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The Real Reason Sam's Club Looks Over Your Receipt - YouTube
Channel: The List
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The stock at Sam's Club may change and move
around a lot, but there is one constant we
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can expect at the warehouse club, the "exit
greeter," a person who hovers near the door,
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waiting to check our receipts before we head
to our cars.
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You might think the men and women who say
goodbye are there because the store doesn't
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trust shoppers and is trying to prevent theft.
But at Sam's Club, that isn't exactly what
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exit greeters are doing when they ask you
to stop.
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Laura Ladd Poff, senior manager of corporate
communications for Sam's Club, explained to
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Cooking Light,
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"Having an exit greeter is a great opportunity
to have another chance to connect with the
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customer before they leave. It's an opportunity
to ask them if they found everything they
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were looking for, and if they have everything
they need."
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"Ooh, whose birthday is it?"
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"Check the price, Carmine. At 5 cents a cubic
inch, it's all our birthdays."
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According to one poster on Reddit, who claimed
to once hold the job of exit greeter at a
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big-box store, the receipt check at the doors
is not necessarily a loss prevention tactic,
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contrary to popular belief. They explained,
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"Trust me, we're not loss prevention, we have
loss prevention in the store and that's not
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us. We're literally just trying to make sure
our cashiers do the job right, and when we
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DO catch it, all the information gets stored...This
is not to benefit anyone but the member to
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improve the experience overall."
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The employee shed some more light on the process,
saying that the main thing the exit greeters
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are looking for is to make sure customers
aren't accidentally under or over-charged.
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They're not trying to catch intentional theft,
they have loss-prevention teams for that.
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As they put it,
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"We're not gonna catch EVERYTHING and that's
fine, we also don't want to keep you there
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all day long. Ideally the people at the register
are doing their jobs right, sadly that's not
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always the case. 99 percent of the time, it's
not due to theft."
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And, as the exit greeter pointed out, if a
shopper was really looking to steal something,
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he or she probably wouldn't just leave it
in plain sight in the cart.
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Another good reason for checking the receipt?
The Redditor explained that they're also checking
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to make sure members have received all the
goods they paid for, like gift cards.
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When purchasing gift cards at a big box store,
you often have to retrieve them from someone
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other than the cashier once you've paid, and
the exit greeters check your receipt in part
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to make sure you didn't forget. Nice of them,
right?
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According to Laura Poff with Sam's Club, the
exit checkers at Sam's Club might be able
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to fill you in on some inside scoop, too.
As she told Cooking Light,
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"Taking a moment to check the receipt also
offers us another opportunity to engage that
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member further. It's not uncommon for the
greeter to say, 'Hey! Swing back on Saturday
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for a special sale on these items.'"
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If online chatter about the subject is any
indication, the question on most shoppers'
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minds after "Why are you checking my receipt?"
tends to be "Is this practice actually legal?"
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According to reporting by Lawyers.com, it
is. While most stores would need to have some
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sort of reasonable suspicion of shoplifting
to actually stop a shopper on their way out
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the door, that's not the case with stores
like Costco and Sam's Club. As the website
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points out, stores that require a membership
to shop at tend to be able to enforce rules
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that other merchants wouldn't be able to.
In signing up for a membership at a store
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like Costco or Sam's Club, it's likely that
you're also signing a contract agreeing to
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submit to a quick check of your receipt on
the way out the door.
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So, the next time you're asked for your receipt
as you're pushing your cart out, put your
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mind at ease. No one suspects you're up to
no good. It's just part of the process, and
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even if it holds you up on the way out, don't
take your frustrations out on the employee.
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As the Redditor who provided insight into
the process put it,
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"Save your frustrations for a manager, not
the people at the door. They're literally
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doing their jobs."
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