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Topic History of: Charity begins at home
Max. showing the last 5 posts - (Last post first)
Author Message
In The Know (as always) honey!oh sugar sugar. wrote:
I have no idea. It really makes you wonder how some people live because it happened quite often.

Have you never seen Benefits Street ?

We once found a contraceptive cap at the bottom of a vase.
Perhaps it pinged across the room and landed there?
andrew Do people still use them caps ? I stick to Durex.
honey!oh sugar sugar. andrew wrote:
honey!oh sugar sugar. wrote:
A few years ago I volunteered in a charity shop ( with my children so they could have work experience)

I can see why the managers think that pricing high brings in most money but the opposite happens.
Selling high street stuff dirt cheap and "accidentally on purpose" underpricing Johnny walker jugs is what brings in the cash because people come back to search for more bargains.

Revamping as high class boutiques works well in a few places,
(I recommend Alderly Edge. Not cheap but the very smartest brands)
but in the more normal areas people only go in them to snigger at the high prices.

Customers complain that the staff have first pick on the stuff.
well.... Considering some of them have to sort through donations of used condoms, tampons, dog dirt and colostomy bags (traumatised for life. Where's my compo? ) so what!
But I have never seen or heard of anyone stealing the donations or underpricing for themselves.
The system is usually that someone else has to price if you want to buy, and in practice most pay more out of guilt.


Mate of mine volunteered in a charity shop, he found dressing gown#s covered in shit and a pissed stained mattress protector. why would people put in used tampons and condoms in a charity donation ?


I have no idea. It really makes you wonder how some people live because it happened quite often.
We once found a contraceptive cap at the bottom of a vase.
Perhaps it pinged across the room and landed there?
andrew Pattaya wrote:
Tony May wrote:
I think the point that is getting missed here though people is that most charity shops are now struggling to get enough donations to keep shops going. People are 'making do and mend' more than before and websites like Music Magpie are offering people another option of how to offload unwanted stuff.

I do agree though that the image charity shops have is starting to sour because more and more are now stocking new goods, charging more and spending gross amounts on paying 'managers'.


Don't forget those annoying 'chuggers'


They should be outlawed, when they stop you ask for proof where my donation will go they can't answer it.
andrew honey!oh sugar sugar. wrote:
A few years ago I volunteered in a charity shop ( with my children so they could have work experience)

I can see why the managers think that pricing high brings in most money but the opposite happens.
Selling high street stuff dirt cheap and "accidentally on purpose" underpricing Johnny walker jugs is what brings in the cash because people come back to search for more bargains.

Revamping as high class boutiques works well in a few places,
(I recommend Alderly Edge. Not cheap but the very smartest brands)
but in the more normal areas people only go in them to snigger at the high prices.

Customers complain that the staff have first pick on the stuff.
well.... Considering some of them have to sort through donations of used condoms, tampons, dog dirt and colostomy bags (traumatised for life. Where's my compo? ) so what!
But I have never seen or heard of anyone stealing the donations or underpricing for themselves.
The system is usually that someone else has to price if you want to buy, and in practice most pay more out of guilt.


Mate of mine volunteered in a charity shop, he found dressing gown#s covered in shit and a pissed stained mattress protector. why would people put in used tampons and condoms in a charity donation ?