3/5 Lesli H. 11 months ago on Google
Originally
from
CR,
I'd
forgotten
just
how
much
larger
the
bigger
city
stores
are
vs
the
smaller
towns.
It
took
me
a
minute
to
acclimate,
but
soon
mostly
remembered
where
things
were
located.
Our
first
stop
needed
to
be
the
restroom,
after
traveling
with
children
for
so
long.
However,
the
women's,
restroom
was
closed.
Barring
any
emergencies,
the
store
is
aware
of
their
busiest
times,
ie
when
the
Pharmacy
opens,
over
lunch
hours,
etc
and
restroom
cleaning
should
be
planned
around
the
slowest
times
in
the
day.
Luckily,
we
made
it
to
the
back
of
the
store,
where
there's
a
2nd
set
of
restrooms.
Our
only
other
complaint
was
how
much
time
we
wasted
trying
to
find
prices/products.
Many
things
were
in
the
wrong
location.
I'm
not
sure
if
it
was
purposeful,
to
make
shelves
appear
to
be
full,
or
because
of
laziness,
but
it
quickly
grew
very
frustrating.
It
wasn't
1
or
2
items,
or
in
a
single
department.
It
was
an
issue
nearly
everywhere
we
went.
This
is
why
I
can't
help
but
wonder
if
it's
something
they're
doing
in
order
for
their
shelves
to
appear
to
be
more
stocked
than
what
they
truly
are.
Walmart,
if
this
is
what's
you're
doing,
please
stop.
Your
customer's
don't
want
to
see
shelves
full
of
the
incorrect
products.
They
don't
have
the
time
nor
the
desire
to
sort
things
to
see
if
you
do
or
don't
have
what's
actually
supposed
to
be
on
the
shelf.
Your
customer's
don't
want
to
have
to
rely
on
tiny
upc
codes
for
accurate
product
placement
and
pricing.
These
type
of
practices
are
a
sure
fire
way
to
lose
your
customer's
business,
especially
with
another
Walmart
across
town,
and
competitors
sprinkled
throughout
the
city.
Not
to
mention,
how
much
more
many
of
us
prefer
to
just
shop
online
anyway.
Your
customer's
are
who
pays
your
checks,
and
who
keeps
you
employed.
Do
better
to
stop
wasting
their
time.