Keeping the Customer Satisfied
Lut has remarked the last several times he's ordered pizza on the speediness of the delivery: he'll get an estimate of 30 or 40 minutes, and then the pizza will arrive in less than 20. Last night, when the pizza showed up in 18 minutes, we got a clue as to why: "You were supposed to be my third delivery, but when I saw that tip, I decided to make you the first."
Apparently, tipping actually can make a difference in service quality. Who knew? :) Although I do feel a bit guilty about bumping other customers down the list, if that's what's happening. I prefer to root for "encouraging efficiency and productivity". =D
Apparently, tipping actually can make a difference in service quality. Who knew? :) Although I do feel a bit guilty about bumping other customers down the list, if that's what's happening. I prefer to root for "encouraging efficiency and productivity". =D
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I have a friend back in CA that the pizza guys came to know tipped like a third to a half the price of the pizza itself. Whenever he ordered they practically teleported to his house with the cheese on the pizza still bubbling.
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I got sick of pizza arriving late and having to shepherd the delivery boy to my apartment every single time (they kept standing by the call box and calling me on their cell phone which meant I couldn't buzz them in, so I'd have to get dressed and go down to the door to pick it up) so I started going and just picking it up myself. Much faster. x.x
Maybe they were being deliberately unhelpful because I was tipping a flat dollar for delivery and not some percentage of the price as if it was a sit-down restaurant or something.
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So I tip well. :)
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Even so, yeah, it's by no means a well-paying job. And yeah, it's not fair to skimp on tip just because you're poor. It's not like they're rich. :/
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(Anonymous) 2010-11-20 08:14 am (UTC)(link)So, hey, those other customers? If they did the same thing, they might not get bumped.