Ironically The Warehouse sold a lot of Tesco products a good few years ago! Our market is just too small to sustain such a huge selection sadly. I'm waiting for IKEA to come here just so I can get me some meatballs :-)
I don't think that we are too small. You can make a really good comparison to the situation with the UK and Ireland. The UK is way bigger than Aus but Ireland has very many similarities to NZ. Similar population with a similar distribution between one big million plus city a handful of other towns and lots of rural areas. In the last two decades Tesco, Aldi and Lidl have all found it worthwhile to use their UK operations as a base for moving in on Ireland. Of course, the UK is closer to Ireland than we are to Aus and the UK and Ireland also share a land border but even so, there can be hope. I did see a note in the Aus biz-press a few years back that Aldi have us on their radar but right now opening more stores in Aus is their priority.
Hiamie:\kingjj: Hey come on, give them a break! They don't hold a sale every weekend like some retailers, they obviously aren't used to being that busy........
I didn't even know they were having a sale - I dropped in there by chance.
They seem to have a sale every second week - at least judging by all the TV advertising I see and letterbox pamphlets I get!
They have been in business a long time, with regular sales, so surely they must know what to expect, and should have processes in place to deal with it.
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