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When I praised a new hire for doing well at their first part-time job, they said they’d watched YouTube tutorials beforehand.
A recent post on an online forum drew attention after praising a newly hired Baskin-Robbins worker for being unusually well prepared.
The poster said the new Baskin-Robbins part-timer did surprisingly well for a first shift. When complimented, the worker replied that they’d looked everything up on YouTube and had even memorized the menu and the exact portion sizes ahead of time.

The poster added that watching vlogs to learn how to operate the POS, use a coffee machine, memorize basic lines, and follow the workflow ahead of a first shift has become almost standard — a positive side of the trend.
Vlogs about part-time work at cafes, fast-food restaurants, convenience stores and amusement parks have recently gained popularity on YouTube and social media.
Whereas such videos used to be consumed mainly as a peek into someone else’s day, analysts say they now function as informal pre-training. Prospective workers can pick up recipes, customer-service approaches and everyday work routines before their first shift.
Commenters responded with lines like, \”Young people today are really capable and diligent,\” \”Feels like they run a simulation before the first shift,\” \”I watched tons of vlogs before my first job too,\” \”It must make adapting a lot easier,\” and \”I used to be nervous and get scolded a lot — it’s great they can study ahead now.\”
Among the MZ generation — roughly millennials and Gen Z — who are fluent in video content, a culture of \”online handoffs,\” where newcomers learn job know-how in advance, is taking root.











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