hagoonabear wrote: » both the cashiers just say they ll take the change out of her wages
cerastes wrote: » Isnt there usually a clip located in the till on a tray where the teller can put the received note until the transaction is over? for this purpose,mostly so the teller cant get tricked/confused by a scam artist to deceive them into giving out too much change? not on ours, but I get what you're saying. also, i know some people just leave the note flat across the inside of the till until the transaction is over…but its just gets so busy, and you really don't have time to be adjusting the money. you just want to get through the customers in a efficient and polite as possible manner.
berger89 wrote: » cerastes wrote: » not on ours, but I get what you're saying. also, i know some people just leave the note flat across the inside of the till until the transaction is over…but its just gets so busy, and you really don't have time to be adjusting the money. you just want to get through the customers in a efficient and polite as possible manner. I see, it seems like a very useful aid to a cashier/teller for very little cost to the retailer, something that would not slow transactions very much but provides for preventing errors occurring.
cerastes wrote: » not on ours, but I get what you're saying. also, i know some people just leave the note flat across the inside of the till until the transaction is over…but its just gets so busy, and you really don't have time to be adjusting the money. you just want to get through the customers in a efficient and polite as possible manner.
hagoonabear wrote: » hi i just checked the receipt now it still says the first amount of change not saying a i handed a 20 instead of a fiver I'm going back tomorrow I asked to speak to a manager they said no its ok, I'm definitely going to speak to the manager tomorrow I still feel kinda ashamed over it
Camila Tender Greenery wrote: » A good tip I was giving years ago. When handing notes over to a cashier, say something along the lines of... "There is 50", as you hand over the note. It makes you look twice (ensuring you actually have given a 50) and most importantly, it lets the cashier know that you know *exactly* how much that you handed over.
pablo128 wrote: » There's a petrol station in Lucan, frequented by a lot of Gardai as it happens, which used to be notorious for an eastern european female member of staff trying that trick. She was no fool either. A lot of lads would spin up there for a late night munchie run, and she would try to take advantage of their befuddled minds. More times I'd have to bring lads back up the next day to get their change back from the manager. She was a right stunner though.
Bottleopener wrote: » Dont read too much into the amount which is said on the receipt - if its an easy amount, say, 5 euro - 2 euro = 3 euro, if youre on autopilot youll often just hit the nearest total button (in this case 20€) hence why it said on the receipt you left in 20 euro.
AKW wrote: » This is part of the scam. Its very clever and without a doubt very carefully planned. Say a customer hands over €50, the sale was €8.00. Expected change is €42.00 instead they get handed back €12.00 and the €30 is 'set aside'. The €12 likely made up of €5 and loose change 50c, 20c and 10c so the customer just pockets the money so as not to let it drop. On paper when the till is checked it looks like the correct amount of change has been given out for the money handed in as the cashier has rang in €20.00 as amount tendered. If the €30 is discovered as 'over' on the till then it was a mistake keying in the tender. The best way as a consumer to avoid being stung is to hand the money over and say the amount being passed over. The amount of people I witness paying for goods while speaking on the phone or texting is astonishing too. Poeple need to pay attention to their money.
berger89 wrote: » Woah!! You'd want to be some eejit of a shop assistant to risk that. Sure surely there would be cameras on the tills. Sure;y there's a manager or something watching CCTV?? As someone who works behind a till, I think that is very extreme. Maybe I'm being naive but even if I found 1cent on the floor, I'd pp it into the charity box. Plenty of times the lads have found a 20euro and even 50euro notes on the floors. They never pocket it. They leave it to see if it gets claimed. After like 3 months, they put it into the charity box (I do). One or two pocket it. But I've never hard of such a scam
cerastes wrote: » Hardly, not that I approve, but probably worth it to them, can easily be explained as tired/error, just dont get up to it too much and there you have it. Im sure there are places that have cameras on the tills and plenty that dont. Wrong change is one thing, finding it is another, how do they determine if the real owner of the money was located? and not just spent in the pub/supermarket that night/weekend? In fact is there another scam to go into places saying you lost 20/50 or whatever? if someone handed something up, how do you know this person claiming they lost money isnt chancing their arm it happened? Where are they finding all this money? PM me please, Im sure there are noble and worthy charities, besides getting the wrong change and finding money its a completely different thing to find and keep money, than handing it up somewhere to someone hoping the real owner will get it, is that realistic, 3 months? where did that timescale come from even?
Bottleopener wrote: » Dont read too much into the amount which is said on the receipt - if its an easy amount, say, 5 euro - 2 euro = 3 euro, if youre on autopilot youll often just hit the nearest total button (in this case 20€) hence why it said on the receipt you left in 20 euro. Just bring it up with the manager and see what they say! . Sorry to hear you had a hard time.
berger89 wrote: » My point being, stop painting all cashiers with the one brush. We aren't all dishonest people. The way you're talking you'd swear everyone was scamming everyone. there are some honest people out there. As I said, I never pocket I find. I have never knowingly short changed someone. the lad I work with, if they find money, its kept behind the till in an envelope saying when and where found. if someone comes in "chancing their arm", a few simple questions will determine whether or not they are the rightful owners.
2Mad2BeMad wrote: » ... But lets be honest guys if a cashier gave you you're correct change and more, would you honestly turn back and tell him?
I expect the obvious boardsies do gooders to say they would but realistically you wouldn't, you would carry on walking. ...
P. Breathnach wrote: » Yes. I suppose that I am one of the obvious do-gooders. Why make it into a sneer? I am reasonably attentive when I am involved in a cash transaction. I won't be involved in conversation with somebody else while dealing with a cashier. It's a combination of looking after business and a matter of showing courtesy to the cashier. So it would take a brave or stupid cashier to attempt a scam on me. I am over-changed about as often as I am short-changed: mistakes happen. And if you are paying attention at the time, they are easily rectified.
berger89 wrote: » Woah!! You'd want to be some eejit of a shop assistant to risk that.
AKW wrote: » Really? Why? If caught the €30 can be explained away as 'someone forgot their change'. They can't be accused of any wrongdoing unless caught a second or third time at which point it becomes a pattern. And before you accuse me of tarnishing cashiers I run a shop and am a cashier. It is worth people being aware of what can and does happen. As I said previously the amount of people handling money while distracted by phones, kids, other people is astonishing. As a cashier, good habit is to always make eye contact when touching money and to say how much is being received for goods and how much change is being given back. I wait until the distraction has abated too. I would stand with the cash above counter level until I have the person's attention.
2Mad2BeMad wrote: » Not a cashier here But lets be honest guys if a cashier gave you you're correct change and more, would you honestly turn back and tell him? I expect the obvious boardsies do gooders to say they would but realistically you wouldn't, you would carry on walking. Cashiers are not scammers, some are but majority are not, most incidents are because of mistakes and when you're giving out money all day as a cashier and counting it giving the correct change as well as keeping an eye for fake notes or the customer trying to scam you, you would give the wrong change the odd time too.