M
Holland,#2UPDATE Employee
Fri, August 29, 2008
you know if a meijer employee got caught buying that item they would be fired. not ethical, not by the rules, not meijer. if you are one of those employees , meijer does not need you anyway. to many dishonest employees make meijer a bad place to work. make sure if you are a meijer employee you are above board. by the way the amount of sale items are not necessarily controlled by meijer. meijer might get 6, best buy might get 4, wal mart might get 7 . meijer does not control the shipments of electronics.
Freeze9549
Batavia,#3UPDATE EX-employee responds
Thu, July 26, 2007
First of all, I'm a former employee of Meijer who worked in one of their Illinois stores for over four years, with the last six months of that term working as the Inventory Analyst in the Media Department. I remember this particular sale very well and the nightmare that resulted from it. During the time of the sale, Meijer did not have a well established relationship with Apple resulting in us being "lower priority" than the national chains (Wal-Mart, Best Buy, etc.). These stores had the ability to stock 25-30 iPods at a time, where you would see about 5-10 at a typical Meijer. Once Meijer's national allotment was figured out, the store allotment was calculated. This number was based on POSITIVE sales only. For example: Store A and B both have 10 iPods to sell. Store A sells two iPods, while store B has their entire stock stolen (sounds impossible, but it happened on several occasions). Store A because they actually made a sale instead of a loss, will receive the replacement iPods before Store B does. Our store had to result to buying our stock from other retailers because of this system. Now regarding this particular sale, we had three of the iPods available (I made it a habit to inventory high-theft items on a DAILY basis even though it was never part of my job description). Of course they were sold in an instant, other employees were sent out to buy from other stores. They managed to buy an additional 14 or so iPods. Our store director extended the sale and started a waiting list, which was over 100 names long by the end of the day. There was no manufacturing problem, only a major supply issue. My only response is that they never should've had the sale in the first place if they knew they would never be able to fulfill a good amount of customers. But smaller, private chains manage to stay under the radar a lot better than the big boys like Wal-Mart.
Joe
Springfield,#4UPDATE Employee
Fri, February 09, 2007
Meijer has a very strict policy not allowing holding of merchindise for team members. And if any one is found molding merchandise is terminated or suspended. And I also know that on that specific deal that apple had a manufacturing problem with that item and had limited quanities avalable. Sorry for the incovience.