Monday, April 21, 2008

What would be a good name for my friend to name her New business? -

Good Morning everyone, my friend is fixing to open her own business. Will be a tanning salon, along w/the sales of wireless phone services. She has competition right up the street, and that business is already called Talk n Tan Any suggestions will be greatly appreciated!Thanks,Yall have a good day!

Skin and Brain Cancer Emporium

Talky Tanny :)

you could put Comm. and Tan ( Comm stands for Communicate)

what about Sun Kissed or something that sounds cute(:

Ebay, Non Paying Bidder? -

I sold a Buy It Now item, and the buyer was someone with 0% feedback and had just joined that day. I ve never had any problems at all in my 5 years of selling, so I just hoped for the best and hoped that they would pay.After about 3 or 4 days, I had heard nothing, so I invoiced them. A couple of days later, I sent them a message saying that I had sent an invoice and asked them how they were going to pay, and also saying that I realised they were new to eBay and to get in touch if they required any help.Still no reply after 7 days, so I opened an unpaid item dispute. The next day I received a reply from them saying that they didn t mean to buy the item, that they were sorry for the inconvenience. I don t know whether they re at it, or if they re just a bit daft, but now I just want to be able to relist the item and obviously get my fees credited. I want to be able to close the case, but if I state that we ve agreed not to complete the transaction, I would have to rely on the buyer agreeing (which I don t know if they ll do because they either don t have a clue, or they re just at it).What s the best way of dealing with this? Should I just leave the case opened for 7 days, and that way I know I ll get my FVF back?

Leave the case open , at the end of the day the buyer will get an unpaid item strike and you will be able to leave negative feedback and then perhaps it will stop another seller wasting their time with them

Just close the case confirming that the buyer ordered by mistake and cancel the order so that you do not have to pay the Ebay fee. The buyer will receive a message to that effect and should confirm

What do you think about this storefront? -

I own a store in a small plaza. Medium-high income area. Highly populated city. The size of the store is about the size of a small liquor store. Next to the store (which is empty now), is a nail/hair salon, a small shoe store, a Japanese food restaraunt, a coffee shop, a bank, and a cell phone store, and also a dermatology business.

I think you own a store in a small plaza. Medium-high income area. Highly populated city. The size of the store is about the size of a small liquor store. Next to the store (which is empty now), is a nail/hair salon, a small shoe store, a Japanese food restaraunt, a coffee shop, a bank, and a cell phone store, and also a dermatology business.I have no idea what we re supposed to make of these facts, however.

Do you legally have to clock in at work if you are paid solely on commission? -

as stated above, what is legal is what is pointed out in your employers, employees handbook. If it is unclear and you have been told that you have to clock in and your hours are specific hours where the sales floor is covered by staff that are suppose to be there covering the sales floor customers or not. Then you best be there and on time and quit being late. Get up ten minutes earlier and be on time. Be humble and try not to get so riled, they weren t late, you were.

I didn t ask for a lecture. I am a grown adult, looking for an answer to a question that I thought someone with legal experience would know. In fact, I did get a proper answer, without any finger-pointing from false assumptions and that should have been the answer that got the popular vote. Report Abuse

if you are paid solely on commission, quit.about 100,000 firms will hire you today to work just on commission andyou can work whenever you want......perfect example; I will hire you RIGHT NOWi do biz advisory work; consulting;you sell my services, collect from the customer and pocket1/2 the money; no costs from your pocket, nothing to buy andyou never go to the office which is out of state.[i charge over 200 per hour, you get 100 per hourof contracts you sell]

ALL the posters above are missing the point.Yes, you must be on the clock at all times that you are working, whether you are hourly paid or commissioned. The only employees that are not required *by law* to record all their working hours are those employees that are *both* salaried *and* overtime-exempt. The reason for this is that even commission-only employees are subject to Federal and State minimum wage laws. Say, for example, that you work 30 hours this week, and make $300 in commissions. You have earned $10 an hour, and there are no legal issues. But if you worked 60 hours to earn that $300, that s an hourly rate of only $4.28 an hour (40 hours at $4.28 and 20 hours at time-and-a-half), and your boss needs to make your pay for the 60 hours up to $507.50Richard

It s not illegal for an employer to require you to clock in. Employers can have policies that turn out illegal, but this isn t one of them.Clocking in has other purposes beyond measuring time for hourly pay. Some just like to keep tabs and measure performance against time. Don t take it personally.

It s legal for your boss to require it, yes. It s also legal to refuse -- and in almost every state, it would then be legal for your boss to fire you for refusing to do as he requires.Your choice.

you are not being paid by the hour which the time clock recordsyou might research the employee booklet your employer should have available for you for questions that arise from the employment

if your employer require u to clock to work, you have to. That is job requirement, as your employer doesnt want any part-time salesperson

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