How to Keep Staff & Customers Safe When Your Shop Reopens
The non-essential retail sector has finally reopened, but how do you keep your customers and staff safe?
Non-essential retailers have been able to start returning to trade. For many store owners, the hardest part of reopening in the aftermath of the COVID-19 lockdown has been implementing the necessary measures to keep customers and staff safe.
This guide will be frequently updated to reflect the latest government advice, as well as measures and initiatives we've seen from our own retail customers. Read on to discover our 5 essential steps for managing your store under social distancing measures.
Keeping your Staff & Customers Safe when your Shop Reopens
1) Complete a Risk Assessment
As an employer, itโs your legal obligation to ensure the safety of your employees and customers in your place of business, irrespective of whether weโre in the midst of an ongoing pandemic. But during the COVID-19 outbreak, the risk is exponentially greater, not least because the threat is invisible. This means you need to be extra vigilant when completing your risk assessment.
Once youโve completed your risk assessment, you should share this information with your employees and educate them on what it means.
2) Who Should go to Work?
The government suggests that even when you reopen, you should limit the amount of staff on your premises at any one time by only having essential employees working from your location.
What this means is if your back office staff - like administrative, accounts and marketing personnel - can feasibly work from home, they should do so.
You should also look at your employeesโ medical declarations to identify any members of staff in the high-risk categories and ensure that they do not return to work. This should be done alongside consulting all of your employees about any anxiety they have about returning.
3) Social Distancing in your Shop
The government has set out advice and guidelines for how to keep employees and customers safe by minimising contact, which we have already seen implemented by major supermarket chains.
The government recommends you practice the following guidelines:
- Increase the frequency of handwashing and surface cleaning
- Minimise the amount of time customers are in contact with staff
- Encourage customers to wear face masks at all times while inside your store (although it is not the responsibility of retailers to enforce the rule)
- Use screens or barriers to separate people
- Introduce 2m floor markers inside your shop and on the pavement outside
- Limit the number of customers in your shop at any one time
- Store returned items for 72 hours before placing them back on the shelves
- Encourage customers to shop alone where possible
It would be advisable to have signage inside and outside your shop to explain to customers any social distancing measures you have implemented.
4) Keeping your Shop Sanitary
Before you reopen, itโs advisable to complete a full assessment of areas of risk that may need to continuously be cleaned on a regular basis. This should follow a deep clean of your premises before youโre due to open.
Keeping clean will require you to:
- Wipe down surfaces, equipment and devices between uses
- Antibacterial wipes available for customers to wipe trolleys & baskets
- Hand sanitizer available for customers and staff
- Staff and customers should be encouraged to wear face coverings in enclosed areas
These four key objectives are part of the governmentโs wider advice in how to operate your shop both during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.