I've gotten a lot of little tidbits from my boss that are interesting, but I just learned something that blows all that out of the water and reframes everything.

The store I work in, a convenience store/pharmacy of medium size in a spot somewhere between the suburbs and the city, pays $50k a month in rent.

Think about how much more you're charged for products than they cost to produce. Set aside the actual Capitalists in the process, they at least facilitate production. Think about how much extra money you've been spending just so that retailers can meet the demands of some company that has a piece of paper that says they own the land.

Apparently in big cities, the rent can get over $200k a month.

  • kristina [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Thats honestly impressive. That implies 2500+ customers a day

    • Nagarjuna [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Half your sales are gonna be from whales. For 5 people buying 100 bucks of like, bananas and lentils, there's someone buying 500 bucks of processed foods, protein powder, and organic eggs.

      If you work in sales, like Nordstrom, every like 10th person will pretty much buy whatever you point them at no matter how shifty and expensive it is.

      So it's not 2500 customers. It's 1250 customers, a few of whom literally can't stop themselves.

      • CatEars420 [they/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        This is what it felt like ringing up at my old grocery store. Many customers spent around $70-200 and a fair amount would have these huge haul $300/$400/$500+ purchases

        We sold nice alcohol and that ran up bills very quickly

    • CatEars420 [they/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      My old store would peak at $300k+ in the weekends and shopping days leading up to holidays. Average customer hauls being over $100.

      $250k for average is wild