I just want honest opinions and any debates on this type of situation if it ever so happens to arise in any work place. I also thought it would be a bit safer to post this thread here instead of CS, so yeah.
In this situation say that you, the reader, are a store manager of any type of retail store [ doesn't really matter what type of store it, be it fast food, department store, or any place has has a register in public view ]. You are working over one particular weekend, it's a Sunday, and you're the opening manager on duty [ MOD to shorten it up for any later referrences in this thread ].
You find out from the closing manager that same morning that there's around $200 missing from one of the tills the previous day. You get information from other employees working the registers that day and more information from Saturday's closing MOD and find out that on the register in question, one of the employees had a customer reach into the open register to try and grab some money out of the till. This employee said that no money was taken out of the register by this customer and the register drawer was closed quickly. The till had not been used at any other time during the day and was closed down right after the first and only employee on the register was supposed to go home.
No other register was short/over by that much in the rest of the store, the safe and cash drawer[s] balance out correctly, and no one else was on the shortaged till. There was only one person on the register all day.
Now this situation gets a bit more complicated at this point. You, as SM, find out that the employee in question had NOT reported the incident to ANY MOD or anyone else at the time it had happened, the first anyone had heard of it was told to a Front-End Supervisor [ FES ] several hours after the attempted money grabbing incident happened. Saturday's closing MOD wasn't informed of the incident until the register was shut down for the day.
$200 is missing from a till that had been supposedly only touched by a single employee. This employee in question is female thats between the ages of 40 and 45, has a primary full-time job Monday-Friday, is married, has one child that is around ten years old, and works at this secondary job three nights a week that includes weekends. The employee has never had more then a few cents off from her till before, she is always on time, has been working in her secondary job for a year a half, and, when possible, will come in for extra night shifts. As far as anyone knows she has no previous records of being that much short in a till before and no known criminal history.
As Store Manager, you have the task of trying to proceed from this point. You have an employee that is missing a good deal of money from a till that she was on and had not told anyone of the attempted mony-grabbing incident until hours later. What would you do?
In this situation say that you, the reader, are a store manager of any type of retail store [ doesn't really matter what type of store it, be it fast food, department store, or any place has has a register in public view ]. You are working over one particular weekend, it's a Sunday, and you're the opening manager on duty [ MOD to shorten it up for any later referrences in this thread ].
You find out from the closing manager that same morning that there's around $200 missing from one of the tills the previous day. You get information from other employees working the registers that day and more information from Saturday's closing MOD and find out that on the register in question, one of the employees had a customer reach into the open register to try and grab some money out of the till. This employee said that no money was taken out of the register by this customer and the register drawer was closed quickly. The till had not been used at any other time during the day and was closed down right after the first and only employee on the register was supposed to go home.
No other register was short/over by that much in the rest of the store, the safe and cash drawer[s] balance out correctly, and no one else was on the shortaged till. There was only one person on the register all day.
Now this situation gets a bit more complicated at this point. You, as SM, find out that the employee in question had NOT reported the incident to ANY MOD or anyone else at the time it had happened, the first anyone had heard of it was told to a Front-End Supervisor [ FES ] several hours after the attempted money grabbing incident happened. Saturday's closing MOD wasn't informed of the incident until the register was shut down for the day.
$200 is missing from a till that had been supposedly only touched by a single employee. This employee in question is female thats between the ages of 40 and 45, has a primary full-time job Monday-Friday, is married, has one child that is around ten years old, and works at this secondary job three nights a week that includes weekends. The employee has never had more then a few cents off from her till before, she is always on time, has been working in her secondary job for a year a half, and, when possible, will come in for extra night shifts. As far as anyone knows she has no previous records of being that much short in a till before and no known criminal history.
As Store Manager, you have the task of trying to proceed from this point. You have an employee that is missing a good deal of money from a till that she was on and had not told anyone of the attempted mony-grabbing incident until hours later. What would you do?
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