Assume that you will never eat in this location or have this waiter or waitress again, and assume that the tip size will be 15-20%.
12-15-2012 11:45 AM
#1
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12-15-2012 11:55 AM
#2
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If I feel guilty for being waited on, if I want to imperceptibly increase my chances of sleeping with the waitress, if I've been given a candy with the bill and therefore owe something back, or how interested I am in impressing people with how quickly I can calculate a 15% tip. | |
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12-15-2012 11:58 AM
#3
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My answer might change based on where the restaurant is. Servers here get paid at least minimum wage ($9 or more per hour). | |
12-15-2012 11:58 AM
#4
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[x] for all but offensive service | |
12-15-2012 12:00 PM
#5
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12-15-2012 12:01 PM
#6
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12-15-2012 12:07 PM
#7
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I'm personally in favor of removing tipping completely and relying on managers and owners like you've mentioned. I think that this would be a better system than allowing customers to influence it with the size of their tips since tip sizes are usually based on a wide range of things instead of the level of service (much like you indicated with your earlier post). | |
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12-15-2012 12:23 PM
#8
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I see what you're saying. If the customers seek out good services and tips are dropped, wages should rise to find people willing to deliver good service to customers. Or wages for managers will rise to see who can best motivate their work staff to achieve the standard. | |
Last edited by a500lbgorilla; 12-15-2012 at 12:52 PM. | |
12-16-2012 08:09 AM
#9
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12-15-2012 11:58 AM
#10
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Besides, if I have many dollars and the waitress has few, a dollar is worth more in her pocket than it is in mine. Tipping is wealth generating. | |
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12-16-2012 10:57 PM
#11
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This thought always crosses my mind whenI'm debating the last dollar or two and always ends up in favor of the waitress. | |
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12-15-2012 12:01 PM
#12
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Only if you tip the same amount for all levels of service. | |
12-15-2012 01:58 PM
#13
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The assumptions suck and the question sucks. | |
12-15-2012 02:00 PM
#14
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As for me, in America I tip probably about 95% of the time, for amounts that are highly elastic to serving quality, usually for a higher amount than the average patron. That is less of a reflection of my generosity and more of a reflection of how amazing service is in America. In Asia I tip substantially less substantially less of the time because expectations are lower and service is far worse. | |
12-15-2012 03:12 PM
#15
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This. | |
Last edited by bikes; 12-15-2012 at 03:15 PM. | |
12-15-2012 02:10 PM
#16
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This is the trolliest of a series of trolly topics from you, Spoon. We just did this. | |
12-15-2012 02:15 PM
#17
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Haven't we had tipping debates about 19 times already? | |
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12-15-2012 02:34 PM
#18
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I think the tipping system is horrible. However I think you're a scumbag if you don't tip as a protest to the system. If you want to protest the tipping system, then avoid giving your patronage to establishments that employ tipped positions as much as possible. This doesn't even limit your ability enjoy the food from the vast majority of restaurants, as you can just get take-out. | |
12-16-2012 11:01 PM
#19
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12-15-2012 05:53 PM
#20
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Would that be where you met me? | |
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12-15-2012 07:30 PM
#21
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I won't be original, for good service, lol | |
12-16-2012 01:59 PM
#22
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12-16-2012 02:04 PM
#23
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15% is standard and unless they really messed up its the right amt |
12-16-2012 05:14 PM
#24
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10% is standard in the UK. More than that requires something special. | |
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12-16-2012 05:30 PM
#25
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12-16-2012 06:43 PM
#26
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Lol no 10% is standard | |
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12-17-2012 03:17 AM
#27
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12-17-2012 04:59 AM
#28
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Restaurant - 10% on average, +/- depending on service. This is the norm except in fancy places where maybe 15% is more standard. | |
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12-16-2012 11:44 PM
#29
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such a busto issue to be passionate about imo | |
12-17-2012 12:14 AM
#30
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I think tipping is primarily responsible for how awesome service is in america compared to the rest of the world. Different tipping policy and culture. And it doesn't only apply to waiters and waitresses. | |
12-17-2012 03:19 AM
#31
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12-16-2012 11:45 PM
#32
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This is missing the "never" option for europeans. | |
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12-17-2012 03:50 AM
#33
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germany isn't really a tipping culture, and when there is tip it gets pooled together so there's less competition among the servers, and they get paid afaik a better wage to begin with. the service is absolutely atrocious. | |
12-17-2012 04:20 AM
#34
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Well I've read about other countries and it seems to be a similar trend of poor service in cultures that don't tip as much. | |
12-17-2012 04:46 AM
#35
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interesting, neither of the two last comments fit with my experience | |
12-17-2012 05:16 AM
#36
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you also never visited berlin! it might really be a berlin-specific thing I talked about. berliner schnauze and so on. but i still really don't think germans put so much effort into service as a whole, from rude waitresses to lazy-ass mail carriers. maybe it's totally different in other towns - i was shocked at how friendly müncheners are, so maybe the service is also friendlier there and so on. | |
12-17-2012 04:59 AM
#37
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well isn't the minimum wage like 16 dollars an hour in soviet new zealand? | |
12-17-2012 05:22 AM
#38
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Works out to like $10.50US before tax. | |
12-17-2012 05:19 AM
#39
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Renton, I think the example that destroys your theory totally is Japan. No tipping ever anywhere, but they really stick to the mantra of "customer is king". | |
12-17-2012 05:28 AM
#40
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American enthusiasm is unlike any real human behavior in the rest of the world and I don't like it. | |
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12-17-2012 05:30 AM
#41
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12-17-2012 05:33 AM
#42
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12-17-2012 05:28 AM
#43
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ya germany being a non-tipping culture was hyperbole sorry, but it's much less expected here and less surprising/rude when somebody doesn't leave a tip after a meal, even though it's pretty normal to say round up the bill to the nearest round number. also goes for hair dressers and taxi drivers. | |
12-17-2012 05:34 AM
#44
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Yeah fair play, all a matter of perspective I guess - from my perspective you gotta think tipping is more more expected there and more surprising/rude when somebody doesn't leave a tip (and then America [and Canada, by the sounds of it?]. is even more extreme on top of that), since I'm coming from a background of 0 being the standard. | |
12-17-2012 05:36 AM
#45
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then again i'm one of those customers who tends to tell anybody who comes to help me uninvited to leave me alone. i'll ask for help if i need it. same goes for annoying waitresses who come around with their annoying nasaly voices going "how r u guys doing? gooood? is there anything else iI can do for u gaiiis?" every 15 minutes. just please come when i wave in your direction please. japan has these wireless doorbell-type buttons on the table very often, a modern version of ringing a bell to get the server's attention. that system is awesome. i'm just ranting now. | |
12-17-2012 05:46 AM
#46
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I guess that's the other big problem with trying to compare service in different places like this is we all expect different things (leaving aside we're different people, that there's a the-friendliness-you-show-the-wait-staff to the-friendliness-you-get-back correlation, how your mood was on any day affects how you judge things, etc. etc. etc. etc.). | |
12-17-2012 08:44 AM
#47
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Don't tip in Italy, they don't know the meaning of it over there. | |
12-17-2012 08:53 AM
#48
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12-17-2012 09:33 AM
#49
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12-17-2012 11:54 AM
#50
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12-17-2012 02:06 PM
#51
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12-17-2012 09:51 AM
#52
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i only ever tip taxi drivers here in aus, because they typically make little money working long hours and often get treated like shit by people who suck. | |
Last edited by rpm; 12-17-2012 at 09:53 AM. | |
12-17-2012 06:16 PM
#53
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12-17-2012 10:13 AM
#54
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I round up taxi fares back home to the nearest dollar but I never thought of it as tipping (although I guess it clearly is), just the done thing and means nobody has to fuck around with change (only ever use taxis when druuuunk) | |
12-17-2012 01:51 PM
#55
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they will remember if you stiff them on the tip- so if your are planning on going back u should prob tip |
12-17-2012 03:21 PM
#56
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For better or for worse (ie: for worse), the US's system is setup so that a 15-20% tip is a built-in price for any situation where you are waited on. As such, I don't ever tip less than 15% (not even sure how often I go that low) unless it's a situation where I would demand to get my money back, which is an extremely extremely extremely rare scenario. | |
12-17-2012 05:46 PM
#57
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You pay for the service in the price of the meal. That's why places that offer eat in or takeaway charge more to eat in. | |
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12-17-2012 07:37 PM
#58
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I'm talking about in American dining situations where servers are not paid mentionable hourly wages. First off: even if the service is built into the price, that money doesn't go to the servers, and you are still responsible for paying the service (fucked up system, but it's how it works). | |
12-17-2012 04:43 PM
#59
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I stopped by a Waffle House a week or two ago to grab some lunch while I was running errands. I ordered a chicken sandwich, hashbrowns and a drink for a total of about $8. The restaurant was not busy, and I was one of maybe four people in the place. Here are two extremes on what could happen: | |
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12-17-2012 04:57 PM
#60
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12-17-2012 07:27 PM
#61
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My thoughts, again, are that tip is a charge that is implicitly added to every bill, and if you don't feel that this establishment is worth their service charges, then don't go there to eat. I mean, Waffle House is pretty fucking infamous for having horrendous service, so if you weren't interested in getting $8-worth of food for $10 because the service there isn't worth the $2, then I would suggest going somewhere else to get your waffles. | |
12-17-2012 09:50 PM
#62
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I think spoon's "I waited 3 minutes for my drink at Waffle House so I don't tip you" example is a bit extreme, but I think that your argument doesn't work either, surviva. | |
12-17-2012 10:21 PM
#63
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If you replace the word "people" with the word "employer" and the word "tip" with the word "pay," this is, quite literally, how it works for any other service job in the world. Not that I mean to argue that how we pay any employee in any line of work is even remotely optimal, (I'm not arguing that a cook who gives fuckall about his job and doesn't care how runny the yolks are should make more than competent, at least half-caring cooks), but I'm just pointing out that this thing you're calling bullshit is a pretty goddamned mundane thing. | |
12-17-2012 06:01 PM
#64
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I think it's worth pointing out that if I'm with friends, we'll often play games like betting on the age of the waitress. If the waitress plays along, she gets a better tip. If she's a bitch, she might get a worse tip. | |
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12-17-2012 06:06 PM
#65
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and if she's cute vs she's an uggo? | |
12-17-2012 06:18 PM
#66
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I actually probably over-correct for the looks of the waitress. If she's attractive, then I'm probably more harsh on average unless it's someone I'm currently involved with. In those cases, I just leave a normal tip every single time so that there are no expectations set for me tipping them extra. | |
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12-17-2012 10:42 PM
#67
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ugh, this got too long for me to not grunch... | |
Last edited by boost; 12-17-2012 at 10:44 PM. | |
12-18-2012 02:15 AM
#68
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12-18-2012 05:36 PM
#69
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I didn't bother getting into how success in accruing tips has so little to do with alacrity to give free refills because I didn't think it's relevant to this particular topic and because I've gotten into it in other threads, but maybe I'll dig it up. | |
12-17-2012 10:42 PM
#70
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I have a story that is not meant to be agenda-based or anything: | |
12-18-2012 03:02 AM
#71
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Does America have a minimum wage? Do waitresses not by law earn this exclusive of tips meaning tips? | |
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12-18-2012 05:44 AM
#72
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In some states, waitresses can be paid less than minimum wage. However, if they do not make at least minimum wage including their tips, then their employer has to compensate them so that they are getting at least minimum wage. In many states, they have to make minimum wage before tips. | |
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12-18-2012 12:56 PM
#73
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12-18-2012 03:47 PM
#74
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Dude, what, no. If the employer is keeping any portion of the tip pool, they are breaking the law. This is true for all 50 states afaik, and when it's not, it's a huge exception to the rule. | |
12-18-2012 12:46 PM
#75
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In many states "wage" is total earnings, or "payroll + tips", and it is legal (though I've never heard of anyone doing this) for the employer to collect all tips which are in excess of minimum wage from their employees. | |