Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Tipping rules


Hotsauce

Recommended Posts

I have noticed a common theme amount restaurants like Moes. When you use a credit card, there is a line for a tip. Today, I went to Roly Poly sandwich shop and walked up to the counter, ordered a sandwich, chips and a fountain drink. I got my own chips, filled my own drink, and when i heard my name, got my food.

It has always been my view that you tip for good service, or if someone goes out of their way to please you. So I tip a restaurant where I sit down and food/drink is bought to me. I also tip at a car wash when the guy goes out of his way to work extra hard on my rims, or I tip a caddie when golfing, etc....

However I choose not to tip at these restaurants where I have to serve myself. How do you guys feel about this?

Also, how about the bathroom attendants? I was in the bathroom at the airport in Charlotte, and some dude was just standing around grabbing towels....I should be able to choose to get my own!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

i've wondered about this too. the cooks are paid like cooks. the cashier is surely paid like a cashier. seems like every business just has their hand out these days.

i typically give a dollar and change though, but mostly cuz i'm confused as to what to do. like 1.50 to make 8.50 an even 10. not sure who gets that money.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.fiscalfizzle.com/2011/03/tipping-lunch-restaurants/

"I’ve noticed a growing trend in the world of eating out, specifically for restaurants like:

* take-out joints for lunches

* smoothie shops

* ice cream parlors

* sandwich shops

* pizza places (non-delivery)

For years, these take-out establishments have been content with setting their prices to cover their expenses and make a healthy profit. Somewhere along the line, a genius business person came up with the idea that putting a tip line on the receipt and forcing people to sign for the transaction might boost profits!"

In my opinion, a tip is something asked for and received when a service is performed—in the case of restaurants, that’s the act of cooking, serving, busing, seating, etc. But one can also make the case that a lot of those things are happening when we visit some of these smaller joints.

"I base my decision on the simple fact that these places have never before asked for tips. That leads me to believe that this is nothing but a move to increase per-check totals and boost revenue, not a genuine move to “reward” the service of employees."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I leave a dollar because:

A. I'm not poor

B. I'm not cheap

C. I've worked in restaurants before

D. Because in two weeks when I look at my CC statement, the $9 meal won't feel any different than the $8 meal I could have had w/out tipping

E. All of the above

Assume at lunch you left $1 everyday mon-fri for a year....that's $260 a year!

Or if you eat out lunch twice a week, $104 a year

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I am trying to remember when I EVER said reach for need. My thing if someone falls you jump, if you can trade back a few slots and get help at the right value and pick up some ammo to move up from 51 which I think is outside the money zone, then you do that.   Take a WR later. Plenty of capable WRs have come from the 3rd round. Though this year I would go for C there if there was a reasonable choice. Take a TE if you must. I see more reason to take WR than TE. I think you give guys drafted two years ago and last year a chance to develop before cancelling them.    I think it is kind of unrealistic to throw everything all in on offense in hopes of going deep in the playoffs after an 8-10 year, even if it did have some nice bright spots in it.    And outside of this argument but relevant to it, I am bothered by Canales and Morgan and their apparent posture that we have arrived and are now in the big boy club. I don’t know where that comes from. They are out there talking like they are winners at 8-10. Backing into the playoffs in a real convoluted tie breaker scenario. They had some good games, yes. But the big feather n the cap, the LA Rams matchups, did you see what the Rams did? They didn’t fire the coaches but they fired their defensive backs. Bryce beat them yes, and it was pretty, but it was kind of like the Bucs and Mike Evans picking on our decimated secondary in 2022. Someone (Wilks) went down for allowing that to happen and they went down in LA too.  Wr aren’t as good as a whole lot of homers think we are. Shore up the trenches.    I think too many fans buy into it because they are so starved for anything that looks like a winner. 
    • How exactly does one win OROY "by default"? Wouldn't winning the award mean that of the two, McMillon stayed strong the entire year while the other guy didn't and fizzled out? That's like saying Secretariat only won by default because the other horse stopped moving midway through the race. Absolutely zero logic in that statement, which makes me very glad that I've never really paid much attention to Walterfoozball.
    • I agree, teams in the past have fired the HC in order to retain a coach on staff...hell it happened to Mcderp this year, rams in the past and Im missing another.  The fall off for the Panthers team defense was huge once Mcderp leftd and Ron could not fix it even when he named himself DC. 
×
×
  • Create New...