shocker, lol |
This. A good cleaner is going to be in demand, and will drop clients who pull stuff like this. |
| "These people?" |
You're horrible. I despise people who employ people who are probably poor/low income and then act stingy when it comes to tips. When you're at the bottom of the income bracket, those tips make a huge difference. It's a thousand times worse if you're the type who gives expensive gifts to family and friends. |
The cleaning people are your staff helping you run your household. These tipping standards have existed forever and you not knowing and not following them is a sign you are low class. |
| yes, insulting |
Just like tipping at a restaurant, if you can't afford to do it, don't go out to eat. If you can't afford to tip your cleaning people at Christmas, you are a stingy ahole. You take care of the people who take care of you. |
Merry Christmas and you step off. |
| Your friend is rude and should give cash. Our weekly is $320 (that includes a $25 tip) and we gave a $400 bonus plus a box of chocolates for each (there are two). They work very hard and a weekly tip + annual bonus isn’t going to break the bank for us. |
| We don't give bonuses in fact it should be the other way around you give gifts to clients so they should be giving you something. However we don't care either way . |
We don't get Christmas bonuses should I get mad at my company |
| We give $200 and a nice box of chocolates. |
| Yeah that's awful |
| I've noticed over the years that when I just give cash (in a card) as a holiday bonus to my Latina cleaners, I get a regular thank you. When I give a gift, they get really excited. So I do both. Can anyone explain this? |
PP here. The difference between hiring cleaners and going to a restaurant is that it's an ongoing relationship. If you got laid off during the year or experienced other financial hardship, you might have enough to keep on your cleaner but not to give them a cash bonus. Sure, you could also have just fired your cleaner and then not had any bonus obligation, but I'm guessing most cleaners would prefer to keep an otherwise good client over the course of the year and miss out on one tip than lose that work altogether. If I were in that situation I would likely also recommend my cleaner to others to help them get more work, but that's not something that counts as a bonus. But no, tipping your cleaner in December is not the same as tipping the waiter at the end of a meal. |