Yes they count.
You are looking in the wrong spot , you will find it in store director page , set on time , expand to company space /sidecaps .You sure about that? I'm looking through greenfield planogram set on time workgroup/depts. and temp sidecaps seems to be missing in incremental space. I only see the std/perm sidecaps.
They do count if it’s still on the workload on the for set workload . The pog would have to be removed from ser workload to not count .Our district hasn't allowed us to put up cardboard sidecaps for at least a year and sometimes we don't receive it. Does it count on set on time report? I know flex POGs no longer count anymore, just wondering...
See, this is what I don’t understand. Corporate makes these decisions and sends these things out. So how is it right that districts get to decide if they “want” to put them out or not and causing stores more work. Because yes, it takes a lot more work to take a completely full board game shipper to the floor, stock the home and make an endcap or backstock all the remainder and tear apart cardboard shipper for the baler, then it does to take it to the floor, slap some new labels on it and let it sell.Our district doesn’t allow cardboard shippers either but we set them on the sidecap fixture
You kidding right? Of course they do .
They do count if it’s still on the workload on the for set workload . The pog would have to be removed from ser workload to not count .
You are looking in the wrong spot , you will find it in store director page , set on time , expand to company space /sidecaps .
Maybe I’m miss understanding over here like SigningLady said 102 is sidecaps and temp is 107 .
107 temp is the ampg and cb and if you are asking if they count they sure do .
But they do show in the set workload correct? And that counts
IDK in my experience (especially in toys where you have kids running around knocking things over all the time) the cardboard sidecaps normally end up falling off anyway. Once that happens, if it's dually located product I tell my DBO to push to home, set capacities to zero and trash the sidecap. If its only location is the sidecap I have them put it on a permanent sidecap fixture.See, this is what I don’t understand. Corporate makes these decisions and sends these things out. So how is it right that districts get to decide if they “want” to put them out or not and causing stores more work. Because yes, it takes a lot more work to take a completely full board game shipper to the floor, stock the home and make an endcap or backstock all the remainder and tear apart cardboard shipper for the baler, then it does to take it to the floor, slap some new labels on it and let it sell.
We’ve also had upset vendors because their company pays for the display and we’ve destroyed it because our boss doesn’t like cardboard shippers on the floor.
So Target- either tell the districts to leave it alone and do what is expected or stop wasting money and even sending them. This is just stupid.
Right, but sounds like you are at least putting them up to begin with. Once they start to fall apart or sell down is a different matter. What I’m referring to is those districts that say you can’t put any out at all when the company clearly wants them.IDK in my experience (especially in toys where you have kids running around knocking things over all the time) the cardboard sidecaps normally end up falling off anyway. Once that happens, if it's dually located product I tell my DBO to push to home, set capacities to zero and trash the sidecap. If its only location is the sidecap I have them put it on a permanent sidecap fixture.