Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Obviously I'm not going to cancel the event. But I feel like it is not difficult for them to just buy tea as a basic level of service for their customers.
To be clear-- I am not talking about only my own needs. I am certainly not the only person in a conference of 300 people who drinks tea.
Is the conference going to be attended only by UMC females over the age of 60 who live in urban areas of blue states?
If so, tea is a must-have.
Sorry for being so snarky, but you’re in a bubble.
Tea (esp hot tea) is consumed by a very small subset of the population. Not at all surprising that a resort wouldn’t stock it.
Anonymous wrote:Obviously I'm not going to cancel the event. But I feel like it is not difficult for them to just buy tea as a basic level of service for their customers.
To be clear-- I am not talking about only my own needs. I am certainly not the only person in a conference of 300 people who drinks tea.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds weird enough that I'm wondering if she didn't understand what you're asking. I'd call again tomorrow and see if they can just tell you what type of tea they carry.
Anonymous wrote:I work for an org that is planning a multi-day event at a hotel in Puerto Rico. It is a large, major chain hotel in San Juan. Our meeting planner reviewed our food and beverage orders with the hotel today today, and since she and I are both tea drinkers, she confirmed what type of black/breakfast tea they serve. And the hotel told her that they don't have black tea. Not that they are out-- they just don't stock it at all. I told her that is unacceptable and they have to either get some, or discount our beverage service rate if I have to purchase tea for all of the tea drinkers at the event.
Am I being unreasonable to expect that a major hotel that hosts large events should have breakfast tea available? I am accustomed to being given limited/bad tea options at restaurants so I always carry some in my bag, but I've never been told by a hotel that they simply don't carry it.
I realize that in the grand scheme of life this is not a big deal, but I have been attending/managing conferences for 20+ years and this is not an issue I've ever dealt with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for an org that is planning a multi-day event at a hotel in Puerto Rico. It is a large, major chain hotel in San Juan. Our meeting planner reviewed our food and beverage orders with the hotel today today, and since she and I are both tea drinkers, she confirmed what type of black/breakfast tea they serve. And the hotel told her that they don't have black tea. Not that they are out-- they just don't stock it at all. I told her that is unacceptable and they have to either get some, or discount our beverage service rate if I have to purchase tea for all of the tea drinkers at the event.
Am I being unreasonable to expect that a major hotel that hosts large events should have breakfast tea available? I am accustomed to being given limited/bad tea options at restaurants so I always carry some in my bag, but I've never been told by a hotel that they simply don't carry it.
I realize that in the grand scheme of life this is not a big deal, but I have been attending/managing conferences for 20+ years and this is not an issue I've ever dealt with.
Buy a big ol' box of Lipton from Giant and bring it with you and call it a day.
Would you say the same if a hotel said they didn't serve black coffee? Just bring a big ol' box of Nescafe?
Yes, if that is the hotel I chose and paid for w/o asking about their beverage options beforehand.
So you think it necessary to ask a major chain hotel in a major city in advance if they serve coffee? You wouldn't think that was a given?
Anonymous wrote:I work for a major hotel chain. That is weird. They have hot water for f sake.
Complain above her head.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for an org that is planning a multi-day event at a hotel in Puerto Rico. It is a large, major chain hotel in San Juan. Our meeting planner reviewed our food and beverage orders with the hotel today today, and since she and I are both tea drinkers, she confirmed what type of black/breakfast tea they serve. And the hotel told her that they don't have black tea. Not that they are out-- they just don't stock it at all. I told her that is unacceptable and they have to either get some, or discount our beverage service rate if I have to purchase tea for all of the tea drinkers at the event.
Am I being unreasonable to expect that a major hotel that hosts large events should have breakfast tea available? I am accustomed to being given limited/bad tea options at restaurants so I always carry some in my bag, but I've never been told by a hotel that they simply don't carry it.
I realize that in the grand scheme of life this is not a big deal, but I have been attending/managing conferences for 20+ years and this is not an issue I've ever dealt with.
Buy a big ol' box of Lipton from Giant and bring it with you and call it a day.
Would you say the same if a hotel said they didn't serve black coffee? Just bring a big ol' box of Nescafe?
I thought bringing a big box of tea is a great idea. And really, how many people drink tea? I think bringing one large box should more than cover it.