Occasionally, I like to add a bump of soda to my water at the fountain. Just enough to add flavor (and turn my water a light brown color). Could I get in trouble for that, you think?
I typically throw in a splash of Brisk. It just makes the water taste a bit like iced tea. That Brisk is strong.Technically, yes, but I doubt anyone would really bother.
That sounds disgusting though.
There's a TM at my store whom is a coupon person. She makes me nervous because she always brings in her coupons after the transaction, so they get processed as missed coupons. As far as I can tell, she's using legitimate coupons, and isn;t exploiting anything, but it still just makes me nervous. The computer will take any coupon in the missed coupon function, regardless of what was purchased. I think you can even do it multiple times in different stores if it's done on the same day. I'm not suggesting this TM is pulling some kind of scam...but it makes me paranoid that I'm being duped into something that can get me fired.
I make coffee at Starbucks for my plano team when we are overnight, could I get in trouble for this? I wonder because I was actually taught by the Starbucks TL for this reason, and was told that my STL said we could.
If I could, they mine as well fire me now.
Why is it fraud if they're legitimate coupons? I've had the cashier miss my coupons on multiple occasions and have had to go to GS to have them processed. Is it because they typically give cash back for them?Its Fraud, but it's the cashier's fault. This is largely why Target doesn't go after coupon scammers. Since the cashier is knowingly accepting the coupons, it technically falls on Target. Alert your AP team and partner with your ETL-GE.