“I am so Embarrassed!” - How Personal and Empathic Embarrassment in Personal Product Purchasing Impacts Sales Clerk Choice

Author(s):  
Ceren Ekebas ◽  
Aaron Arndt
Keyword(s):  
Tibuana ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (01) ◽  
pp. 61-64
Author(s):  
Gempur Santoso ◽  
Prihono

Work fatigue is a health and safety problemthat can be a trigger factor for accidents atwork. The purpose of this study was to analyzethe standing work position with work fatigueon the sales clerk (shop assistant) in the TradeShop, Sidoarjo. This type of research usesanalytic observational research, with a samplesize of 21 employees, with the technique oftaking through questionnaires and interviewsfor each employee in September, 2020. Thelevel of fatigue is analyzed using a percentage,with categories: 1 - ≤ 25 (Not Tired) , > 25 - ≤50 (Less Tired),> 50 - ≤ 75 (Tired), and> 75 - ≤ 100 (Very Tired). The results showed thatthe level of fatigue felt by a sales assistant(shop assistant) with a standing work positionwas in the "Less Tired" category as many as 15employees with a percentage of 71%, "A littletired" as many as 6 employees with apercentage of 29%, while for the category"Tired. and Very Tired "not felt by allemployees, so the percentage is 0%.Suggestion, for standing position salesassistant, who is still experiencing a bit offatigue need a brief relaxation, by sitting for awhile or leaning back for a while


1980 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 12-14
Author(s):  
James E. Riley
Keyword(s):  

Recently I was patiently waiting for a clerk to help me in a jewelry store. The clerk, who was occupied by a couple who were buying a watch for a child, was doing his best to convince the man and his wife that a digital watch would be their best choice. “Just think,” he said, “how much easier it will be for teachers to teach the telling of time when only digital watches are sold.” How many teachers, like the sales clerk, believe that learning about time means only learning the “telling” of time?


Author(s):  
Frank McCourt

I went to O'Mahony's Bookshop to buy the first book in my life, the one I brought to America in the suitcase. It was The Works of William Shakespeare: Gathered into One Volume, published by the Shakespeare Head Press, Oldhams Press Ltd. and Basil Blackwood, MCMXLVII. Here it is, cover crumbling, separating from the book, hanging on through the kindness of tape. A well-thumbed book, well marked. There are passages underlined that once meant something to me though I look at them now and hardly know why. Along the margins notes, remarks, appreciative comments, congratulations to Shakespeare on his genius, exclamation marks indicating my appreciation and befuddlement. Inside the cover I wrote, 'Oh, that this too, too solid flesh, etc.' It proves I was a gloomy youth. When I was thirteen/fourteen I listened to Shakespeare plays on the radio of Mrs. Purcell, the blind woman next door. She told me Sheakespeare was an Irishman ashamed of what he came from. A fuse blew the night we listened to Julius Caesar and I was so eager to find out what happened to Brutus and Mark Antony I went to O'Mahony's Bookshop to get the rest of the story. A sales clerk ...


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