Is this the solution? I do not now. I know what I have seen over time in various stores, including Wal-Mart, in several towns and states. I offer this in someone's defense: do you know how much time the Wal-Mart store managers spend issuing badges to vendor reps/ICs like us? In the same spot in the store, they also must scan incoming booze, pastries, and other vendor items. Baler, anyone? Nearby, employees are fetching their current loads from the latest truck delivery if they are not releasing their loads of garbage, recyclables, or what-have-you that can leave the store only after a manager has unlocked doors and other spaces. Later, when some vendors are ready to leave the location, they may return a badge to a manager (although some locations have a collection box for this) or obtain a manager's signature. So now, a busy manager must be summoned to sign a form. Meanwhile, do you know how many management activities are piling up until a manager is free to attend to each undone task? It does inconvenience Wal-Mart staffers to deal with the seemingly endless stream of vendors who deliver product, perform demos, and service assorted items in the stores.
For security, inventory, and general oversight purposes, it is good for people like us to follow a procedure to check in and check out of the stores. This process can be streamlined.
My guess is that dealing with fewer companies and fewer vendor/IC processes will free Wal-Mart managers for other work. I hope for similar and streamlined activities among the few remaining vendor companies that supply people like us to the stores. Streamlining will benefit all: management, employees, vendors, and IC's. In our jobs, we might spend less time checking in and checking out of each location. Then, we need to be on-site only long enough to complete our tasks and we can get in and out of the locations quickly. Perhaps this efficiency will free up enough time for us to complete more jobs each day and earn a little more money. At the very least, it will give us more time for something...
Bach is not noise, Madam. (Robert, in Two's Company)