northernlad
Well-Known Member
A few of my friends have been waiters and waitress', so my usual tip is 20% and i usually try to leave a cash tip. I too feel its something thats earned. Sometimes the waitstaff has earned less, sometimes they have earned more.
But that leads me to a question or maybe more of something that irritates me. I've been noticing, mostly at chain restaraunts, we are sat by one person, maybe the server will come by and ask for our drink order, or sometimes it's not our server, then the server will come by and ask if we've gotten our drinks and offer to take our order. Someone new brings our meal out, and usually rushes off. A few minutes later the server will come by and ask how the food is. Many times our order has been wrong and if we try to explain it to the new person they don't know what we ordered they're just handing us our food. Why does it take many different people to wait on us? I think it really leaves the customer feeling disconnected having so many people come around.
I know in this scenario I only mentioned about 3 people. But many times we've had 4+, one time I even remember having 6 people throughout our meal
I worked a long time in a major chain that relied heavily on the support team. The server takes your order and if he/she is not at the window as soon as the food comes up the expeditor or another server will run your food. It is designed to minimize your wait.
If the point of going out is to be waited on and have your dinner cooked by someone else, I don't understand why it matters who brings your food to your table. The server tips out the entire support staff so it is all equal in the end.