this post was submitted on 21 Oct 2024
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[–] cordlesslamp 4 points 56 minutes ago

A recurring customer having habit of delaying to pay the bar tab because he's "too drunk". Usually took him weeks and multiple asking before he paid his bar tab in full.

This time he bought a bunch of pretty girls lots of expensive drinks, at the end of the night he is so drunk that nobody can reason with him to pay (but we suspect he's faking it as always). So we put his bill in his tab and let him go.

The next day he act like he doesn't remember anything and refused to acknowledge that he was buying anyone else drinks even with the CCTV footage of him on that night (and of course refused to pay his tab).

This went on for 2 weeks before the head bartender get into a fight with him. The customer ended up with a black eye and got banned from the bar. He doesn't press any charges.

I couldn't remember his bill total in the end, but it was close to 2k.

Wrked in a bakery with a café part to sit at. the store was in the same building as a convinence store. Every now and then a middle aged woman with smeared make up (think simpsons make up shotgun) went to the convience store the came to us, to first use the toilett and the sit down and "drink" a coffee. at least that is her story. as a worker we all knew that she never drank the coffee, but instead drank those mini alkohol bottles in the toilett ( as if we didnt see the bottles in the trash). she usually gets punch drunk till closing time. but we let her since she obviously felt ashamed about drinking, and seemed to have a hard life as is. but as she got comfortable with the workers, because we were nice to her, she started to belive/act as if she worked there too when drunk. repositioning all the tables and chairs. takeing the toilett keys home and never return them, try to make us hang out inside the store after closing. and if you ever tried to reason with a drunk person you know there is no way. after we needed to call the police the second time just to able to end out shift, and close down, she got banned.

in a way i feel sorry for her, since she was never seen in the store again. these people make me want to be able to help. but i am not able and i get paid minimum wage to keep up with it :/

[–] shai_hulud@lemmy.world 9 points 4 hours ago

I worked at a headshop in the late 80's amd early 90's.

We sold nitrous oxide for whipped cream (and to inhale). It's a very short lived high...mebbe a couple of minutes for the average person. It came in 24 packs of nitrous cylinders for about $50 US.

There was a guy who would come in when we opened at 10 AM and buy a case (144 cylinders) for personal use, and be back in the store before 6 PM to buy another case. Eventually over a few weeks he was buying multiple cases every time. His lips started cracking and bleeding from the cold, and then turning blue. We found out he was going to our other stores in the area and finally banned him.

We had people buy crack pipes and other smoking paraphernalia too, but that one haunted me. I had never seen someone fall that hard into addiction, or that fast. He was obviously miserable and could not stop.

[–] hactar42@lemmy.world 7 points 6 hours ago

I work as an IT consultant so I don't have to deal with any of the crap people in traditional customer roles do, but there have been a couple of customers we've agreed to mutual part ways with. Mostly due to them having unrealistic expectations.

One client expected us to basically be their 24/7 help desk, but only paid for like 20-30 hours a month. He wanted someone in their office from 8-5. He was like they can work on other stuff, but I need them to be here in case someone needs them. We were not an MSP. We didn't do help desk. The original contract was to help with a date center migration with flex hours to support after the move. We did project work with mainly senior consultants. This was a company with 1 IT guy and maybe 100 employees. As soon as the contract came up for renewal we were done.

[–] sevan@lemmy.ca 18 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

At my old company we would ban customers that were repeatedly abusive to customer service agents. Agents had the right to hang up on customers that were being abusive and if the same customer kept getting reported, eventually they would receive a letter from the legal department telling them to stop. If it continued, they would get banned.

I remember one guy was so bad that a director got the phone system to automatically route any calls from him to his mobile line and put him in his phone book. He would very politely greet him by name as soon as he picked up the call to make it clear that he wasn't ever going to get through to anyone else.

Great move by the director

[–] Kolanaki@yiffit.net 15 points 11 hours ago

I can't say exactly why, other than maybe causing drama or simply because nobody wanted to enable her addiction, but where I used to live there was a well known alcoholic homeless lady that was banned from every single store in town that sold alcohol. I always felt bad for her, being the very epitome of the stereotype of homelessness. Where you couldn't just give her money, because she would just drown herself in booze. Made running into her awkward because she was, at least to me, nice as hell but fuck if I knew how to actually help.

[–] some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org 15 points 12 hours ago

Woman was clearly mentally ill, extremely belligerent, seeking tech support. At some point, store manager was saying something about trying to accommodate her and she said, “You don’t get points for trying.” Store manager turned around and said, “Call security.”

Phone support later called us to arrange help and I explained that she wasn’t welcome and would have to go to a different store. Fortunately, there are many where I live and she didn’t have to travel very far if she accepted that answer (dunno the outcome).

guy was making threats, demanding to know the full name and address of anyone he talked to, etc. this was a call center job that tolerated verbal abuse of staff and expected us to take it with a smile. it was company policy to not punish customers for verbal abuse and we were not allowed to shut it down. this guy was apparently considered enough of a problem that he was banned from all stores owned by corporate, which I had never seen happen before or after.

[–] shinigamiookamiryuu@lemm.ee 20 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

He made threats at gunpoint.

[–] CluckN@lemmy.world 15 points 13 hours ago

Maybe don’t point a gun at them and they’ll be less agressive.

[–] Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 60 points 19 hours ago (2 children)

It was the rare occasion of someone being so stupid that they accidentally started their own cell phone scam.

This guy could not decide on what phone he wanted. He had two plans with all of his relatives on them. Whenever someone became eligible for a contract renewal, he would buy himself a phone and give his old one to one of those relatives. He also was very picky, and would try to return his phones for dumb reasons like "I haven't turned my phone off since I got it, and now it's running slow."

He would hop between different stores and customer service to get warranty replacements for his older phones, and exchanges for new ones, and because he was passing phones between accounts, a phone that he had for a year, would look like it was just bought a few days ago, so he would be offered a brand new one, or the option to try another model. When he came into my store complaining, something didn't seem right, so I spent an entire day researching where all his phones came from and where they went. I discovered that for years, he was costing us thousands of dollars burning through brand new phones and requesting credits for his inconvenience.

The last time we told him that we couldn't help him, he said he'd never come back, we thanked him.

[–] sevan@lemmy.ca 10 points 10 hours ago

At a prior employer, we noticed that there were many customers getting essentially free service ($100-200 per month) by calling customer service hundreds of times per month and asking for credits for all sorts of things. They were generally very nice and just picked up $5-10 credits until their service was free. Beyond the free service, they were costing the company the expense of the service calls.

We started routing all of them to a small group of agents and flagged the accounts so the agents would deny them pretty much every time. It was kind of funny because we didn't tell them anything changed, but you could see that some of them noticed because they started asking which call center they were talking to. They would immediately hang up and call back over and over and just keep going back to the same place. Eventually most of them gave up.

Note: nobody here would/should feel sorry for this particular company, but I still thought it was funny to see these scammers get mad that we caught on to the scam.

[–] OwenEverbinde@lemmy.myserv.one 24 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

I'm really glad someone out there is costing these companies money.

So many times it's AT&T and Verizon selling you an "insurance plan" for your phone that still requires you to pay $99-$300 if you actuality need your phone replaced. That's objectively worse than no "insurance".

Maybe I'd feel differently about it if I had that pro-capitalist "your loss is my gain" mindset... and also owned shares in AT&T. But being a human capable of empathy and humanity, AT&T and Verizon just disgust me.

[–] Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 17 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

You're not wrong. There were times I felt pretty dirty doing what they asked of me in order to close more sales. I worked with some decent people who cared more about the customer's needs, and some shitty ones that cared more about that commission check.

This guy was a real asshole on top of it all, and he was trying to pull it off on my watch, so, no regrets on shutting him down. I'm sure he's still pulling similar shit at other stores.

[–] OwenEverbinde@lemmy.myserv.one 2 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago) (1 children)

There were times I felt pretty dirty doing what they asked of me in order to close more sales.

So many companies! Back when I worked Arclight, it was a small bit of subtle manipulation: "would you like to turn that to a large for only an additional 40¢?"

I hated it, because I knew the purpose was to pressure people into buying more than they wanted.

Thankfully, the place was run like the Trump Administration, so no one really knew how consistently the company's stupid mind games were being deployed against our guests.

But anyways! Yeah. Feeling dirty is pretty reasonable. The things we do for rent money...

This guy was a real asshole on top of it all, and he was trying to pull it off on my watch, so, no regrets on shutting him down.

What's with that, anyways? Why aren't real-life thieves more like charismatic, charitable Robin Hoods?

[–] Nibodhika@lemmy.world 2 points 1 hour ago

Because the charismatic ones you are less likely to notice. Also most people who work for Evil Corp know their company is evil, so if a polite charismatic person is taking advantage of the system you're less likely to go dig out what they're doing.

For example if in OPs story the guy had been polite and charming, he would have never gone into his account to check what was up, because it would be just a nice customer being nice. What's to tell you that there weren't other dozen like that that flew right under OPs nose, just because they never awoke suspicion.

[–] Dran_Arcana@lemmy.world 44 points 18 hours ago (2 children)

Hundreds of gigabytes of horse porn, right in a folder on his desktop called "horse". The thumbnail of the folder made it incredibly clear what the folder was and what was in it, which was made extra clear by the max zoom his desktop icons were set to. (it was like, no joke, almost 1/10th the screen).

Fun fact: that was the day I learned my state doesn't have mandatory reporting laws for animal abuse, only csam.

[–] shinigamiookamiryuu@lemm.ee 13 points 16 hours ago (2 children)

That moment when you take the advice to ride a horse the wrong way.

[–] GreenKnight23@lemmy.world 4 points 6 hours ago

you don't ride horses like that.

they ride you.

[–] Dran_Arcana@lemmy.world 11 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago) (1 children)

bill helped his brother jack, off a horse

bill helped his brother jack off a horse

Commas are important, who knew? If only he had paid attention in English class!

[–] corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 hours ago

Comma before 'Jack' too.

[–] NutinButNet@hilariouschaos.com 8 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

This was on a company computer? It was humans + horses? I initially thought this was horses + horses until your last paragraph. Just a weird dude who really enjoyed watching horses get it on with each other lol

[–] Dran_Arcana@lemmy.world 6 points 11 hours ago

Personal computer taken to a company help desk, humans + horses

[–] spankmonkey@lemmy.world 76 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

Last place I worked at that actually banned customers was at a pizza place in a college town that did a lot of late night deliveries back when restaurants delivered their own food.

Bounced checks, being rude to employees, not being there when the delivery driver arrived were the biggest ones. After hitting a critical mass on fraternities we started banning the whole fraternity if we ran into issues and they sorted that out fast by getting their members to behave better and other people would volunteer to buy the pizza if the person fell asleep or couldn't be found. Pretty much everyone who screwed up was given another chance by paying off their balance and the bounced check fee or apologizing to staff.

There was also one guy who never tipped and kept calling and saying is pizza was wrong so the owner made his pizza one night and delivered it himself, then banned the guy when he called and lied about the delivery. He was banned for life along with the people who were racist/sexist. The owner was a jerk when it came to his ridiculous capitalist expectations, but he did defend his employees from external assholes.

[–] Passerby6497@lemmy.world 55 points 20 hours ago (1 children)

The owner was a jerk when it came to his ridiculous capitalist expectations, but he did defend his employees from external assholes.

The number of bosses I've had that were massive assholes, but had the mentality of "only I get to abuse these employees" is amusingly high.

[–] VindictiveJudge@lemmy.world 17 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

I think some of them just lack people skills. I had this one manager that nobody liked and was rather prickly, but she very quickly kicked out an asshole customer and then immediately checked to make sure I was okay after. She cared, and actually did more for us than most of the rest of management, but her people skills were terrible.

[–] Empricorn@feddit.nl 1 points 31 minutes ago

Legit props to them, but my unpopular opinion: these people shouldn't be bosses. Like, at all. At my job, myself and my coworkers do all the work compared to my direct supervisors. When my previous boss got sick for an extended time, the work still got done. When they retired, and a search process was in progress to find a replacement, the work was still done. All of it.

Management is about dealing with people and unexpected situations. If you can't do that, why the fuck are you paid more than the people that put in the time and are literally solving the problems all day, every day!?

[–] Nemo@slrpnk.net 34 points 20 hours ago

He touched a waitress in a way she didn't want to be touched.

[–] witty_username@feddit.nl 29 points 20 hours ago

Worked in a little delicatessen shop for a couple of years. The local drunkard got banned because they got cross with the owner of the neighboring tobacco shop (this was back when those were still common) and did a protest pee inside that shop.
Word spread fast among the shop owners in that area and the drunkard was banned from all of them.
Once, they wouldn't leave when I asked so I went up to them and showed them out. On the doorstep they turned around, looked me in the eyes and pleaded that it was their birthday. Pretty sad. Probably a lie but pretty sad nonetheless.

[–] ContrarianTrail@lemm.ee 49 points 21 hours ago (2 children)

One of my previous customers was a mentally ill and delusional elderly lady. She called me about a non-existent plumbing problem in her house, supposedly caused by her neighbor, who she claimed breaks in and messes with her stuff. According to her, everything wrong inside or outside her house was because of her neighbor's sabotage. She even mentioned plans to kill him. Not exactly the kind of person you want to turn your back on, but also someone who would have been extremely easy to take advantage of. I basically talked her out of redoing the entire plumbing in her bathroom, and we finally settled on me re-aligning her kitchen cabinet doors that - yes, you guessed it - her neighbor had 'messed with.'

It was quite sad, really. She asked me twice whether I thought her stories sounded crazy, so she was clearly somewhat aware of her condition. I just didn’t know how to deal with someone like that. I refuse to lie, but I also don’t want to tell her she’s losing it. I don’t mind senile people, but I didn’t feel safe around her.

[–] neidu2@feddit.nl 28 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

My brother in law is like that. He's been diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, and his drivers license has been suspended after an unrelated episode 10 years ago. He's harmless, and perfectly capable of getting it unsuspended if he puts in some effort, but he can't because:

  • His doctor is out to sabotage his life
  • Someone is tapping into his phone
  • This lady on the other side of town is stealing his mail
  • His PC had been bugged

....allegedly.

He sometimes takes his meds, but it's rare. Those are the days when he's out and about and reasonably normal.

[–] HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com 11 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

how old is he? it tends to get better the older the person gets. (quick edit as I just realized what people will think. it will not go away. I mean get better in that they tend to get better about taking medication and are less likely to go off and do the really nutty stuff)

[–] neidu2@feddit.nl 3 points 15 hours ago (1 children)
[–] HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com 1 points 8 hours ago

unfortunately not going to necessarily be much better than. 20's and 30's are the real scary scene with that disease.

[–] givesomefucks@lemmy.world 23 points 21 hours ago

She asked me twice whether I thought her stories sounded crazy, so she was clearly somewhat aware of her condition.

Not necessarily.

It's very likely everyone in her life were telling her it's all in her head, she gets mad and says she's not crazy...

Then calls random repair people, tells them the story. And asks "am I crazy" because most businesses would never say that to a client. She was looking for validation, the same way people go fishing for compliments saying stuff like "I'm so bad at my job, I don't know how you all put up with me". Even if it's true and they're dead weight, most people will be polite and reassure them.

I just didn’t know how to deal with someone like that

Tell them that they should relay their concerns to a medical professional if they're concerned.

If they're seriously doubting their delusions, they'll go get help and thank you for the advice.

More likely they'll realize you're not giving them what they want, get mad, and often blame you for being involved in the conspiracy.

But there's a chance they actually get help.

Any kind of acceptance of their beliefs, no matter how tentative, reinforces it and drives them further into the delusion. Depending on how involved her family is, she might have called them immediately, and after cussing them out said even the plumber agrees she's not crazy.

[–] That_Devil_Girl@lemmy.ml 37 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 21 hours ago) (1 children)

Freelance welding on my days off. A customer wanted to hire me to make a fence gate, but he didn't have solid blueprints. He had a crude sketch drawn on a scrap of paper, but no specific measurements. I offered to come by and take measurements, but he didn't even have a fence base to take measurements off of.

Essentially, he wanted me to construct a property fence gate of unspecified size and install it to a nonexistent perimeter fence. I told him these issues, but he didn't care. He wanted me to build this fence gate, but he didn't know what size, what materials, and where to install it.

I fired him. A welder's reputation means everything. I'm not about to make a thing for a customer who doesn't actually know what he wants. I did him a favor by walking away and not taking his money.

[–] Agent641@lemmy.world 18 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

I would have made a gate per the drawing.

To 1:1 scale.

[–] Passerby6497@lemmy.world 25 points 20 hours ago (1 children)

The spite sounds fun, but giving the customer what they ask for when they want a shit job is still going to reflect badly on you. A lot of the time, potentially problematic customers should just be directed elsewhere to make their data someone else's problem.

Whether or not you gave them exactly what they asked for, if they don't have a realistic vision/hardware/site you're setting them up for a bad time, and they'll bitch about you because you couldn't translate the ephemeral concept of an idea that never left their skull into something that looked good or they wanted, and they'll be sure to tell everyone who made the mess they're unhappy with.

[–] Agent641@lemmy.world 13 points 19 hours ago

No tiny gate for you, then!

[–] Vanth@reddthat.com 30 points 22 hours ago

He was creepin' on other customers. When he was asked to tone it down, especially when it came to talking to minors, he got mad and started yelling and shoving chairs.