This is ain’t no joke, I’m going on a month come a few days from now, and when I say I’m physically drained I’m DRAINED, good money but you won’t have time to spend it cause you’ll be sleep on your off days lol
@@drzdenizenwell good money for something that you need no experience for … I’m making 1300 a week so I say that’s good money not having to deal w bullshit as a truck driver all day… 2k for truck drivers is weak asf…. I’ve seen truck drivers make 5k plus in a week…. So idk what pay scale you’re on
@@markarthur1083 don’t miss the night shift, it gets boring after years of doing the same orders. There’s a lot more to this world/workforce than the same 10 aisles over and over.
I used to select and I understand everything you’re doing but now that I’m driving a lot of stuff you’re doing is going to make the drivers job a living hell. Putting labels on top of cases makes our life hell believe it or not. Not wrapping pallets makes our life hell. Loaders probably don’t care and will drag the pallet against the wall and mess up the labels or damage the case. Let’s not forget might not even strap it down so guess what the whole pallet falls over on a driver and now he’s hurt. I know as selector stuff like that don’t go through the mind and I know because I did it for 5 years
Sysco stretcht oder sicher die Paletten nicht anderweitig? So verschiebt sich die Ladung auf den Paletten und die entlade Zeit dauert länger. Wer kommt auf so ein blöde Idee. Vielleicht wäre das Kommissionieren auf Geschlossene Paletten besser.
I worked Sysco in riviera beach and upstate New York. Freezer, cooler, dry. I don’t miss those triple jacks AT ALL lmao. Selecting at Sysco is for the real ones for sure. Cool video.
how does the incentive and pay work there? I heard someone say you get paid by per case as well? I may be wrong. Just wondering, currently at a Walmart DC
@@MRSLENDERBOBnah you get incentive pay based in you’re score and you can get a case bonus also if you pick over like 5k a week but the more you pick the bigger the bonus is I think but it’s not per case
Staccing is the key to running percent.. saying that to say it’s the hardest part of the job.. but staccing takes time and precision and common sense, and also retention.. you do the same order everyday and every week .. all you have to do is find a way that works for you and do it that way everytime
I did selecting, loading, and reach truck over a span of 5 years. I work at a wood shop now making cabinets and installing mostly. Half the pay but my mental state improved 10 fold. Warehouse work is good money and great self discipline for the young foke but after a while it takes a toll on you.
Im a selector for publix and been doing it close to a year. Shit can get you in shape real quick. My stack is great and yet to drop a pallet but im in the slower end of my warehouse with a 120 percent
The health and safety standards are abysmal over there in the states. If you tried using that ped op truck like that, or picked things up without bending your knees over here in the UK, you'd instantly be taken away for health and safety discussions and warnings. Of which if you continued to work in that unsafe manner even after, then you'd find yourself quickly out of the job.
Dude jumping off and on while the jack is moving, is a NO NO. First time something happens, they'll CRUSIFY you. As long as your numbers are good and no accidents, They'll look away.
I pick at the moment but never again I'm going to walmart or wawa just be a cashier and chill out money is good but they drain your soul and body fck that
i’ve been selecting for almost 2 years and watching these are just cool to me haha. you seem like a chill selector but also puts his work in. you’d be a good trainer fr
i got a job interview for this position in a few days. i never seen a triple like the one you are operating. i drove the other yales that’s like a reach truck sort of. hopefully i can wiggle my way onto a reach truck instead of doing this the whole time 🤣
how does the incentive and pay work there? I heard someone say you get paid by per case as well? I may be wrong. Just wondering, currently at a Walmart DC
Your most likely to giraffe birth a dolphin then that happening.. those videos are complications, so of course your gonna think it happens often but it Dosent
Sysco is not for the weak. At all. You’ll run just like this and think you did PERFECT then look down and you got a freakin 85%. Any other warehouse I’m running at least 130.
This guy is not that good bro at all ..I would dust this dude np ..Sysco Albany ny ..12 year selector ..he’s a cross picket can’t even pick on the side he selects on ..in mu warehouse he get chewed up!!!
Bro dead ass, get this dude in our warehouse we would run circles around him while building perfect cubes. I should film you and you film me and we will figure out a way to tag him
Personally I’m already fit so it’s no need for me to work out at work n get off n have to do that but for someone that’s not as fit.. consider doing gym workouts during the slow season
Dry is fun, especially when you get to the potato chip section. Haha! If you know, you know. **Cooler is the best area though. Light sweater, race around and you're never hot. Freezer can be fun too, as long as you've got the right gear. I worked at Sysco in Clifton Park, New York. Bunch of great guys there with maybe 2 or 3 dudes who should go into another line of work, because they're always grumpy and miserable. Seriously tough work but good physical work.
Worked at Sysco in Denver for almost a year. That job had moments where it wasn't too bad and alright...but that was short-lived. This type of work is NOT for everyone, is very demanding, both physically and mentally. The hours take a toll, the long nights, and if you have trouble sleeping and getting proper rest, forget it. Your life falls into a pit. It happened to me and happened to every co-worker I knew at some point. Most people don't realize that their access to convivence is on the backs and shoulders of hardworking (predominately for the most part) men. We had ONE female in the entire warehouse, and she was a forklift driver who was also on restrictions.
In life people that are not born rich, we gotta work to survive.. Sysco is a place to do that.. yes is physical n very demanding but it also pays the bills, and leaves you with a lot extra .. you just gotta be smart about it..
I have an interview coming up. I'm a 4'10 female 100 lbs. I prefer physically demanding jobs but are they going to want to hire me for something like this that men will generally be able to do quicker?
Depending on the company and where they stand wit employees but you should have no problem getting in.. staying in will be harder.. be prepared to be challenged but you fully capable 💪🏿
Used to work here. You have to be a robot/vampire to work this job. The money good but it’s back breaking work literally… & work/life balance is TRASH & it’s a lot of pressure to hit your production numbers. & they have you on a point system. I wouldn’t recommend this job to anybody it’ll suck the life out of you.
Well...not surprised, but I see AT LEAST 4 unsafe things he did operating that pallet jack. Sadly, the order building looks about what I've seen for 5+ years - low quality and sloppy in appearance. Plus, I can never understand why people honk when they don't need to, but fail to when they absolutely should. I swear, I have to teach everyone everything...and pick from the top, bro! I've had enough of that pyramid shit! I swear to God, if I were the supervisor, anybody who did that crap would be written up or gone, in an instant!
@@brentwodrich8314and this is why some work places dont have a good employment turnover rate…. Doing too damn much youll run out of employees due to them quitting if your dry write ups dont get them Gone… imagine the poor guy who kids wont eat cus you dont like pyramid stacks 😂
@@98slime86 I mean, it’s not hard to build a full pallet without stacking in the middle or one side. It doesn’t even take much time. If everyone would just do that, I guarantee there’d be less complaints, breakage or other issues, overturned pallets of orders, returns, etc. It’s not hard to do it right the first time, even if you have to move a couple of things around to even it out.
I just rather cook than to do this. It looks fun until you know where everything is. It was cool to see this line of work on the opposite end. Respect!
Ok so for his question is it easier for the delivery driver nope.. the driver then picks through those pallets with a scanner and uses a dolly to take the cases into each store , then the cases must go into cooler or freezer or dry section . It’s just as hard for the driver if not harder because that driver has to deal with outside conditions even if it’s snowing you have to deliver
Currently a Heb selector but the pay doesn't seem worth even with incentive being a extra 250 a week max. Heard sysco makes more obv im looking for other things in life to do but till then i need some bread. Selecting becomes easy once you learn how to stack but you will be tired.
I work at the one in Plant City Florida the supervisors there at the time all suck they was lucky I was nice and quiet I let a lot of stuff slide and plus I don't like going to jail😂😂😂😂😂😂
Na. It’s shitty piling. Plus he is slow. Or I should say, their system of picking does not help. I. Understand though, they are shipping to mostly restaurants. And sometimes you need those tags to be just incase the receiver is young, and doesn’t know how to tell chicken from lettuce.
I have never used one of those electric pallet jacks, just forklifts. Ever time I see you jump off that jack while it is still moving in those racks, I have visions of it hitting those racks and them collapsing.
Hell ya just started at WinCo DC in Boise Idaho and never have felt so drained I'm 2 months in and not giving up I have a lot of trouble stacking deli orders . It's hard to explain to people how hard or challenging this job is . At first I was thinking I'ma get paid really good just to stack boxes and drive electric pallet jacks but I was in for a surprise. Sticking with it and not turning back .
I use to work in Giants Fresh Food Facility & we could never move this slow but I ain’t mad at it. You can last a lot longer in this field working like this
I got fired because the supervisor purposely knock all my water shit down and I punch him I spent 20 minutes taping it up fuck that job the pay is good but it ain’t worth it all I was doing good getting use to my stacking frustrated but wasn’t super frustrated when I walked out
I'll work my mandatory 8 hours of OT on the holidays but they wont ever get me to work anything over that.... taxes will just rob you blind at that point plus i understand we all have bills that need to be paid but y'all need to start living more instead of spending every minute of your life in a warehouse.
Used to work a walmart dc almost to 100% pick rate. I would get alot of the shit juice trips roughly 225 picks and 35 minutes give or take to do it. I'm moving close to an area with a sysco nearby.. Would I make the cut here? Trying to compare by case count, etc..
@@Orderselector I’m A Driver for Sysco currently , I Jst feel like day in day out we have bad loaded trucks and pallets falling over Becus of poor wrapped or not strapped in … the selectors don’t have to go behind nobody to do there job … that’s why & y’all inside not having to deal with weather or anything that’s just my opinion idk what y’all deal with tho just going off what I see
The only thing we don’t deal wit weather wise is rain but cold and heat we definitely deal wit but badly strapped pallets and wrapped pallets can be fixed with a talk to your supervisor but I can’t fix or change these order I get bac to bacc and there no joke.. I think we equally deal wit something