I get on a rampage occasionally about large companies. Incidentally one of my favorite examples is the relatively small but talented and responsive group with the Tax Book, and other giant publishers with seemingly powerful and infinite resources. The rest of this post is off-topic, but the comparison has well-recognized counterparts in other businesses.
The best-rewarded companies on Wall Street used to be those who built plants, expanded facilities, hired people, provided benefits, etc. Now the Wall Street darlings are those who move plants overseas, lay off people, slash benefits because "this adds to the bottom line."
Earlier tonight, most stores in our little town were closed due to a rare five-inch snow, plus it was late Sunday. Of course, Wal Mart was open. Yes, the same whose four heirs of Walton are among the 10 richest people in America. The same WalMart who works 90% of their people less than 28 hrs/wk so they don't have to provide medical benefits to any except top management people.
At some point in the past, I could go into a store, ask for help, get what I needed, check out and be on my way. Tonight, all I needed was kitchen matches and cranberry juice. Found a few workers in the cavernous facility, none of whom knew where the matches were and didn't really care. Found the juice, and walked to the other end of the store to find another clerk who had been surrounded by a whole group of people who needed help. I looked around awhile to come back later. After coming back the clerk had been summoned to the far recesses of the store to wait on someone where there wasn't a clerk on duty.
Gave up on the matches, and headed to the check-out. Food-stamp people were in front of me arguing with one of only two cashiers for the whole store. Cashier said she couldn't approve a transactions, so had to call in a manager from the back. Manager came and they huddled about something. A few minutes later cashier had more problems and had to call the manager back up again.
Cashier was being paid little more than minimum wage - every tax preparer in town sees their W-2s and knows this. Another guy with two purchases said he was going to the other cashier after waiting behind this one customer 25 minutes. The manager was being called up for the third time, and I joined the guy at the other cashier station.
Guy in front of me wrote a check for less than $20, and cashier shoved some paperwork under him for him to sign. Said his check had instantly cleared the bank but had to have this agreement signed whereby Wal-Mart could automatically draft his bank account in the event of a payment disagreement. (Even after she told him his check had already cleared the bank) Guy refused, got pissed off, and walked out. Cashier didn't really care, and was relieved she didn't have to listen to him any more.
I paid my $8 for two large OceanSpray bottles and finally got out of Dodge.
I could give you more sensational business practices by WalMart, but that is really out-of-scope. The point I wish to make:
DON'T THINK FOR A MINUTE that larger, well-heeled companies with resources are going to provide you with a superior product or services. Remember the days of walking into your friendly neighborhood store, getting what you need, and service with a smile, even at a slightly higher price.
I'm not promoting nostalgia, but excellence. When I was younger in church we used to sing "This Is My Father's World." If they still sing this today, they are definitely not talking about my father, Mr. Jordan, or his world either.
The best-rewarded companies on Wall Street used to be those who built plants, expanded facilities, hired people, provided benefits, etc. Now the Wall Street darlings are those who move plants overseas, lay off people, slash benefits because "this adds to the bottom line."
Earlier tonight, most stores in our little town were closed due to a rare five-inch snow, plus it was late Sunday. Of course, Wal Mart was open. Yes, the same whose four heirs of Walton are among the 10 richest people in America. The same WalMart who works 90% of their people less than 28 hrs/wk so they don't have to provide medical benefits to any except top management people.
At some point in the past, I could go into a store, ask for help, get what I needed, check out and be on my way. Tonight, all I needed was kitchen matches and cranberry juice. Found a few workers in the cavernous facility, none of whom knew where the matches were and didn't really care. Found the juice, and walked to the other end of the store to find another clerk who had been surrounded by a whole group of people who needed help. I looked around awhile to come back later. After coming back the clerk had been summoned to the far recesses of the store to wait on someone where there wasn't a clerk on duty.
Gave up on the matches, and headed to the check-out. Food-stamp people were in front of me arguing with one of only two cashiers for the whole store. Cashier said she couldn't approve a transactions, so had to call in a manager from the back. Manager came and they huddled about something. A few minutes later cashier had more problems and had to call the manager back up again.
Cashier was being paid little more than minimum wage - every tax preparer in town sees their W-2s and knows this. Another guy with two purchases said he was going to the other cashier after waiting behind this one customer 25 minutes. The manager was being called up for the third time, and I joined the guy at the other cashier station.
Guy in front of me wrote a check for less than $20, and cashier shoved some paperwork under him for him to sign. Said his check had instantly cleared the bank but had to have this agreement signed whereby Wal-Mart could automatically draft his bank account in the event of a payment disagreement. (Even after she told him his check had already cleared the bank) Guy refused, got pissed off, and walked out. Cashier didn't really care, and was relieved she didn't have to listen to him any more.
I paid my $8 for two large OceanSpray bottles and finally got out of Dodge.
I could give you more sensational business practices by WalMart, but that is really out-of-scope. The point I wish to make:
DON'T THINK FOR A MINUTE that larger, well-heeled companies with resources are going to provide you with a superior product or services. Remember the days of walking into your friendly neighborhood store, getting what you need, and service with a smile, even at a slightly higher price.
I'm not promoting nostalgia, but excellence. When I was younger in church we used to sing "This Is My Father's World." If they still sing this today, they are definitely not talking about my father, Mr. Jordan, or his world either.
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