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I find when you get what you pay for. When you are paying more you will get more quality applicants. It is up to the person interviewing to be picky. I look for people who are trainable, not necessarily experienced( sometimes you get both, which is great) Most people interview 2 people and hire at least one of them. Go through application and pre-screen and rule out at that point. I have certain criteria i use to move applicants to my interview process.
If you want quality people, post jobs in quality places, like Barista Exchange. Good luck with your hunting.
I, being a senior, am a bit prejudice. I answered a Craig's list add nearly two years ago. I work about two hours in the morning (gets me out my jammies). If there were a coffee shop job posted, I would have grabbed it. Consider a person in my position (retired early and like people). I call on businesses during the morning. The businesses that have a senior behind the counter are the most efficient, friendly, and cooperative. I watch how young and old interact with customers. There are some young who are very good, but overall the old geezers have a better way with people, even with the younger clientele. Just my observation.
They may be from the dark ages, of Folgers, and percolators, but they can balance a checkbook, read a road map, and add a column of numbers with out using a calculator.
We do have some good looking applications, but the more the better, right?
I didn't mean to imply that we weren't looking for an older (maybe senior) person. I've long thought that an active retiree or empty nester would be great to have on staff. You'd get the benefit of a flexible schedule and years of work experience. What I meant by "coming out of the dark ages" was that we don't have the benefit of coffee college grads or even many home baristas who might bring some previous coffee knowledge to the position. Most of the shops around here are chains (Sbux, Caribou, etc.) and use super automatic machines, so even those with previous experience need intensive retraining. Like most independent shops, we work hard every day to teach our customers about the value of high quality, lovingly made coffee.
Or you are just being prejudice. Today I went into VOLUNTARILY fix a grinder for one of our customers (read as no charge on an account that doesn't have a maintenance program). The person working the counter was... I dunno... 60+. He was a pathetic excuse for a barista. There wasn't a single person in the entire business the whole time I was there, which was about 30 minutes. When I came in he was parked in a back room in front of a computer screen (not work related).I, being a senior, am a bit prejudice. I answered a Craig's list add nearly two years ago. I work about two hours in the morning (gets me out my jammies). If there were a coffee shop job posted, I would have grabbed it. Consider a person in my position (retired early and like people). I call on businesses during the morning. The businesses that have a senior behind the counter are the most efficient, friendly, and cooperative. I watch how young and old interact with customers. There are some young who are very good, but overall the old geezers have a better way with people, even with the younger clientele. Just my observation.
They may be from the dark ages, of Folgers, and percolators, but they can balance a checkbook, read a road map, and add a column of numbers with out using a calculator.
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