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Read your statement after your first year my friend and you'll be singing a different tune.
Fire her, do it in front of other employees and emphasize that closing early is the same thing as stealing she stole your opportunity to do business and may have cost you customers.
Jared Rutledge said:i'm completely against the whole "watching your baristas with a camera" thing. that's way too big-brother for me. if you aren't hiring people you can trust, don't hire them in the first place.
Read your statement after your first year my friend and you'll be singing a different tune.
Fire her, do it in front of other employees and emphasize that closing early is the same thing as stealing she stole your opportunity to do business and may have cost you customers.
Jared Rutledge said:i'm completely against the whole "watching your baristas with a camera" thing. that's way too big-brother for me. if you aren't hiring people you can trust, don't hire them in the first place.
Oh, please... this is the worst advice on this thread yet. First of all, you should NEVER, EVER fire someone in front of other employees, it just brings you to their level and makes you look childish and unprofessional.
Secondly, while the issue is serious (I'm not stating or debating that) it is NOT stealing. Taking money from the register is stealing. Putting a baked good in your stomach without paying is stealing. Walking out the door early on a night when it was obviously slow enough that the shop should have been closed anyway (if you can sucessfully close a shop completely while it is still open that's a sign of a wasted hour of operation) is not the same. I agree that it's a serious issue, that trust is now a big problem and that some customers may be upset, but it is not stealing and I repeat there is NEVER a reason to fire in front of other people.
If I ever caught one of my managers firing somone in front of or in earshot of another employee, they would be fired themselves.
-bry
Jason Shipley said:Read your statement after your first year my friend and you'll be singing a different tune.
Fire her, do it in front of other employees and emphasize that closing early is the same thing as stealing she stole your opportunity to do business and may have cost you customers.
Jared Rutledge said:i'm completely against the whole "watching your baristas with a camera" thing. that's way too big-brother for me. if you aren't hiring people you can trust, don't hire them in the first place.
I guess what I'm saying (which, really, I already said well enough that I should probably just leave it alone, but when have I ever done that before) is that if we can't predict the future, I feel like we are handing out a guilty verdict without evidence which is not fair to the employee.
Closing up shop early certainly could have cost Stephanie nearly $100 or so (in my random figure estimation), but it also could have saved her money if no one would have come in.
To have to tell the employee as you were firing them (because in my handbook stealing is one and done, no warnings) that, "It's like stealing. We can't be sure that we missed out on customers, but we'll just never know and that isn't okay, so you're out" would just seem like a week argument to me.
Eh, I dunno... maybe it's just me.
-bry
This is not theft.
It is almost always a bad idea, and may well cause significant loss of future income, but it is not theft. Theft is consciously taking money out of your till and pocketing it. Closing early is at worst laziness and negligence. Lets keep some perspective, eh?
Don't believe me? Call the police and try to have your employee charged with closing early.
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