Oh where do I begin. First, I recognize that someone has to serve food at restaurants but I also realize that that someone doesn't have to be me. My statement about being a failure if I found myself waiting tables is a personal one that only applies too me. Some people are fine with it and work to be the best wait person they can, good for them but it has never been nor will it ever be a goal of mine or good enough for me.
I haven't had an opportunity to try this yet, thankfully, but now if I got bad service here in CA I would simply not leave a tip at all. If the server was dumb enough to say anything about it I'd have him or her bring the manager over to discuss the matter. He or she gets paid as much as the fast food worker in CA the tip, since it comes after the meal is an extra financial thank you for doing a good job. If they didn't keep my drink full, if I had to constantly ask for refills or my order was wrong, no tip. I don't usually blame the wait staff for a meal being late but if tips are shared by the cooks I should be applying the same tipping mentality to late meals.
I'm sorry if I lost anyone with my analogies but my point is simple, I keep hearing about how waiting tables is so hard so waiters deserve a tip, and I think BS, waiting tables doesn't even come close to a lot of the jobs I've had when it comes to difficulty and none of those jobs were subject to tipping. If how hard or stressful a job was determined if it was subject to tips, I would be tipping many others I deal with not wait staff. I've never tipped an airline pilot but maybe I should since I have a much greater interest in an airline pilot doing a good job than a waiter doing one. My other point being if tipping practices are changing such that a waiter can't make as much as they used to, get a new job, bitching won't help and bitching to a patron who you perceive has stiffed you for not leaving a completely discretionary tip will likely get you fired, not a bigger tip.
I deal with government employees all the time. The best example is the dmv. For the most part they provide shitty service, usually slow, sometimes just wrong. However, there are still a few that do a great job not in the hope of getting a big tip, since I've never seen a dmv employee get a tip, but for the satisfaction of doing a job well. I and my coworkers don't get tips, most of us spend a lot of time getting the job done right the first time because we take pride in doing good work and it is simply expected of us. Tipping seems to send the wrong message in my opinion, like do a good job only if there is something extra in it for you. THe financial rationale for tipping has been done away with in ca (and seven. Other states) why should tipped employees not have the same mentality as non-tipped employees in these states?
I'm a fan of
@OCMD , not because I always agree with him but because he is brutally honest with his opinions. Still that doesn't mean that I will be bullied, embarrassed or shamed into changing the way I tip / paying for standard or substandard service.
@cbus I've done a lot of research into tipping lately so I'm sure I'm not simply uninformed, I am opinionated, but also educated. Tipping for bad service simply because it is the norm (seemingly here in the us) just doesn't make sense too me.
Some related notes:
I saw my accountant at this past weekend and she mentioned that unlike charitable contributions (e.g. To a church) tips are not tax deductible. If I'm making a pros and cons list on tipping this would definitely be a con and just another reason not to engage in tipping.
I also resubscribed to the local newspaper. It was a $26 bill and I wrote in a $14 tip. Hopefully, the paper man and not just his employer gets it. I usually give him a cash tip at Christmas but didn't wake up in time to meet him this past year. Things have changed, my friends used to be paper boys when we were kids. They would deliver the paper on their bmx bikes and walk to the front door to collect the fees and their tips, if any. Now my paper boy is man that delivers the paper from a used Lexus and the bill is mailed to me in the form of a subscription renewal.
Last night I picked up dinner from the spaghetti factory. The receptionist took my order and said it will be ready in 15 minutes, it ended up taking 30 so instead of a 10% tip on a $40 meal I simply added a dollar and change to get me to the next full dollar. I retrospect I shouldn't have even left that much since when I got home I found that she didn't include the plastic ware that I confirmed I wanted when she asked. I would have been better off paying my son the same money to set the table last night when we got home.
Tips stand for "to insure prompt service" and they they started as being given before the service was rendered not after it. It looks like the practice of tipping after the service was rendered started here in the u.s. If I remember, the next time I eat out, I will estimate the final bill pull 30% out in cash and let the waiter or waitress know this is their potential tip, work for it or it will decrease. It will be interesting to see the result, hopefully I don't end up getting poisoned with the special and vomiting or sitting on the toilet for the day.