Guides May 30, 2026

How to Train a New Cashier in Their First Week: A Day-by-Day Guide

Throwing a new cashier behind the register on day two without proper training is a recipe for chaos. Here's a structured day-by-day plan for their first week — from learning the menu to handling tough situations.

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CrescendPOS Team

Why the First Week Is Critical

Most cafe owners train new cashiers the same way: "Here's the POS, here's the menu, ask if you're confused." Then the new hire is left alone at the register on day two.

The result? Wrong transactions, frustrated customers, a stressed cashier who sometimes quits within the first week. Not because they're incapable — but because they weren't given a solid enough foundation.

The first week should have structure. Not rigid or formal — but a clear progression from day to day. Here's how.

Day 1: Orientation — Don't Touch the POS Yet

Day one isn't about the POS system. Day one is about context.

  • Introduce the team. Who works when, who to ask for help.
  • Tour the space. Where the register is, where the kitchen is, where supplies are stored, where the restroom is. Basic but important.
  • Walk through the menu. Not just item names — but categories, bestsellers, items customers frequently ask about. If there are similar-sounding items (Iced Latte vs Iced Mocha Latte), explain the difference.
  • Explain the operational flow. Customer arrives → orders → pays → picks up. It's that simple, but a new cashier needs to understand this flow before touching the system.

By the end of day 1, your new cashier should be able to answer: "What do we sell?" and "When a customer walks in, what happens?"

Day 2: Getting to Know the POS — Practice Mode

Now they touch the POS. But not for real transactions yet.

  • Login and basic navigation. How to log in with their PIN, how to navigate between screens, where the menu is, where the pay button is.
  • Practice entering orders. Have them enter 10-15 dummy orders. Vary them: simple orders (1 item), multi-item orders, orders with special notes.
  • Practice payments. Cash — how to enter the amount paid, how to see the change. QR payments if applicable. They need to know every payment method you accept.
  • Practice voids. Give them a scenario: "You entered the wrong item, how do you cancel it?" This matters because not knowing how to void = panic during rush hour.

Ideally, day 2 is spent entirely on practice. Let them make mistakes in a safe environment — better to mess up during training than in front of a customer.

Day 3: Shadowing — Watch First, Then Try

The new cashier stands beside a senior cashier and observes. Not idle — actively watching:

  • How the senior cashier greets customers
  • How they handle unclear orders ("the usual coffee" — usual which one?)
  • How they multitask when the line gets long
  • How they handle cash payments — including efficient change-counting

During quiet moments, let the new cashier handle 1-2 customers with the senior standing by. The senior doesn't intervene unless the new person is truly stuck.

Day 4: Supervised Solo — On Their Own, But With Backup

The new cashier starts working the register alone, but a senior cashier (or you) stays within eyesight. The rules:

  • New cashier handles all transactions independently
  • If unsure, they can ask — but they should try first
  • Senior only steps in if the situation starts getting out of control (long line, customer complaint)

At the end of the day, review together: what went smoothly, what was still confusing, any transactions that need correcting.

This is also a good time to check the shift report. Look at transaction count, any cash discrepancies, any unusual voids. Not to judge — but to identify areas that need reinforcement.

Day 5: Special Situations

By now the new cashier can handle normal transactions. Time to prepare them for the abnormal:

  • Customer complaints. It's not about who's right — it's about how to respond. Listen, don't get defensive, offer solutions within their authority.
  • Menu items out of stock. How to inform the customer? How to suggest alternatives?
  • Customer asks for a discount. What's the policy? Who can approve? If the cashier doesn't have authority, how do they handle it without disappointing the customer?
  • Suspicious payment. What should they do?
  • Printer error or POS issues. What's the first step? Who should they contact?

This doesn't need to be a formal training session. It can be a casual chat, running through "what if" scenarios during quiet hours.

Days 6-7: Full Independence with Check-ins

The new cashier works a full shift alone. No senior standing by — but with an agreement that they can call or message if they hit a situation they genuinely can't handle.

At the end of each shift, a brief review (10 minutes is enough):

  • Any issues today?
  • Any situations where they felt unsure?
  • Shift report: transactions, discrepancies, voids

After the First Week

The first week ending doesn't mean training is over. During weeks 2-4, continue monitoring:

  • Speed. Is the average time per transaction approaching the senior cashier's pace?
  • Accuracy. Are cash discrepancies decreasing day by day?
  • Confidence. Is the new cashier starting to handle tough situations without needing to ask?

If after two weeks they're still struggling in certain areas, that's not a sign the person can't do the job — maybe the training approach needs adjusting.

Extra Tips

  • Don't skip the shadowing day. It's the most commonly skipped because it feels like "wasted time" — but it's actually the most effective day for transferring the kind of knowledge you can't write down.
  • Make a cheat sheet. Similar-sounding menu items, POS shortcuts, important phone numbers — print one page and tape it next to the register.
  • Be patient. New cashiers will make mistakes. What matters isn't zero errors — it's that each mistake becomes a lesson, and the same mistake doesn't repeat.