Having worked at various retailers, I know there is basically nothing in the back. There’s rollover; when you have too much shit to fit on the shelf but this is super rare and you likely will never see the shelf where the items are ever get empty, becsuse it is going to be restocked as it starts to look empty, since there’s more in the back.
If the shelf is empty, it’s because they ain’t got no more. Period.
I’ve heard this so many times on the Internet that I never ask. However, I actually have had many employees still suggest it, and they come back with something with surprising frequency.
You can ask, but just trust the employee when they tell you all their stock is on the floor. I used to have people insist that I go check, even after telling them that there was nothing in the back room. I would go there, stand around for a few minutes and then come back out to reiterate that we didn’t have more of the product they are looking for.
Probably depends on where you worked at, but at GameStop we did have a lot in the back and upstairs too where we had a single office. Behind the register in the backroom, we had a small TV to connect consoles to and try them out when we bought from customers, a bunch of shelves with duplicate games we didn’t have any space for upstairs as well as a shelf for upcoming games that were not out yet/preorders for customers.
Upstairs was the office were probably like a billion copies of Red Dead 2, various CoDs, and Fifa lived, our stash of new consoles, and one giant room full of old promotional material that was never distributed.
The only other retailer I worked at was kind of a gift shop I’d call it? Like a shop where you can buy all kinds of seasonal crap, but primarily candles, decorations, party games. And there we’d also not have anything “in the back” to materialise product from.
When I worked in retail, I was on multiple occasions asked to check the backroom. One thing is if I suggest taking a look myself, but when a customer demands I check, then I consider that a required break.
Having worked at various retailers, I know there is basically nothing in the back. There’s rollover; when you have too much shit to fit on the shelf but this is super rare and you likely will never see the shelf where the items are ever get empty, becsuse it is going to be restocked as it starts to look empty, since there’s more in the back.
If the shelf is empty, it’s because they ain’t got no more. Period.
I’ve heard this so many times on the Internet that I never ask. However, I actually have had many employees still suggest it, and they come back with something with surprising frequency.
You can ask, but just trust the employee when they tell you all their stock is on the floor. I used to have people insist that I go check, even after telling them that there was nothing in the back room. I would go there, stand around for a few minutes and then come back out to reiterate that we didn’t have more of the product they are looking for.
Probably depends on where you worked at, but at GameStop we did have a lot in the back and upstairs too where we had a single office. Behind the register in the backroom, we had a small TV to connect consoles to and try them out when we bought from customers, a bunch of shelves with duplicate games we didn’t have any space for upstairs as well as a shelf for upcoming games that were not out yet/preorders for customers.
Upstairs was the office were probably like a billion copies of Red Dead 2, various CoDs, and Fifa lived, our stash of new consoles, and one giant room full of old promotional material that was never distributed.
The only other retailer I worked at was kind of a gift shop I’d call it? Like a shop where you can buy all kinds of seasonal crap, but primarily candles, decorations, party games. And there we’d also not have anything “in the back” to materialise product from.
When I worked in retail, I was on multiple occasions asked to check the backroom. One thing is if I suggest taking a look myself, but when a customer demands I check, then I consider that a required break.