+1 same here. |
| When places don't have a no tip option and they go up to 25% tip, I just get really angry that the business owners refuse to pay their employees and that it somehow has become my job to pay their employees. I buy Compass Coffee now for this reason. Before I knew they did this, I went in and was like "sheesh that's an expensive latte", but then nobody hit me up for a tip and I felt so good about life that I'm never going anywhere else. |
Yes, I had to adjust the way I approach these interactions. I used to view tipping as a form of thank you or a compliment to the staff, and I was happy to provide the tip. Now that places aggressively ask for tips or provide a "default" tip on electronic transactions that I must affirmatively change, I view it as what it is -- a negotiation. It's not a thank you or a compliment, we're bargaining and your goal is to get as much of my money as possible. Well now my goal is to keep as much of my money as possible, and I'm not going to bullied or manipulated into giving more. See how that works? |
If you are unable to calculate the tip you want and have to use the preset options, you deserve to pay a 2-3% penalty. |
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Tipping is an evil practice and we should all boycott it.
First, it puts the economic risks of running a business on the low paid employee rather than the wealthy owner. For example, if you own a restaurant, you keep your restaurant open from 12pm-10pm. You know most of the customers come between 7pm and 10pm but you can't just open for 3 hours. You hire staff and pay them $3.50 an hour knowing there will be several hours where they will not get any tips. New waiters know that they will often get the shifts where no customers come but they still earn $3.50 an hour. Second, if your restaurant is terrible, if the economy is down, if you decide to open in a bad location, no customers come and the owner has lost nothing but $3.50 an hour. If the restaurant is understaffed and customers tip badly, they also don't earn very much. Some weeks a waiter might earn a lot, some a little - but their rent and other expenses stay the same. Third, many waiters will say, I like to get tips because I earn more than I would if I was only earning minimum wage. What they are missing is that restaurants will not be able to pay minimum wage - they will have to pay above minimum wage (like McDonald's sometimes does when they really need staff). And they will be better able to predict their earnings. https://time.com/5404475/history-tipping-american-restaurants-civil-war/ |
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Sometimes the tip screen will have little grades for the tips. Like it will say "18% (fair)" or "22% (good)" or "25% (great)."
And the funny thing is that these grades are really supposed to be a reflection of the customer's opinion of the service. Like you are really only supposed to tip 25% for really exceptional service, and if your experience was only fair, 18% is appropriate. Which makes sense, because a tip is supposed to be like a grade for the service, right? But the tone of tipping culture has made it seem like these are actually grades for the tip itself, or the customer giving it. Oh, an 18% tip? Okay I guess, but you can do better. Just 22%. Alright, but not exceptional. There you go, 25%, good job! Eff you. |
What’s your HHI? |
| Do what you want. I do 20% for good service and 15% for just OK. |
What’s your HHI? |
This. I wish that we could just go out to eat without having to do a stupid calculation at the end to pay servers. I'm over tipping. Employers, learn how to run a business and pay your people. |
Same. |
Many systems intentionally make it hard to customize your tip. You can, but it's not obvious and the system is clunky, whereas the preset tips are designed to be very easy to use. It's a manipulation tactic. |
| just dont tip, it's not illegal |
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Why are you acting like this is some foregone conclusion, like you are being frog-marched into the trunk of a car?
Tip what you want, when you want. Like always. As has always been true. Get your precious feelings hurt about some other imaginary hardship. Because OPTIONAL practices ain't it. |
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Amazing. A bunch of rich white professional and allegedly liberal women who purport to care complaining about leaving a few extra pennies as a tip.
The hypocrisy of DCUM is over the top. |