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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Topic: Employer's attitude toward booth personnel quality
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Chase Hanson
Expert Film Handler
Posts: 172
From: San Diego, CA
Registered: Oct 2004
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posted 04-15-2005 03:10 PM
Question: "Does your circuit/theatre employer(s) give you any credit due to the quality of your operations, or are you just "a number, a tool"-anything to be doing them a favor, to where you feel you're just doing a job? Very little, IMO. I feel, as most of you do, that the Movie Theater Experience...has drifted drastically away from the actual Movie. Home Office has a system inplace to evaluate Guest Satisfaction and this is broken down into categories Box Office, Facilities, Concessions and Film Experience this is trended across the 52 week fiscal year with weekly updates. And this report is evaluated by Senior Management and "Notes" are hand written about ways to improve each category...except film experience. Calcuable variations in score are acknowledged...but there is very little visible proactive effort applied to this. Its all very lasse faire.
Question: "do they give you any support where it makes you feel important since you're succeeding at your position?" Booth in the theaters that I have worked has pretty much been a "Nobody cares unless somethings broken". This is more the mind set of the General Operations Staff and not the actual Booth operaters. Leaking projectors, misaligned sprockets and forgetful brains are insanely common occurnces in the cave...but since they dont effect presentation, who cares.
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Matthew Ballantine-Patton
Film Handler
Posts: 7
From: Denver, CO, USA
Registered: Feb 2005
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posted 04-16-2005 03:31 PM
#1: I consider myself a hard worker, and I've often been called a work-aholic. However, since going to work for a major chain, I often find myself thinking "Yeah, I could fix that, but why?" For instance, our digital pre-show looks like crap in several auditoriums, but someone else gets paid to work on that stuff, and I get no credit for any of the work I do. Whether or not a show starts on time, or looks good or anything, makes no difference to me (beyond my natural work ethic) because there are no incentives, no benefits, and no positive feedback.
#2: in a recent "Best of the city" in a local paper, our theater was commended for uniformly high standards in presentation. There was not even a "thank you" from our management. Success brings no reward, and I earn less than $200 a week. Why should I continue making any effort to provide a good presentation when it obviously means nothing to the company bosses? My natural tendency to work hard and take pride in my work are the only incentives/support that I have.
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