Anonymous wrote:I cannot stand the overbearing push to get people to buy these at the office. The boss used to have his secretary blast out “friendly” reminders to sign up to buy from his daughter, who was the citywide champ every year. The pathetic quotes from her in the local paper about how her “hard work” pays off were comical. We finally had enough of this and just before the cookie sale deadline the massive sign up sheet disappeared. After a frantic dither to locate it, the message finally got through. About a month later a policy prohibiting this was issued. This is unfair and inappropriate in an employment setting.
Anonymous wrote:I will buy then if a kid knocks on my door or is standing outside in the cold selling them. I will not buy from a friend posting on Facebook that their kid is selling them.
I also buy fewer boxes not that I can buy them for a lot less at Aldi or Lidl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a Girl Scout dad, I sell at work but I always have my daughter give me a message to put in the email about why she's selling and what she gets out of Girl Scouts. If people say they want cookies I send them the link to her site which has another message from her. I want her doing all much selling as possible.
But I'll also say people definitely want them. A friend passed along my daughter's link to one of her friends and that person bought 20 boxes from a girl she's never met.
My office banned parents selling their children's cookies. Wrapping paper, peanuts. Etc. as they should. You want to believe that the employees in your office want these cheap cookies. They feel forced because you are the boss and they look cheap and mean for not supporting your snowflake.
Perhaps in your office this was necessary, I have no idea. In my office, my daughter sells cookies to a small number of people (usually about three out of thirty employees) usually only people who expressly ask to be reminded about cookie season, and she's never sold to anyone who reported to me (but she always sells to my boss). I don't expect to change your mind at all on this, but in my experience, your comment seems quite silly.
Anonymous wrote:I cannot stand the overbearing push to get people to buy these at the office. The boss used to have his secretary blast out “friendly” reminders to sign up to buy from his daughter, who was the citywide champ every year. The pathetic quotes from her in the local paper about how her “hard work” pays off were comical. We finally had enough of this and just before the cookie sale deadline the massive sign up sheet disappeared. After a frantic dither to locate it, the message finally got through. About a month later a policy prohibiting this was issued. This is unfair and inappropriate in an employment setting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is selling cookies online right now with her troop. It is funny and awkward at the same time. Neighbors we barely know stepped in and bought cookies from her. Some other people I could bet would support her didn’t come through yet
You sent the link to the neighbors? Or you put it in their mailboxes? Either way, yeah it’s awkward. I didn’t let my daughter do this. They aren’t really supporting her. Her troop is getting cents for each box.
Our troop earned over $2000 from cookie sales, and we're about as low-key as you can get with cookies. Not all families can just pay for troop activities, so cookies really are a vital part of the funding for most troops.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD is selling cookies online right now with her troop. It is funny and awkward at the same time. Neighbors we barely know stepped in and bought cookies from her. Some other people I could bet would support her didn’t come through yet
You sent the link to the neighbors? Or you put it in their mailboxes? Either way, yeah it’s awkward. I didn’t let my daughter do this. They aren’t really supporting her. Her troop is getting cents for each box.
Anonymous wrote:DD is selling cookies online right now with her troop. It is funny and awkward at the same time. Neighbors we barely know stepped in and bought cookies from her. Some other people I could bet would support her didn’t come through yet