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#1
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![]() "C Kingsbury" wrote in message ink.net... "Martin Hotze" wrote in message ... who has less money? European consumers or the European airlines? Consumers in general. I don't think the disparity is enormous and in any case there's no question that a European with a decent job can enjoy a very nice quality of life. Also, assuming that an American family and European one would both budget say $2000 for a vacation, the European family will likely be trying to spread it across a longer trip. In the US the typical vacation trip is a week, occasionally ten days, once in a while two weeks. And that's pretty much it for the year. When I worked for Bertelsmann my German comrades would typically take three or four weeks off in the summer, and two or three in the winter. Likewise when I was in Thailand a few years back, most of the Europeans I ran into were there for at least a month. So you guys need to stretch your money a little further even if salaries were identical, which they are not. tickets from Europe to the US east cost (both ways) sell for about EUR 500.00 - and with the fall of the exchange rate it is now about 40% cheaper to spend holidays in the US than it was in 2002. So be friendly to those French .. they (and others) have the money to spend in the US-tourism industry. So long as they tip 15% in bars and restaraunts they will be quite welcome. providing those working in the bars and restaurants earn it. |
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On Sat, 27 Nov 2004 16:01:03 -0000, Chris wrote:
So be friendly to those French .. they (and others) have the money to spend in the US-tourism industry. So long as they tip 15% in bars and restaraunts they will be quite welcome. providing those working in the bars and restaurants earn it. they have to travel there (to the US) in the first place. #m -- The policy of the American government is to leave its citizens free, neither restraining them nor aiding them in their pursuits. Thomas Jefferson |
#3
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![]() "Chris" wrote in message ... "C Kingsbury" wrote in message ink.net... So long as they tip 15% in bars and restaraunts they will be quite welcome. providing those working in the bars and restaurants earn it. When I worked for a European company I frequently went out for meals with senior managers visitng from Germany, the UK, etc. We'd spend $385 on dinner at a steakhouse where you had a waiter, a busboy, and a sommelier serving the table and they'd sign the credit card slip for $400. At a Chili's-type place the waitress would be lucky if she got more than change for a dollar. After the second or third time I gave up trying to explain "American customs" to them, after all, they were my bosses. The last time we went to the Palm I thought the waiters were going to jump us on our way out they were so mad. It was a sign of things to come as the US office failed in large part because these guys refused to understand that the American market did not function the same as the European one and they needed a different strategy. FWIW I have seen my share of Americans making fools of themselves in other cultures in both personal and business settings. Perhaps the most humorous example being a visit to the bullfights in Barcelona. There were four or five guys in front of us, very obviously American, and every time the matador would land a killing shot with his sword, they would jump up and yell, "Touchdown!" -cwk. |
#4
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On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 18:14:30 GMT, C Kingsbury wrote:
When I worked for a European company I frequently went out for meals with senior managers visitng from Germany, the UK, etc. We'd spend $385 on dinner at a steakhouse where you had a waiter, a busboy, and a sommelier serving the table and they'd sign the credit card slip for $400. At a Chili's-type *hehe* yep, in Europe most likely you don't calculate a percentage as a tip but more likely you round up the total. And I don't like the idea of *expected* tipping - even as part of their income. Let the boss pay their wages (even if this would mean to raise the prices on the menue). I generally only tip if the service was more than average (friendly and prompt service is part of the job and is expected). most likely (my personal experience) the staff at any establishment I've been so far in the US mostly doesn't deserve any tip at all. They (mostly) have no knowledge of their job and work this job only besides their college or whatever. All they can say is "Haa-aiiiiiiii, my name is Janine, and I am you waitress for tonight - our special for today is ..." and then she serves the plates with her fingers right beside the food. Disgusting. [yeah, generalised; there sure are well trained waiters out there in the US] place the waitress would be lucky if she got more than change for a dollar. After the second or third time I gave up trying to explain "American customs" to them, after all, they were my bosses. The last time we went to the Palm I thought the waiters were going to jump us on our way out they were so mad. It was a sign of things to come as the US office failed in large part because these guys refused to understand that the American market did not function the same as the European one and they needed a different strategy. You're right, the American market follows different rules than the European market (different values, resulting in different ways for marketing a placing a product in the market, ...). #m -- The policy of the American government is to leave its citizens free, neither restraining them nor aiding them in their pursuits. Thomas Jefferson |
#5
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![]() "Martin Hotze" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 18:14:30 GMT, C Kingsbury wrote: When I worked for a European company I frequently went out for meals with senior managers visitng from Germany, the UK, etc. We'd spend $385 on dinner at a steakhouse where you had a waiter, a busboy, and a sommelier serving the table and they'd sign the credit card slip for $400. At a Chili's-type *hehe* yep, in Europe most likely you don't calculate a percentage as a tip but more likely you round up the total. And I don't like the idea of *expected* tipping - even as part of their income. Let the boss pay their wages (even if this would mean to raise the prices on the menue). I generally only tip if the service was more than average (friendly and prompt service is part of the job and is expected). I would prefer to see the size of portions decrease 'cause I cannot eat it all and instead of reducing the prices pay a decent wage. I just hate to see good food going to waste and as for taking it home for the dog - well, I have no dog besides which its expensive dog food. |
#6
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"Chris" wrote in message
... I would prefer to see the size of portions decrease 'cause I cannot eat it all and instead of reducing the prices pay a decent wage. I just hate to see good food going to waste and as for taking it home for the dog - well, I have no dog besides which its expensive dog food. Don't they have refrigerators in the UK? Here in the US we do. And when a restaurant serves me twice as much food as I can eat (which they often do), I simply take the remaining portion home and have it for a later meal. Storing it in the refrigerator until that time, of course. As far as the relationship between portion sizes and prices go, there's a reason the portions are so large in the first place. It's because portion sizes don't have all that much to do with prices. Labor, rent, equipment costs, etc. are a much bigger chunk of what winds up on your bill. Making portions smaller wouldn't reduce prices by much at all. Pete |
#7
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Here in the US we do. And when a restaurant serves me twice as much food
as I can eat (which they often do), I simply take the remaining portion home and have it for a later meal. Storing it in the refrigerator until that time, of course. Mary and I usually split one entree, and order an appetizer or soup. I'm sure the wait staff hates it, but I just can't eat the portions that most restaurants serve -- and if I can, I shouldn't! -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#8
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:y2tqd.103738$V41.51654@attbi_s52... Here in the US we do. And when a restaurant serves me twice as much food as I can eat (which they often do), I simply take the remaining portion home and have it for a later meal. Storing it in the refrigerator until that time, of course. Mary and I usually split one entree, and order an appetizer or soup. I'm sure the wait staff hates it, but I just can't eat the portions that most restaurants serve -- and if I can, I shouldn't! That's not the point though. |
#9
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![]() "Martin Hotze" wrote in message news ![]() On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 18:14:30 GMT, C Kingsbury wrote: *hehe* yep, in Europe most likely you don't calculate a percentage as a tip but more likely you round up the total. And I don't like the idea of *expected* tipping - even as part of their income. Let the boss pay their wages (even if this would mean to raise the prices on the menue). I generally only tip if the service was more than average (friendly and prompt service is part of the job and is expected). Just keep in mind that your average waitress is paid somewhere around $3/hour by the restaraunt. Thus if you don't tip, the person basically doesn't get paid. You may find the "system" objectionable but don't take it out on the person at the bottom of the food chain. When in Rome... FWIW, the "system" does make some sense. First, it clearly connects pay to volume of work. On a busy night you work harder and get paid more. This is fairer to the staff and simpler for management. Second, it connects pay to quality very directly. The waitress is essentially paid by the customer after the service has been delivered, allowing you to vote with your wallet. I am one of those who feels tipping is getting a little out of hand- more and more people expect it and the percentage people think they're entitled to keeps going up. But, I have no doubt that the alternative would lead to much worse service. -cwk. |
#10
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"Colin W Kingsbury" wrote in message
k.net... [...] FWIW, the "system" does make some sense. First, it clearly connects pay to volume of work. On a busy night you work harder and get paid more. This is fairer to the staff and simpler for management. True. However, management could simply either pay waitstaff on commission, or even easier for management, just prorate their pay based on gross receipts. Second, it connects pay to quality very directly. The waitress is essentially paid by the customer after the service has been delivered, allowing you to vote with your wallet. That's the theory. However, in reality you have a wide variety of customers with a wide variety of tipping styles. You never know which guy you've worked your ass off for is going to stiff you, and you never know which fat cat is going to drop a load of cash even though you let his water glass sit empty for three minutes. Now whether waitstaff generally are in favor of this little game of roulette, I don't know. A lot of waiters I know get paid handsomely, mostly through tips, and they like their jobs. But as a customer, I have to say that I find tipping to be an archaic, inefficient custom. I am one of those who feels tipping is getting a little out of hand- more and more people expect it and the percentage people think they're entitled to keeps going up. But, I have no doubt that the alternative would lead to much worse service. I have a HUGE doubt that the alternative would lead to much worse service. A food service business will only do as well as their waitstaff performs. We may tip low for poor service, but more importantly, we just don't go back. A local Italian restaurant was our favorite for several years, but there was only one good waiter there. We always made sure we sat in his section when we went there, and we got the five-star treatment every visit. We tipped him well. But, when he had a falling out with the management and went to work somewhere else, we only gave the restaurant a couple more tries before deciding that there was no hope of ensuring that we got good service there. Our response would have been exactly the same had service charges been included in the bill. With or without tipping, service quality depends a LOT more on repeat business and management's ability to train and keep competent waitstaff around. And as far as tipping "getting a little out of hand", don't even get me started on the recent (last 5-10 years) tradition of people in what are really production jobs (behind-the-counter positions, primarily) expecting tips too. It's one thing if you're really a waiter who just happens to work behind a lunch counter instead of cruising the tables. But when you're just serving ice cream to a steady queue of people who walk right up to you? Forget it. Someone tell me again what all this flying stuff is doing in a food service newsgroup? I seem to be a bit confused... Pete |
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