![]() |
Quote:
|
Quote:
There was one time, though, when the service was so bad, I walked over to my waittress as I was leaving, handed her the two cents, and said to her "This is the tip for your service tonight, and believe me when I tell you is far more than you're worth". |
I don't quite understand the spite directed at the waiter or waitress personally...
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
If the wait person provides poor service, who should the spite be directed at? |
Quote:
Just don't go back. If they are consistently bad, the marketplace will find out. I will tell my friends not to eat there, oh yeah. |
I realize that the people who are waiting on me and cooking my food are generally overworked, underpaid and footsore, so I'm generally willing to forgive a certain amount of less-than-good service. But I have little patience for rudeness, and God forbid I realize that I'm getting shitty service while someone else isn't. If I see somebody who came in after me get their food before I do, I'll generally just get up and leave. Bad service because of extremely busy conditions is generally forgiven. Rude service gets NO tip and no return business.
The worst service I ever got was at an Applebee's in Staten Island. That was in 1997. I didn't set foot in another Applebee's until earlier this year. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Good points all. Unless I know for sure I'll never go back (e.g., business trip to some odd place), I'll always leave at least a ten percent tip. However, if I leave a ten percent tip, I'm probably not coming back anyway. On a related note, a client of mine a while back was the head of a very large organization (1,000+ employees), and told an interesting story a while back. Probably 300 of the employees were in the headquarters building, and a new restaurant opened across the street. She went over there with a group of managers, and essentially got ignored. When they finally asked for service, the server was snitty, and so they asked for the manager. The manager came out and said something along the lines of "Get off my back. I'm busy." My client went back and sent a memo out to the entire headquarters that said that there were to be no business lunches held at that restaurant in the future. You never know who you're dealing with. |
Okay, here's another question. What do you do when you go to a "fast casual" restaurant like Chipotle's or Boston Market or something, and pay by credit card? They've always got that line for a tip, and I feel guilty if I write in a zero, but at the same time I'm not getting any service. I'm just picking up my food to go and I'm even pouring my own drink. I hate that. Half the time I'll put down a zero and feel guilty, and half the time I'll put down a dollar and be ticked off about it.
|
Quote:
A tip is paid for service. What service are they providing that would warrant a tip? How about this. On that line for tips, write "Get a job that you actually earn tips". |
Quote:
Exceptional service will get 25% and above. Someone who goes out of their way or goes beyond the duties of their jobs even when we can see they are very busy. Average service will get 15% This doesn't mean the server was unpleasant, but that they failed to check up on us or fill our waters, etc. Simply omitting the duties we expected of you. And bad service and an attitude, but I'm giving them a break 'cause it is after all a busy night and they may be putting in a double and stuff like that will get 10% But, service that is appalling and unforgiving will get the two cents. |
Quote:
Fug if I did that I would have been out of business a long time ago. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:24 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.