What Does a Convenience Store Manager Actually Do? (Part 3) — Training Staff

Working at Konbini

Hello everyone.

Today, I’d like to continue my series about the work of a Japanese convenience store manager.

This time, I’d like to talk about something many foreign visitors may wonder about:

👉 Why do Japanese convenience store staff often seem so consistent?

No matter which employee you meet, the service often feels surprisingly similar.

Of course:

👉 not every store is perfect.

However, in many Japanese convenience stores:

👉 there are detailed training systems behind the scenes.

And honestly:

👉 staff training is one of the most important jobs for a store manager.


Different Stores, Different Training Styles

Training methods vary from store to store.

For example:

Some stores let experienced part-time staff train new employees.

Some leave training to assistant managers.

Others prefer to teach new staff personally.

When I was a store manager:

👉 I always trained new employees myself.

Why?

Because the first person who trains someone often shapes how they work later.

That influence can be:

👉 positive or negative.

In other words:

👉 the first teacher leaves a lasting impression.

From a manager’s perspective:

training people personally also makes it easier to build a team that fits the store’s culture and expectations.


My Personal Training Method

Here, I’d like to explain how I personally trained staff.

Whenever I hired someone:

👉 I first scheduled three to four short daytime training shifts.

Usually:

👉 around four hours or less per day.

Why?

Because trying to teach everything at once often overwhelms people.

I wanted new employees to focus on:

👉 learning, not simply surviving exhaustion.

I also explained this policy before hiring.

If someone could not attend daytime training:

👉 unfortunately, I usually had to decline the application.


Why Daytime Training?

The reason was simple:

👉 daytime is usually the safest and easiest time to train while the store is fully operating.

There are customers.

Products are arriving.

Staff are moving around.

In other words:

👉 trainees can experience a “normal working environment” without the pressure of being left alone.


Day 1 — No Work Yet

On the first day:

👉 I did not make new staff work immediately.

Instead, we focused on:

  • employment paperwork
  • store rules
  • staff registration
  • salary registration
  • prohibited behaviors inside the store

After that:

👉 I gave what I called a “store tour.”

This simply meant walking around the store together.

For example:

“This is the register.”

“This is the office.”

“This is the garbage area.”

I explained the layout and important locations.

By the end of Day 1:

👉 the goal was simply to help them understand the workplace environment.

Not skill.

Not speed.

Just familiarity.


Days 2–3 — Register Training

Days 2 and 3 focused mainly on:

👉 cash register training.

Day 2:

Basic register operations.

Day 3:

Slightly more advanced situations.

My teaching method was simple:

First:

👉 watch me.

Second:

👉 do it while I stand beside you.

Finally:

👉 try it alone.

But secretly:

👉 I still checked through the store cameras.

Not because I distrusted them.

Simply because:

👉 customers always come first.

As a manager:

I needed to confirm that the new employee could handle situations safely.


Day 4 — Learning the Shift Routine

On Day 4:

👉 I taught employees the basic tasks for their actual working hours.

For example:

If they worked during delivery times:

👉 I taught them how to receive and stock products.

If they worked another shift:

👉 training focused on the tasks common during that period.

The goal was simple:

👉 become somewhat functional — not perfect.

No one becomes fully skilled in four days.


Days 5–7 — Extra Staff, Not Real Staff Yet

From Day 5 onward:

👉 I scheduled them during their actual working hours.

However:

👉 I did not count them as normal staff yet.

Instead:

👉 I treated them as extra support staff.

In other words:

👉 during the first week, I did not expect them to be productive workers.

Only after experienced staff felt comfortable working with them:

👉 did I allow them to work independently.


Was My Method Normal?

To be honest:

👉 maybe not.

At the time, some people criticized me for spending too much on labor costs.

Their argument was simple:

“Part-time workers will improve naturally.”

“Don’t waste labor costs on training.”

And honestly:

👉 from a business perspective, they may have had a point.

So I should add one important disclaimer:

👉 my training style may have been more intensive than average.

Still, personally:

👉 I believed good training prevented bigger problems later.

In convenience stores:

👉 small mistakes can quickly become expensive mistakes.

And confident employees usually create better experiences for customers.

That is why, for me:

👉 training was never simply a cost.

It was an investment.

In the next article, I’ll explain another important part of store management:

👉 staff scheduling and labor management.

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