I’m not a security guard but I was always curious when I see these random armored trucks that pull up to a store. I got the general gist of why they came but from your experience, what are the signs that a store cannot manage the cash they make from transactions? Do you have any crazy experiences or stories?
u/Bubbly-Sentence-4931
This pillow was roughly $50 dollars. I knew I wasn’t getting anything spectacular but little did I know that the feathers would constantly come out and poke you. I tried putting multiple covers on to stop feeling them poke me but that wasn’t successful. I’m warning y’all not to buy this garbage.
I was led to this forum after reading reviews of the power broker. But I personally love biographies of business people and i would like to read another biography of business people who 1) exposed corruption, 2) had to make tons of trade offs to get somewhere or build something or 3) screwed people over to get where they wanted to go.
Hoping this community can help me find biographies that are oriented toward business dealings instead of history textbooks. Thanks!
I recently visited a marijuana store in California traveling to visit some family. I stopped by a dispensary and chatted with the sales person who said most transactions are done in cash. They also told me that they count the cash manually and then check the POS to see if it matches. But this got me thinking, how do cash heavy businesses actually handle it effectively without losing money? Isn't a POS primarily for digital transactions?