Why retailersâ preconceptions are insulting to the customers
By Elliot Chan, Opinions Editor
Just browsing, Iâm always just browsingâat least I used to be. I tend to panic a little when a retail clerk pops out from behind a rack of clothes and inquires: âCan I help you look for anything?â Nope, just browsing. However, recently Iâve started making some bigger purchases, and Iâm not talking about televisions, hockey gear, or computer software. Iâm talking about appliances, furniture, and an engagement ring. Not exactly kidâs stuff, these are bona fide adult purchases. Itâs a next step understandably, and hey, Iâm proud to be making strides.
My problem is not with having to grow up and buy expensive things seldom advertised as âaction packed,â my problem is with the service I get upon buying them. Itâs subtle, but like all forms of discrimination, itâs apparent. I look younger than I am, Iâll admit itâand if I donât, people will insist that I do. Itâs a gift and a curse. Whenever a liquor store employee doesnât ask me for identification, I feel they should be fired. Yes, I look young and so in many adult situations, Iâm treated that way.
It doesnât matter how old I look, though. It doesnât matter how much money I may have. What matters is that I should feel welcomed and be kindly guided through the shopping or buying process without feeling like a kid taking food from the adultâs table.
Many retailers make status a commodity in their stores. If you are seen buying something there, you are of a higher class or tax bracket. When young people enter the store, they are perceived with suspicion. Itâs uncomfortable and thatâs probably why they do it. Capitalism has turned retailers into machines that only focus on those who have and ignore those who donât. And sometimes when those who do have look like those who donât, they experience a less than satisfactory customer service. Itâs as if a server at a restaurant only served those who tip well and disregarded those who donât. Thatâs kind of a shitty way to deal with customer serviceâas if itâs a commodity, sometimes with a monetary value.
To the people working in retail, I say this: donât ever assume that someone doesnât have money to buy your product. Donât ever make it sound like they need help paying for it. They might, but they might not. Your job is to facilitate a sale, not to make assumptions about their livelihood. While statistics and data on a given demographic are useful in determining marketing strategies, isolating or alienating outliersâdiscriminating against age and wealthâis not.