Meijer Case Study

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Meijer Management Management at Meijer is its own special group, and there are a lot of subgroups with the big group. First shift managers are relaxed and have less stress than most of the rest of us. Most everything is stocked and there is less customers to deal with. Second shift managers have more stress than first shift because they have to deal with the busiest time of the day. People might think that third shift managers would have the least amount of stress because we do not have to deal with many customers but they would be wrong. Third shift has the most stress because we have the most to do, stocking as many as 5,000 cases of product. But as the stress level goes up the closer we became. The three of us on third shift became so close that no matter what was happening we always stuck together and if one of …show more content…

The few times that I have gotten to talk to old coworkers, management and non management they have told me that the store is running smoothly with the changes even though the new store director was not hired from a previous spot in Meijer and he needs to learn some of our different ways of doing things. I have shopped there a few times since the new store director took over. And from a customer standpoint, I have not seen any real difference in the overall store performance other than the sale displays look like they are getting out on the sales floor better and towards the end of the week the new grocery managers are getting the product to the shelves making more sales. Also, I noticed not all the employees are wearing the same color shirt which means that they are getting help from other stores which is both a good and a bad thing. Bad that they still do not seem to have enough employees to run this store, but it’s good that managers and the store director finally understand that the store is understaffed and are doing something about

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