Subject: Re: The World of PPC, Part II
Author:
Posted on: 2013-12-14 14:37:00 UTC

I manage a drop-off store for a local dry cleaners. I don't do the actual cleaning; they tried to talk me into learning that and taking over one of the cleaning plants, but chemical fumes + contact lenses = problems*. Though, I've been in the plants enough that I can do very basic spotting.

For the most part, my job is basic customer service. I take the customer's clothes, check them for anything that will take extra care (or that we can't do at all), and write up the invoice. When the customer comes back in, I take payment and hand over the clothes.

I also do minor repair work, rather than send it out to our seamstress. I don't have a sewing machine here, but I'm pretty good at handsewing.

And of course, there's the usual manager-type stuff. Not hiring, that's run through the main office. But I order supplies and do the daily and weekly reports.

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* It turned out that the reason my eyes were burning every time I pulled a load out of the cleaning machine was the plant manager I was working with at the time was ripping off the company. He'd reopen the plant after we'd closed for the day, and use the equipment and solvents for his own dry cleaning business, pocketing all the cash. But to cover this up, he couldn't change the filters as often as he should have, meaning more chemical fumes in the air. I'm a little cautious about my eyesight, though, so I might have turned down plant manager training even if I'd been working with someone honest.

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