A newspaper’s recount of a bad restaurant experience is news of the dog-bites-man variety. But a critique of restaurant patrons’ behavior? That’s Britney Spears gnawing on the leg of Paris Hilton’s Chihuahua, with Michael Jackson holding the leash. Clearly The Scoop would be remiss if it didn’t note the 2,000-word roundup this week in The Dallas Morning News of restaurant employees’ pet peeves about customers.
The report was a counterpoint to a March Herald story on the little things about restaurants that irk consumers. Then, as with Wednesday’s article, the report was based on first-hand experiences of the aggrieved parties.
Joyce Saenz Harris, the author of the Wednesday’s article, noted that the March story drew 500 responses from readers. The run-down of server and manager’s gripes will probably draw more objections, even though many of the complaints were the same as the ones voiced by patrons. Server and serve-ee both loath parents who let their wolf pups tear through the dining room like a starved pack in a clearing filled with gazelles.
Ironically, patrons were just as likely as restaurant personnel to complain about boorish patrons; the ones who spend the meal on a cell phone were particularly likely to be regarded as snakes by both camps.
But restaurant professionals did cite some curses that are peculiar to their side of the table. Like getting stiffed routinely by customers who either don’t know how to tip—they leave a flat rate like $5, regardless of the bill—or are quick to rescind it for the slightest infraction, like forgetting the third refill of an iced tea for one person in a party of 12.
Ramon Infante, a former waiter at Dallas’ Old Warsaw restaurant, recounted how he’d lost take-home money several times to wives who held back after a family vacated a table and then took a few of the dollars their husbands had left as tips.
In particular, Harris noted, servers are “unhappy with campers,” as her article put it. Several noted how parties would camp out at a table for the equivalent of several table turns, and then tip as if they’d eaten expeditiously. “Customers should realize that each table is only as valuable as the amount of time a server turns it over,” noted Monica Newbury, a manager at Sali’s Pizza.
Reservation no-shows were also blasted.
You can check out Harris’ article at the Morning News and consider the solution she puts forth, for aggrieved patron and restaurant employee alike: “Treat other people the way you would like to be treated,” she writes.
Friday, July 20, 2007
Turnng the tables on pesky customers
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The camper mentality works both ways. If i am served salad then entree within 5 minutes of each other, and you quit filling my glass before I am done with my meal, and start asking who gets the check, I will ask for more tea, and stay a long time and tip only 15%. It works both ways!!!
ReplyDeleteServers have no control over how long it takes the food to come out of the kitchen. If you receive your food to quickly or it takes too long it rarely has anything to do with what your server has done.Too often servers get stiffed on a tip due to mistakes made in the kitchen. Most of the time it is by people who have never worked in the industry and have know idea how the flow of a kitchen goes. Servers are only in control of the tables in their section. Cooks have to keep up with every order that goes through the kitchen including take-out.jfpmlq
ReplyDeleteServers have no control over how long it takes the food to come out of the kitchen. If you receive your food to quickly or it takes too long it rarely has anything to do with what your server has done.Too often servers get stiffed on a tip due to mistakes made in the kitchen. Most of the time it is by people who have never worked in the industry and have know idea how the flow of a kitchen goes. Servers are only in control of the tables in their section. Cooks have to keep up with every order that goes through the kitchen including take-out.
ReplyDeleteanonymous
ReplyDelete"Servers have no control over how long it takes the food to come out of the kitchen."
This is 100% FALSE! My husband and I waited a half an hour LITERALLY for an appetizer all because our waiter FORGOT TO PUT THE ORDER INTO THE COMPUTER. See, we ordered our drinks and appetizer first. Then he came back some time later to get our entree order. HE was the CAUSE of us waiting that long. HOW THE HELL CAN YOU BLAME THE COOKS FOR SOMETHING LIKE THAT?
Also, when servers decide to buss a table or go voluntarily to other tables to ask if they need anything, THOSE ACTIONS ARE DELAYS IN GETTING THE ORDER INTO THE COMPUTER, THEREFORE, IT'S THE SERVER'S FAULT I AM WAITING AN EXTRA 3 minutes or 5 minutes. As long as there's nobody's food or bar drink that is ready that ordered BEFORE the current customer that the server just got the order from, the thing the server should be doing at that point is going to put the order into the computer. They should NEVER pick up dishes or buss a table BEFORE doing that. By doing this, delays the customer's food or drinks. Even though it may be 2 minutes, it may add up to be 8 minutes due to the bartender putting in an order, which may be for the same exact thing. Think about it. If the bartender puts in an order for cheese sticks BEFORE my server does all because my server decided to buss a table instead of putting my order in for my cheese sticks, GUESS WHOSE FOOD COMES OUT FIRST? The person at the bar, even though I would have placed my order BEFORE the person at the bar did. The difference, the bartender would have put the order in IMMEDIATELY, whereas my server would have basically held my order on his or her pad of paper until she or he was ready to put the order in.
Also, food taking a long time could be the server's fault due to they just forget to get something. I have waited 25 minutes for a margarita, NOT due to the bartender, due to my waiter at Applebee's that FORGOT TO GO GET IT. My husband had ordered a bisque one time at a restaurant and the waitress totally forgot about it. That was supposed to be out BEFORE the entree, NOT AFTER! THAT WAS HER FAULT, NOT THE COOK'S.
So unless the server goes put the order in IMMEDIATELY INTO THE COMPUTER(OBVIOUSLY unless someone's food or drink that ordered BEFORE the current customer did)and the server or another server gets the food as soon as it is ready, those are the ONLY WAYS that it's NOT the "SERVER'S" fault.
"If you receive your food to quickly or it takes too long it rarely has anything to do with what your server has done."
To be honest with you, it's NOT "RARELY." My husband and I eat out EVERY WEEKEND and have been doing this since 2001. Receiving food quickly is great unless appetizers are brought at the same time as the entrees.
The LONGER you wait to put the order into the computer, the LONGER the customer will wait for what they ordered. That's the TRUTH. One time at Chili's, my husband and I were just finished our entrees, but I wanted to order a refill on my soft drink and my husband did also. I also ordered a margarita. Instead of just putting the dirty plates on the table next to us that had already dirty plates or maybe even just leaving those dishes there, NO, she grabs our dishes, then goes to buss a table as well as stack plates BEFORE going to put in my order for my margarita and getting our refills. Not only did she delay our refills which is in HER control 100%, but my margarita order got delayed from being made by the bartender all because she decided to buss the table next to us. They didn't even have a wait for a table at the time. If I would have ordered food, she would have delayed that order from getting into the computer system at least 2 minutes, because by the time she went to the kitchen to drop off those dishes as well as doing the bussing and stacking those plates, that was 2 minutes we could have already received our soft drink refills. So you are SOOOO WRONG that servers have NO CONTROL of how long customers wait for their food or drinks. You have NO CLUE WHAT YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT!
If I would have been the server in that situation, I would have left the dishes right where they were, went to the computer IMMEDIATELY to put in the order for the margarita and went to get the refills. Brought back the refills and THEN grabbed those dishes. I would have thought of the customer's thirst, feelings, and time. My margarita may have been done by the time she finished bussing the table and putting away the dishes if there were no other orders the bartender was making at the time considering it wasn't a frozen margarita that had to be made in a blender.
"Servers are only in control of the tables in their section."
That is FALSE when a restaurant has other servers running each others food such as Applebee's. It's called READING THE TICKET BEFORE YOU BRING THE FOOD OUT. If the ticket has been put in correctly by the server, if you weren't the server for a table for instance that ordered a side of ranch with their food, if it's not on the plate, but it is on the ticket, YES, by you giving service to customers, that IS in your control to make sure the ranch is on the plate by comparing the ticket with the plate of food BEFORE you go deliver that food. Now if the server has input the order incorrectly into the computer, well, that cannot be the other server's fault that is bringing out the food OBVIOUSLY if the ranch isn't on the plate for instance.