This is 100% true, which is why fine dining doesn't exist outside of the united states. If only places like Japan and France had tipping, they would have "real" fine dining restaurants with quality food and quality service.
Bad examples. Universal healthcare and other social services in those countries allow people to do this work for less actual pay while still having the safety net in place. If they push service into a $15 a hour position for someone with 10 years of experience you can expect those people to leave that industry. These are not dumb people.
ummm there are more Michelin starred restaurants in Japan than in the US. Ditto for France.
you have absolutely no idea what you are talking about. like zero.
source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Michelin_starred_restaurants#By_country
if you believe this you must
- go to balling places on a daily basis OR
- not go to very high end places OR
- don't drink alcohol OR
- some combination of the above
What's the tipping policy in Japan again? And France?
I don't really drink alcohol when I dine out. Wine and alcohol subsidizes the food price at many of the finer restaurants.
I have no idea. Keep trying to deflect.
Regardless, your statement said one thing that was totally false and the facts prove that. You can't get much more fine dining than Michelin stars and the two countries you SPECIFICALLY pointed out as lacking in find dining, are the two leaders, by far, in Michelin starred/fine dining establishments.
restaurant owners have for years tried to find ways to take tips from foh employees. They are finally doing it and pocketing more money for themselves while paying people less.
Being a server in a decent place was a middle class job. One of the few middle class low edu jobs left in this country. They will be gone in 10 years.
No they won't be cooks because they aren't dumb. They will leave the industry. Good luck finding good servers for your $400 per person restaurant. Do you know what happens at understaffed restaurants?
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Once again you're totally right. I've been to fine dining restaurants in Japan and France and the servers are all awful - claim jumper status.
The tipping model is the only model that delivers quality servers. Sorry I was mistaken.
And by that I meat the tipping model creates an entitled whiny ass force of servers and having a fairly paid crew where everyone feels valued including BOH is a way better model
Let me repeat for emphasis - entitled, whiny ass servers. "OMG I had to memorize an order and give a guy water. Obv I deserve $23/hr while Jose in the back in that hundred degree kitchen totally deserves only $15/hr"
Joe's Crab Shack is decidedly not a decent place nor a middle class job.
Waiting tables at most places is good enough for a part time high school jobber looking to save up enough scratch for his first beater, not someone trying to pay their mortgage. There's absolutely no reason for this to be more than a barely-above-minimum wage job, and minimum wage as it is is too high.*
(*Or not high enough since every bump in minimum wage has a knock-on push to inflation rendering every bump to minimum wage moot causing the low end to bitch that they still don't make enough and the once thriving middle class to become the new poverty level because their wages never get a corresponding bump when minimum wage gets pushed up in the first place.)
You would be surprised. I worked at tgif in the late 90's as my first real gig aside from bussing tables and washing dishes when I was 15-18. I was a food runner for a year and pulled in $100 a night easy and sometimes more.
When I became a waiter it took a bit of time to get good at it but then I was pulling in $200 a night. Sometimes a lot more. I then moved to a local fine dining restaurant and worked lunches only while I built up my skillset working with higher end foods. I then worked there for a good amount of time before moving. I had the highest sales in the restaurant and never had any service complaints. I would regularly make $400 to $600 every friday/saturday night.
I then moved to washington, dc and worked in a world class steak house - because as someone so astutely pointed out you can make a lot of money selling slabs of beef. I served princes, diplomats, us senators, lobbyists, rock stars. I served the lord Satan Cheney, hillary clinton and Obama when he was a senator. I worked with $2000 bottles of wine and bottles of wine that are so rare the waiting lists are over 10 years to get 3 bottles. I was the lead server in 300 person buyouts of the restaurant in the closest commercial building to the capital.
I had full medical, dental, optical and 2 weeks vacation every year. I worked monday thru friday 4pm to 11pm.
I stayed with this as a career for a couple of reasons.
1. shorter hours so I could focus on my real passion.
2. I enjoy food and food culture. Wine, whisky and craft beers. The knowledge I have about food at this point (spelling aside) is not something you come across in daily life.
3. And I enjoyed serving people. I enjoyed making people happy. (this skill set has stayed with me into my next career)
The reason Im listing all of this is to show how a poor 15 year old who is hungry and didn't even finish high school can climb out of his shit socio-economic background and carve out a little existence for him/herself. I was literally buying food for my mom and little brother with my busboy earnings.
It would be a shame to remove this "net" from lower class people to be able to get ahead if they are willing to work hard and put the time in and have the right skills.
You know the Buddhists believe we spend one of our last lives in the service of others. You all should try it, you dont even have to work in a restaurant.
I already countered your claim. In those countries working in the service industry has all the benefits of working in other industries because those countries have large social nets. You can raise a family in france working at a restaurant. You cant do that here because for 1 you are paid 2.13 a hour and 2 you dont get health insurance in most situations.
The tipping model creates incentive to do well. Not only for the customer but also for the restaurant.
Maybe the server paid a normal wage will feel less inclined to offer another glass of wine?
Maybe they will feel less incentive to sell you the grand marnier 35 year old instead of the regular.
Maybe they dont care if you drink a 10 year old tawny instead of a great 20 year old tawny.
Maybe they dont care that you get a bitter green to go with that ribeye you ordered, even though it makes the ribeye better and makes the check larger it no longer matters to them.
So whatever. I worked in that industry for 15 years. Its really your problem that you dont appreciate the service you get.
We need better "nets" for the people that need them, not "nets" to trap the people that don't.
If you follow my link on the first page. It sounds like tipping is totally arbitrary. Good service, bad service. Very little difference in tip amount.
As for your other threats. If a server has a drop in sales. They can be replaced. And the ones pushing for higher priced items and provide better service receive a bonus.
The tipping model is effing horrible. It needs to go away.
If you follow my link on the first page. It sounds like tipping is totally arbitrary. Good service, bad service. Very little difference in tip amount.
As for your other threats. If a server has a drop in sales. They can be replaced. And the ones pushing for higher priced items and provide better service receive a bonus.
The tipping model is effing horrible. It needs to go away.
so obvious it hurts.
Well there you go. Offering sales bonuses is a very real way to deal with that issue but it really depends on the amounts. I would not work at a restaurant that didnt pay out at least $200 a night average - A 7 hour shift would be 30.70 a hour. Anything less and I would go somewhere else.
Well there you go. Offering sales bonuses is a very real way to deal with that issue but it really depends on the amounts. I would not work at a restaurant that didnt pay out at least $200 a night average - A 7 hour shift would be 30.70 a hour. Anything less and I would go somewhere else.
$30.70/hr is more than the starting salary of any college educated profession. More than just about any union factory worker, mechanic or tradesman contract I've ever seen, too. Considering this is at $10pp restaurants, that hire high school kids, this is just stupid.
Yeah, at a nice restaurant, top servers pulling in $31/hr might make sense, but the 12th grader at Chili's?
Can we at least stop hearing the BS about how they only make $2.13/hr? When they are are whining about getting a raise to $15/hr?