Anonymous wrote:It has nothing to do with the workers and everything to do with Amazon owning WF. The workers are tiny little cogs in a much larger system - it’s ridiculous to blame them and not the system.
Anonymous wrote:Usually stores are understaffed and they work for minimum wage. Show some grace and kindness.
Anonymous wrote:Usually stores are understaffed and they work for minimum wage. Show some grace and kindness.
Anonymous wrote:Do NOT shop at Silver Spring Whole Foods in person!
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe I just saw this post. I recently had a terrible experience with the customer service desk and the store manager (I don’t even think he was a manager, but he was the most senior person in the store when I was there) at the River Rd WF in Bethesda. It was so bad I thought about elevating my experience up the chain, but quickly realized what a waste of my time that would be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was at the one in Pentagon City a couple of weeks ago and it was so packed with workers shopping the aisles for online orders that you couldn't get around the store.
That’s basically all the stores exist for at this point. People who shop in person are very uncommon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the generation of workers, especially the demographic that would work stocking shelves, putting together online orders.
This. It has nothing to do with WF. This is true at all the big box hardware stores. They could care less if you need something and are trying to find the right item. Target and Lowes have the worst employees who could care less about their customers. Home Goods employees also do this a lot. Sometimes they will get in your way if they think you are shoplifting. They will also send someone to walk buy you, buzzing you, as close as possible. If any store does this to me, I leave my cart and refuse to buy anything. These stores clearly don't need my money. I refuse to shop at Lowes because of how horrible they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything Amazon touches they ruin. Amazon ruined everything. The end.
Then how do you explain the same phenomenon everywhere? At any supermarket? I swear the local Giant is staffed by only four people in the entire store and the customer service desk is always grumpy or empty. My local Whole Foods is fine but all stores do have fewer staff than they did in the past.
The people who work there don't decide how many people to staff. When people are overworked they get grumpy. All stores are competing with Amazon now and so it is a race to the bottom.
Anonymous wrote:I was at the one in Pentagon City a couple of weeks ago and it was so packed with workers shopping the aisles for online orders that you couldn't get around the store.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the generation of workers, especially the demographic that would work stocking shelves, putting together online orders.
It's typically late 30s-50s working in WF not young folks.