Russell Williams
Well-Known Member
Daily Pharmacy Activism
Yesterday I was in a grocery store that had a pharmacy section. As I passed through the delicatessen section I saw three people in suits sitting at a table and working on paperwork. I immediately realized that this presented a potential activism possibility. I went to the pharmacy section of the grocery store and looked at the chairs. Both of them were armless.
I then went back to where the three people in suits were sitting and asked them if any of them worked for the particular grocery store I was in or if they were just three business people having a leisurely breakfast in the grocery store. One of them introduced herself as the regional manager for the pharmacy sections of this particular chain of grocery stores. I complimented her on having armless chairs. I explained why having some armless chairs is important to the large size people that the doctors say will be getting sick in large numbers. I told her that some pharmacies have no armless chairs and asked if she would mind if I encouraged the managers of such pharmacies to send the customers they cannot accommodate to branches of the grocery store I was in. The regional pharmacy manager said that she would be quite happy to receive additional customers. She then thanked me for telling her of this issue. She said that it was important to become aware of issues of customer service that she had not thought of before.
Yours truly,
Russell Williams -- activist
Yesterday I was in a grocery store that had a pharmacy section. As I passed through the delicatessen section I saw three people in suits sitting at a table and working on paperwork. I immediately realized that this presented a potential activism possibility. I went to the pharmacy section of the grocery store and looked at the chairs. Both of them were armless.
I then went back to where the three people in suits were sitting and asked them if any of them worked for the particular grocery store I was in or if they were just three business people having a leisurely breakfast in the grocery store. One of them introduced herself as the regional manager for the pharmacy sections of this particular chain of grocery stores. I complimented her on having armless chairs. I explained why having some armless chairs is important to the large size people that the doctors say will be getting sick in large numbers. I told her that some pharmacies have no armless chairs and asked if she would mind if I encouraged the managers of such pharmacies to send the customers they cannot accommodate to branches of the grocery store I was in. The regional pharmacy manager said that she would be quite happy to receive additional customers. She then thanked me for telling her of this issue. She said that it was important to become aware of issues of customer service that she had not thought of before.
Yours truly,
Russell Williams -- activist