- Joined
- Nov 25, 2004
- Messages
- 548
- Reaction score
- 1
...the gift card is a bastardization of retail pharmacy? Something that happened at work yesterday absolutely disgusted me.
Discuss.
Discuss.
All4MyDaughter said:What happened?
OSURxgirl said:If you are talking about chains giving patients free store gift cards in exchange for bringing in their new or transferred prescription to your pharmacy to be filled, I couldn't agree more. We have some people who transfer so much they honestly do not know where their prescriptions are anymore.
I work at a pharmacy that does this, and I hate it. All these other patient safety measures and technology have been introduced into this pharmacy, but the company is undermining it by publishing "free gift card" coupons in its publication that encourage polypharmacy....aarrgh.
Plus when we run these coupons we have people filling prescriptions from months ago that they don't even need just because their copay is 5 bucks and the free gift card is 10 bucks. Do the math. Sigh.
crossjb said:b*rizzle, that's horrible but don't take it personally.
We live in a litigious society where appeasing customers -- honest or not -- is priority #1.
b*rizzle said:In the end, what upset me the most was not that a customer was dishonest and was rewarded for it, but that the corporate mentality is that it's better to keep a few dishonest customers (who will probably "card hop" anyway) than to stand up for the integrity of its employees. It doesn't seem to do much for their public image, either. They make it seem like they employ a bunch of greedy a-holes that are just out to cheat the customer.
bananaface said:Your pharmacist/manager should have backed you up if you said you didn't take the coupon. If they won't do this, you are working in the wrong place.
kkelloww said:I would like to provide input from the other side. I was a District Manager in fast food for 15+ years. I had many instances of a valued employee saying one thing and a customer saying another. I always sided with the customer. Period.
Understand that this is not a situation of right or wrong. I always believed my employees were telling the truth, but this is business and the customers write our checks. Give the dishonest customer the $25. That money is irrelevant to a billion dollar corporation and there is the possibility in the future that the customer might actually buy something.
Besides, if I didn't take care of the customer my boss would or his boss would, etc. Sooner or later somebody would give them the gift card. IMO, the tech should have done it.
meg said:Heh. When I worked at Red Robin and we had a dishonest customer making a scene our manager would tell them not to come back... ever.
Man I liked that place.
Letting the customer lie and benefit from that lie in this case sends the message that the technician is lying and therefore not trustworthy. If an employee cannot be trusted, they do not belong behind a pharmacy counter. Pharmacy is different than food service. In our profession it is important to maintain our professional integrity. In this case, siding with the customer would be unprofessional.kkelloww said:I would like to provide input from the other side. I was a District Manager in fast food for 15+ years. I had many instances of a valued employee saying one thing and a customer saying another. I always sided with the customer. Period.
Understand that this is not a situation of right or wrong. I always believed my employees were telling the truth, but this is business and the customers write our checks. Give the dishonest customer the $25. That money is irrelevant to a billion dollar corporation and there is the possibility in the future that the customer might actually buy something.
Besides, if I didn't take care of the customer my boss would or his boss would, etc. Sooner or later somebody would give them the gift card. IMO, the tech should have done it.
bananaface said:Letting the customer lie and benefit from that lie in this case sends the message that the technician is lying and therefore not trustworthy. If an employee cannot be trusted, they do not belong behind a pharmacy counter. Pharmacy is different than food service. In our profession it is important to maintain our professional integrity. In this case, siding with the customer would be unprofessional.