Anonymous wrote:Haven’t been a leader in 10 years - right when they started online orders and we ignored them. Not regulation, but we collected money upfront. The shipping costs for online make it a ridiculous proposition.
The beautiful thing about GS is that you can do things the way you want, so long as you can account for the money and boxes of cookies. But GSCNC has THE WORST timing for cookie sales.
Anonymous wrote:How old do they girls keep doing this for? Dd still has a lot of friends in late ES selling, and I always buy one if they ask me directly. But I don’t think they’re very good cookies and hate buying.
Anonymous wrote:You are actually not supposed to accept payment up front. People order and pay when the cookies are delivered. As for the wagon situation, you can order cookies "for yourself" now and then sell them to your neighbors when you receive them.
But yes, the ordering period for GSCNC SUCKS, it's stupid to have it completely over the holidays. I hate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My neighbor took our order but didn’t collect money. Are you SURE you need payment upfront and not just the orders?
Op here. Yes. I need to write a check or give the cash prior to the order going in.
I was a Girl Scout for like 6 years. We got an assortment of 150 cookies and then could sell them. What was wrong with that way? Im debating doing this so my dd could sell but I am afraid of getting stuck with unsold cookies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish the Girl Scouts would figure out a new gig. Nobody needs those second rate cookies. Many who order them throw them out.
But how are kids getting 200 orders? They aren't. Their popular/social/well-connected parents are putting the ask out on facebook.
This. I love Girl Scouts, it's been great for my kids but I am really, really over selling cookies. Neighbors don't answer their doors anymore, nobody wants to spend money immediately after Christmas and Hanukkah, it's COLD outside, and all my local friends have girls around the same age selling their own cookies. Most of my and DH's co-workers are not local, so I don't bother selling to co-workers. At most, my girls have sold 20 boxes a year. This year, we're selling to the handful of people who responded on Facebook and neighbors who asked about it, and they'll make the rest of their money at booths. I actually wish the entire organization would just switch to doing booths and not bother with individual sales.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dd is a first time Brownie Girl Scout. We are supposed to go door to door and at parent workplaces to take “pre orders”. This isn’t working at all. No one wants to pay without orders in hand and fronting 100+ cookie order is expensive. Neighbors told us to come around with a wagon when we have our cookies in stock and they’d love to buy. Grandparents said the same.
I went to the troop leader and it seems the girls are never going to get actual cookies in hand. They only sell through “pre orders”. Is this true? Maybe this is why I couldn’t ever find cookies to buy in years past…
Dd has only sold 3 boxes. I’m also not thrilled because without cookies in hand she’s not learning any sales pitches. I really wanted to make a booth with her to sell. I’m prohibited by ethics to sell at work.
How does everyone else sell 200 boxes? I’m missing something.
Yeah! At long last people have recognized that GS cookies are grossly overpriced and taste gross.
I see stuff like this here, and then in the real world people get legitimately mad at me when I don't remind them to order cookies. People love them. My daughter is probably quitting at the end of this year, and I'm going to hear about it from disappointed family members and coworkers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dd is a first time Brownie Girl Scout. We are supposed to go door to door and at parent workplaces to take “pre orders”. This isn’t working at all. No one wants to pay without orders in hand and fronting 100+ cookie order is expensive. Neighbors told us to come around with a wagon when we have our cookies in stock and they’d love to buy. Grandparents said the same.
I went to the troop leader and it seems the girls are never going to get actual cookies in hand. They only sell through “pre orders”. Is this true? Maybe this is why I couldn’t ever find cookies to buy in years past…
Dd has only sold 3 boxes. I’m also not thrilled because without cookies in hand she’s not learning any sales pitches. I really wanted to make a booth with her to sell. I’m prohibited by ethics to sell at work.
How does everyone else sell 200 boxes? I’m missing something.
Yeah! At long last people have recognized that GS cookies are grossly overpriced and taste gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish they would go to direct donation. The cookies are gross.
You are welcome to donate cash. We always have one or two neighbors that just hand us a $20 and say "I don't need cookies, but I'd love to donate to your troop". This happens at cookie booths sometimes too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My neighbor took our order but didn’t collect money. Are you SURE you need payment upfront and not just the orders?
Op here. Yes. I need to write a check or give the cash prior to the order going in.
I was a Girl Scout for like 6 years. We got an assortment of 150 cookies and then could sell them. What was wrong with that way? Im debating doing this so my dd could sell but I am afraid of getting stuck with unsold cookies.
Nope, if you're in the nation's capital region, your troop leaders are doing it wrong. Money doesn't get taken out of the troop checking account until after the cookies are delivered.
Anonymous wrote:I wish the Girl Scouts would figure out a new gig. Nobody needs those second rate cookies. Many who order them throw them out.
But how are kids getting 200 orders? They aren't. Their popular/social/well-connected parents are putting the ask out on facebook.