Coffee Shop Girl (Coffee Shop Series Book 1) by Katie Cross

Coffee Shop Girl (Coffee Shop Series Book 1) by Katie Cross

Author:Katie Cross [Cross, Katie]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: KC Writing
Published: 2020-10-03T22:00:00+00:00


“No, you can’t reverse the steps, or the machine won’t work. I think. I’ve never tried,” I said, lips pursed as I regarded the espresso machine.

Lizbeth grinned maniacally. “Let’s try it.”

I swatted her hand away and jabbed a finger toward the laptop. “Just take some more notes. We can clean this process up later.”

The espresso machine had been tricky to learn, but I’d forced myself through it as best I could when Dad first died. Vaguely recalling his actions from when we’d hung out in the shop on my visits had helped. Trying to picture the behemoth through Lizbeth’s eyes now made it easier to break it down into smaller steps. She’d never operated it before, which forced me to remember all the little details.

Like how to flush it, for one.

Step back, Maverick had said, and imagine you’re seeing this process for the first time. What can you say, and where can you start, to make this successful for your employee?

Lizbeth sighed and leaned over the counter to study what we had already done. The sheer number of things I did to run the shop every day boggled my mind. Documenting them had simultaneously exhausted and validated me.

Lizbeth, who thrilled to the organization and fell more in love with the shop every day, tapped away at the computer. She read aloud what we’d just written, verified processes, and asked questions. Maverick sat at the table, a running ledger of numbers on his computer. Most days he wore a pair of glasses that made him even more attractive.

If such a thing was possible.

“We still haven’t discussed the close-down routine,” I muttered. It had been a week since we started this process, and every day we found more to do. More to clean up.

Numbers to run.

I suppressed a groan. This process also brought to light my own weaknesses with glaring intensity. Just this morning, I’d run out of whole milk and had to send Lizbeth across the road to the grocery store to buy more. Half the time, I spent more mental space trying to create a definitive process, then follow and test it. Maybe I didn’t make cappuccinos the best way. Was there another way?

My inventory? A laughingstock.

No wonder Anthony quit in a fiery huff. I kind of didn’t blame him. I should send him a card. Did they even make sorry-I-fired-you-because-I-suck-as-a-boss kind of cards?

“Put drive-through customer service on the list too,” I said. “Maverick will want a process for dealing with difficult customers.”

“Affirmative,” Maverick called from the office in a deep, amused growl. I listened, savoring every second with a fluttering stomach.

“Can I take a break?” Lizbeth asked, eyes hopeful. A new stack of romance books waited in her usual corner. We’d been at this for over two hours. I had to remind myself that it wasn’t her job to run this place, even though she wanted to help. She was still a teenager and deserved some semblance of a summer.

She’d likely just spend it with her romance novels, but at least she’d be happy.



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