Great job. Especially with the tip. Tipping is a long lost art. It’s a great way to show your appreciation for a job well done. I even tip kids at the drive-through. Just to see the smile on their face is worth every penny. They feel validated, which many people don’t anymore these days.
Fun fact, if Hillary Clinton got into office she was going to do some type of executive order or something to end tipping. So you wouldn’t be able to tip people in restaurants, and what not. Rumor has it, she doesn’t tip at all or she’s a horrible tipper.
It’s just another way for communism to slip through, showing that hard work and doing a great job will not be rewarded. These people are sick!
Well that was your choice. Some people actually do tip people that clean their houses. I don’t know if you were cleaning houses, or if you were working somewhere else. But that’s your choice
If you work at a job where people do tip people, like being a barista, being a doorman, being a taxi driver, or some type of hospitality industry, then you will more than likely get a tip if you do a good job.
We work doing home repairs for people. And the last 10 years, we’ve gotten two tips. But I don’t expect him because that’s not a hospitality environment. It was just an extra bonus.
Boy I tell you, I didn’t know that tipping people were such a controversial subject. I made a simple comment, and people are bent out of shape about it.
I tip people for a job well done, and I will continue to do so. Nothing anybody says or does is going to change that. Get over it people!
Ggeezzz. The fact that someone would want to begrudge somebody else from trying to show appreciation for a job well done, or just wanting to put a smile on someone’s face is beyond me.
I’m not here on this platform for people to tell me what I should do and not do with my money. For a minute there, I thought we were on Reddit!
Waiters have literally chased people out to the parking lot. I'm not saying it's right, but yes. They even have to pay 10% of their sales as tips to the IRS whether theyade that in tips or not.
I said expected, not required. If someone is rude or inattentive, I won't tip.
If they try (especially new and overwhelmed servers even though the service sucks they really busted ass and worried about me), I tip.
They make 2.13 an hour here or something like $20 from house money. Some places don't even pay any house and servers only earn pay on tips.
So yes the expectation is that patrons who eat out will tip. If you go out and dont put in for tip, you will get shamed by any social circle you're in as far as I know.
I was a server and bartender for a while and I was always attentive and knowledgeable of the menu. I always treated a tip as a tip, but when you eat out watch how pressured people are to tip.
I always did well, it wasnt unheard of in a small mom and pop I wormed at to clear $350 on a Friday in tips. Idk why you assume I was a terrible server or never worked.
At least in my region of the US it is and I'm certain it's more than just my region, the social expectation is to tip. When I was a server we had to pay 10% of our sales as tax to account for tips (big chain, not a mom and pop). Even if it was a day where tips weren't coming in and ypu happened to make under 10%. Particularly lunch hour where people with fixed income who are tight on funds come in.
Of course there were many times where you'd make 20+% and you'd still claim 10%.
I still treated those guests as I would any other customer. But tips are expected for sure in my region and people will often say "if you can't afford to tip you can't afford to eat out."
Idk I'm in a blue state where servers make 2.13 an hour from their employer.
I always tip well because I know they get paid shit and I was in their shoes. Id they're particularly rude or dismissive, I won't, to send a message.
But tipping isn't just for excellent service here, it's for adequate service.
Great job. Especially with the tip. Tipping is a long lost art. It’s a great way to show your appreciation for a job well done. I even tip kids at the drive-through. Just to see the smile on their face is worth every penny. They feel validated, which many people don’t anymore these days.
Fun fact, if Hillary Clinton got into office she was going to do some type of executive order or something to end tipping. So you wouldn’t be able to tip people in restaurants, and what not. Rumor has it, she doesn’t tip at all or she’s a horrible tipper.
It’s just another way for communism to slip through, showing that hard work and doing a great job will not be rewarded. These people are sick!
Interesting.
I used to clean people's toilets and never got a tip. $12 an hour to clean toilets. That was the life.
Well that was your choice. Some people actually do tip people that clean their houses. I don’t know if you were cleaning houses, or if you were working somewhere else. But that’s your choice
If you work at a job where people do tip people, like being a barista, being a doorman, being a taxi driver, or some type of hospitality industry, then you will more than likely get a tip if you do a good job.
We work doing home repairs for people. And the last 10 years, we’ve gotten two tips. But I don’t expect him because that’s not a hospitality environment. It was just an extra bonus.
I cleaned homes. Just regular residential homes. For all kinds of people.
Okay? And?
Boy I tell you, I didn’t know that tipping people were such a controversial subject. I made a simple comment, and people are bent out of shape about it.
I tip people for a job well done, and I will continue to do so. Nothing anybody says or does is going to change that. Get over it people!
Ggeezzz. The fact that someone would want to begrudge somebody else from trying to show appreciation for a job well done, or just wanting to put a smile on someone’s face is beyond me.
I’m not here on this platform for people to tell me what I should do and not do with my money. For a minute there, I thought we were on Reddit!
The only tip Hillary gives is the tip of her strap-on to her aide Huma.
Tipping is expected and wages should not depend on it.
^ Found the server ^ who thinks he can sleepwalk through his job and still get 20%
Waiters have literally chased people out to the parking lot. I'm not saying it's right, but yes. They even have to pay 10% of their sales as tips to the IRS whether theyade that in tips or not.
lol
I said expected, not required. If someone is rude or inattentive, I won't tip.
If they try (especially new and overwhelmed servers even though the service sucks they really busted ass and worried about me), I tip.
They make 2.13 an hour here or something like $20 from house money. Some places don't even pay any house and servers only earn pay on tips.
So yes the expectation is that patrons who eat out will tip. If you go out and dont put in for tip, you will get shamed by any social circle you're in as far as I know.
Social shaming, lol
Tipping is NOT expected- let me guess, you either never worked in restaurants or you are oblivious to the fact that you were a terrible server...
Fyi--bartender for 10yrs, paid for my undergrad degree no loans, all tips.
I was a server and bartender for a while and I was always attentive and knowledgeable of the menu. I always treated a tip as a tip, but when you eat out watch how pressured people are to tip.
I always did well, it wasnt unheard of in a small mom and pop I wormed at to clear $350 on a Friday in tips. Idk why you assume I was a terrible server or never worked.
At least in my region of the US it is and I'm certain it's more than just my region, the social expectation is to tip. When I was a server we had to pay 10% of our sales as tax to account for tips (big chain, not a mom and pop). Even if it was a day where tips weren't coming in and ypu happened to make under 10%. Particularly lunch hour where people with fixed income who are tight on funds come in.
Of course there were many times where you'd make 20+% and you'd still claim 10%.
I still treated those guests as I would any other customer. But tips are expected for sure in my region and people will often say "if you can't afford to tip you can't afford to eat out."
Idk I'm in a blue state where servers make 2.13 an hour from their employer.
I always tip well because I know they get paid shit and I was in their shoes. Id they're particularly rude or dismissive, I won't, to send a message.
But tipping isn't just for excellent service here, it's for adequate service.