As an ex RS employee from back in the early 90's, the thing I hated the most was the battery club. We would be inundated at the beginning of the month with all the senior citizens who had 30-40 cards each. I took almost child-like delight in taking all the cards they handed me, throwing all but 1 away and handing 1 marked card and battery back.
you're just brimming with customer service, aren't you?
if that happened to me, I'd put a series of calls into corp and you'd be out of a job in no time.
those batteries cost YOU nothing. and you represented the company in a bad way. its amazing you held a job there more than a single day, with that kind of crap attitude.
look, its a 'loss leader' and its not your call to piss off customers.
I hope you left the service industry. you don't belong in it.
Obviously, you never looked at the back of one of those cards. On the back, if I remember, it said 1 battery per card per month. People were only to have 1 card. Complaints probably wouldn't have gotten farther than being told not to take their precious cards from them. These people were scamming the system for crap batteries that they would never use, just store in the refrigerator until dead. These people were not shoppers. They would storm the store once a month, never to be seen until the next month. As one of those underpaid people trying to make enough commission to live, myself and my fellow employees were more interested in helping customers who actually had money to spend and would buy real batteries for their purchases. They would refuse a battery club card as they knew the batteries were crap.
Loss leader? A loss leader (also leader) is a pricing strategy where a product is sold at a price below its market cost to stimulate other sales of more profitable goods or services. With this sales promotion—marketing strategy, a "leader" is used as a related term and can mean any popular article, i.e., one sold at a normal price.
Those things never drove any sales. It would be foolish to even think that.
Attitude? I was always very polite and helpful to all customers, even the battery scammers. I was simply following company policy. FYI, I have been in the service industry all my working life. Now, thank God, I no longer deal with the public, I work at the government agency level. You should take the advice of others who posted here. If you haven't worked at RS, you have no real clue what it was like. You should probably get back up on your high horse and ride off into the sunset. By the way, I would have been polite and helpful even to you.