• 2:25 AM, 29.2.08
no matter what aspect of a business you're in charge of, it all has to deal with trust.
that's how businesses can prosper, because the customer trusts the business to deliver what they promise and the business trusts the customer enough to not run off after ordering.
when we gave you that 600$, it was a promise as well as a symbol, of the trust that we had placed whole heartedly in you and the belief that we held in the promise that you would deliver it by thursday, 7pm.
when we gave you the other 660$ yesterday, before we even recieved the product, was because we had no doubt that you would be a trustworthy person and have the shirts ready by 7pm.
but no, our trust was misplaced and we ended up having to wait till 11pm.
even if it's true that you have no control over whether the worker at the printer's would be sick or not,
it's still your responsibility to make sure that it will be delivered on time.
you told us at around 9, that there were only around 15 shirts left.
but when according to the others, they saw one big pile of unprinted shirts.
does that mean you lied to us?
you can't possibly claim that it was the printer's fault all the way now because you actually lied to us.
what happened to that trust that was supposed to coexist between the two parties?
if this is what the real life is going to be, i don't think i'm that eager to grow up after all.