I was in a clothing store recently and noticed a few sheets of paper sitting on a counter near the register.
- Staff schedules.
- Shift attendance.
- Staffing needs based on peak hours.
- Shift gaps.
All useful information. All clearly generated from a software platform. All printed out on paper.
I get the intent. You want your team to see important scheduling information, so you print it and put it where people will notice. Makes sense on the surface.
But then what?
- Employees scribble notes in the margins about shift swaps.
- Someone takes the paper home and now the store has no copy.
- A manager updates the schedule in the system but forgets to reprint.
- Now the paper version and the digital version don't match.
Congratulations, you have a version control problem in a retail store.
This wasn't some small independent shop. This was a large national chain. They're paying for scheduling software. The data exists digitally. And yet the last mile of getting that information into employees' hands is⦠a printer.
I have to imagine the reason is access. Frontline employees often don't have corporate email addresses or company-issued devices. So the software lives behind a login that half the staff can't reach. And the workaround becomes paper on a counter.
But these employees all have smartphones. Every single one of them. Smartphones have been a fixture of daily life for close to 20 years now.
It's exactly the kind of problem we built MangoApps to solve.
- Shift schedules
- swap requests
- availability preferences
- coverage gaps.
All accessible on the device employees already have in their pocket, with a shift marketplace where swaps happen digitally and everyone stays on the same page. No printing required.
Yes, there are considerations around privacy, off-the-clock access, and personal device policies. All solvable. None of them are harder than the problem you already have, which is a printed schedule that's outdated before the ink dries.
A single source of truth, on the device people already check 100 times a day. That's the bar. And it's not a high one.
#frontlineworkers #employeeexperience #workforcemanagement #digitalworkplace #shiftscheduling
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