I worked in a Jessops store for about 10 months, around 2 years ago, first experience of working in retail. I asked about the job as I was due to start a HND in Photography later that year, I thought it might have been a good place to learn some stuff. I did learn quite a bit, but most of it came from the customers. I asked some of them more questions than they asked me!
Anyway, there are quite a few negative comments about the attitude of the staff, I feel very much obliged to add my thoughts...
While there is absolutely no excuse for being rude to customers, I can totally understand the disinterested attitude, there is extremely low levels of staff training, practically none at all. The training usually comes in the form of a DVD, it has little to do with the product and everything to do with how to sell it, I still have nightmares of one I was forcibly made to watch about DSLR's, the guy presenting it was wearing reindeer antlers (christmas) and a jumper with a fat snowman on it, he managed to make the letters D S L R somehow sound like a word! There was a quick bit about selling the camera, then a really big bit about selling extras, cases, memory cards, card readers, Photo+ warranty (lots of importance based on that!) filters, etc...
Training for the lab (C41 Film & Digital file processing) comes from whoever you might be working with, so that could be someone aged 17 with one weeks experience, or from someone older and more experienced...
And, then there is the issue of pay, it's without doubt the worst paid job I've ever had, I think it was 5p less than minimum wage, the younger get paid even less... I think some of the guys there were on under £4-00 per hour, and, the wages were always wrong, every month our manager would literally spend hours on the phone trying to sort out why people were paid less than they should have been, or not paid at all...
The store I worked in (Newry) has a pretty good range of film and darkroom related stock, and staff that know about it too. Of course, some of the staff don't know anything about it, but they also struggle to explain the functions of a DSLR, because they haven't been trained.
I completely avoided anyone wanting to buy a Video Camera or printer, because I knew absolutely nothing about them. There were others I worked with that didn't want to go DSLR, let alone a 35mm, or a discussion on film.
Sorry for going on, it might be a bit of a pointless reply, but I always feel a little defensive for the staff...
Sinead