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If your cashiers do this manually, a cash counter could automate the task freeing staff to focus on your customers: at the start, middle and end of every day.
Cashiers using our machines overwhelming agree it improves job satisfaction. Management enjoy the time savings, accuracy, actionable data and improved loss prevention reported.
With an electronic till count, you can print out its data for your records and even transfer it straight into a POS.
“We are very satisfied with our investment in Cashmaster technology. Our staff are also very happy with the Cashmaster One Max devices as their daily cash counting tasks have become much easier and opportunities for errors in counting and in record keeping have been significantly reduced”.
Rocky LOK, CFO of KFCHK
News and Events
Build a till drawer and prepare your deposit in less than a minute
If you are tasked with rebuilding the till drawer AND preparing its deposit each day you will know how much of a drain it can be on your time and resources. So, let us share some tips on how to simplify these tasks, save time and get it right the first time and every time!
Future proofing your cash handling processes during an IT-upgrade
When one of our long-standing supermarket clients decided to upgrade its cash office IT equipment, we worked closely with them to ensure their cash handling operations continued to deliver the time-savings they had come to rely on and to add a layer of future proofing into their cash management systems.
The beautiful bank notes in Hong Kong
Bank notes and hard cash still rule in Hong Kong, where the notes often depict people, places and animals unique or symbolic to a specific place in the country. The note designs tell a lot about the city, its history and what was important at different periods of its existence.
Taiwanese still have faith in cash
Taiwan's government has cashless ambitions. One target the government has set to facilitate the move to a cashless society is for 90% of smartphone users to be using mobile payments by 2025. However, consumers and businesses in Taiwan have proven resistant to mobile payment forms, instead preferring to rely on more traditional payment methods.