I am starting a job in a few days, and I might have to be a cashier and am really nervous because I am bad at counting change. Any help or suggestions?Cashier at Little Ceasers Pizza help?
The stickyfingeredurchin is correct about leaving big bills aside until the change has been counted out.
I hated counting change back, but I just started with the biggest bills and worked my way down to the pennies. It gets easier with time and practice.Cashier at Little Ceasers Pizza help?
If they pay with a big note, leave it on top of the cash drawer untill just before you give them their change so you don't forget if it's a 10 or a 20 etc.if you just stuff it in the drawer you could get distracted and forget.Cashier at Little Ceasers Pizza help?
Go back to school. Haha j/k. When someone gives you money it should say EXACTLY how much to give back.Cashier at Little Ceasers Pizza help?
The first guy is right, don't put the large bill in the drawer until you give them back their change. Start with the bills first, like tens, then fives, then ones, and then quarters, dimes, nickels, pennies. When giving the change to the customer always give them the bills first and then the change. And just say "and here's eleven seventy - two." Don't say "here's eleven dollars and seventy - two cents." It gets easier the more you do it and the more you say and pretty soon it won't take much thought and you'll get used to the prices and you'll see that most of the times things cost the same so if someone gives you a twenty or a ten you'll already know the change because you'll know that a large pizza and a two liter costs so much money and you'll already know the change for it. Just make sure you don't go over or under what your drawer is allowed to have at the end of your shift. Where I worked at a gift and card shop it was $5 but when I worked at Pizza Hut it was like 50 cents, we couldn't have more than or less than 50 cents extra.
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