Are You Being Served?
By Kamal
Sunavala
This is an
open letter to Phillip Clarke, the head of
Tesco stores in the Czech Republic. And if he has fled
these shores, then to the person responsible in his place.
Dear Mr. Clarke, when we heard that
Tesco was taking over Carrefour in this country, we, the
lovers of British brands were more than happy that there
would be more opportunities to feel at home, shopping for
custard and chicken tikka masala in a glass jar. But the
past weekend, we were appalled to find that not only was
the Tesco at U Slavie, poorly and shabbily stocked but
it was also completely under-staffed with extremely rude
people wearing your staff colours.
Since we were with people from other
countries, keen to prove to them, why the British store
was a better idea than the French one it took over, we
were extremely put out when one of our companions pointed
out that it was strange for Tesco to have won the Retailer
of the Year Contest in 2006. For what? Rudeness? Ugly shelves
in disarray? Under-stocking?
Let us give you an example. We were
hunting for birthday candles and came upon the section
upstairs which had half the items missing on the shelf,
no labeling and all of two candles. Great if you’re 6 or
4 years old but what should a 24-year old do? But of course,
we looked around for a friendly face in blue and red. We
found one that didn’t even let us finish our sentence;
he cut us off extremely rudely, in Czech, saying he worked
downstairs and didn’t even break his stride while telling
us this. We were standing there shocked. Our non-English
friend raised an eyebrow and said, “So much for the British
culture of politesse.”
We tried to explain it as a one off
incident, even blaming the Czechs en masse as a rude people
and tried our luck again. We thought it would be better
to go downstairs and talk to the lady who sat at the service
desk to deal with tax refunds for foreigners. We asked
her if she could help us. She refused. Point blank. We
tried again, asking her politely if she spoke a little
English. She said no. Obviously she understood what we
had asked her but simply said no and turned her face away
and started chatting with another lady.
We walked around the store thrice.
There were a total of two salespeople walking the floors,
one being the extremely rude punk from upstairs who had
floated to his post downstairs and one lady who was arranging
milk cartons. Finally, we abandoned the cake we had bought
since we couldn’t get candles or help.
Silently, we stood in the billing
line. The lady at the checkout counter scowled at us because
we hadn’t weighed two of the vegetables. We were tempted
to explain to her that usually at Tesco there was a person
who helped to weigh vegetables and stick the price on them
but there was no one here. Instead, being thoroughly fed
up with the unpardonable unhelpfulness and rudeness, we
decided to give her a taste of her own medicine and scowled
right back.
As we were going home, we were still
wondering how to salvage the English culture of good manners.
How could we explain that in England, people still came
up and asked- are you being served? That Tesco was meant
to be a mark of home comfort in a foreign land? That its
international service standards were meant to be everywhere
and not just in England? That it didn’t usually hire staff
who looked more like they were ready to verbally stick
their middle finger at you than help you to shop?
Upon reaching home we realized that
we had forgotten to buy coffee and since we buy only fair
trade coffee, we would need to ask if Tesco carried it
and did we really want to go back to that unpleasant place
again? We decided finally that Marks and Spencer would
be a better choice. People would rather shell out a few
crowns more for someone to come up to them with a smile
and help.
We, Mr. Clarke, were most definitely not being served.
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