On layoffs, very bad attendance, and Iger's legacy being one of disgrace

flynnibus

Premium Member
There in lies the difference and the problem. Tips shouldn’t make up the difference. They should be an award on top of the wage for good service.

The old model of 'paid less than minimum wage' is not that common anymore (and rarely is the problem). The issue is people expect to be paid X... but they only get X by having tips plus their wages.

You can argue if the wages should be X to start with... but then you're back to the fundamental issue of if the pay should be guaranteed or is it a performance based comp model..
 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
To clarify, is that layoffs? I'm sure more than 15% of the company isn't "working" right now by way of furloughs
Had that thought too. I imagine it is more for the furlough positions that would not ecominf back in phases that could be soon a d .ore of cusbt jobs and redundant clarical positions or front of the line with less yeara, but that is an educated guess. Again, not just the parks and resorts. The company as a whole. My source said globally.
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
To clarify, is that layoffs? I'm sure more than 15% of the company isn't "working" right now by way of furloughs
Had that thought too. I imagine it is more for the furlough positions that would not ecominf back in phases that could be soon a d .ore of cusbt jobs and redundant clarical positions or front of the line with less yeara, but that is an educated guess. Again, not just the parks and resorts. The company as a whole. My source said globally.
The “furloughs” are going to be more “permanent-ee” soon enough.

There’s a lot of romanticism about “bounceback”...it’s just not gonna be that, however.
 
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Lilofan

Well-Known Member
Had that thought too. I imagine it is more for the furlough positions that would not ecominf back in phases that could be soon a d .ore of cusbt jobs and redundant clarical positions or front of the line with less yeara, but that is an educated guess. Again, not just the parks and resorts. The company as a whole. My source said globally.
That's realistic. All divisions may be feeling the pain of restructuring. The ones who survive the cuts will probably have more responsibilities added to their plate.
 

marni1971

Park History nut
Premium Member
Those of you questioning adding tips for large parties and our tips in America...have any of you been a waiter or waitress? I am not a waiter/waitress, but most work very hard and are often short changed when people don't tip.
If the service is good then they deserve a tip. If it’s not then it’s the fault of the employer for not paying the going rate in the first place.
 

brianstl

Well-Known Member
There are two trains of thought - as a visitor on US soil do you follow US custom, or do you do what you think what’s right and not make up for someone else’s wage problem. Unless of course the service deserves it.

But please don’t penalise me for having a largerr party and automatically increasing my bill even with shoddy service.

Or is there a middle ground?

Or is this off topic?
If Europeans don't want to tip, they should pay 20% more for their food and drink in the restaurant. The expectation of tipping reduces your meal and drink costs by at least that much.

If you really care about people like servers and bartenders financially, you don't want to get rid of tipping. Good servers and others in similar positions make far more money with tipping than they would ever make with increased hourly wages. I made really good money for someone in their 20's when I was bartending in the 2000's.

The top quality people and even the level below that in that industry will all end bailing out of that industry if tipping is done away with. It isn't worth it for the hourly wages that are proposed to replace it. You will end up with the same kind of service you get at fast food places.
 

marni1971

Park History nut
Premium Member
If Europeans don't want to tip, they should pay 20% more for their food and drink in the restaurant..
Which in effect is what the tip is. So increase the price by 20% and receive a tip on top if service warrants it.

A tip is a tip. Not a subsidy.

The Cambridge English dictionary of a tip:

“to give someone who has provided you with a service an extra amount of money to thankthem”
 
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brianstl

Well-Known Member
Which in effect is what the tip is. So increase the price by 20% and receive a tip on top if service warrants it.

A tip is a tip. Not a subsidy.
A current tip actually isn't a subsidy. It encourages people that otherwise wouldn't get into or stay in the profession to do so. Because providing excellent service will result in greater monetary reward than what a higher established hourly wage would. The higher hourly wage is actually the subsidy because it subsidizes poor service. Their is no reward for quality service because you are going to get paid the same as the person busting their but to deliver quality service.

Look, if you don't want to reward bad service while still not denying a server some sort of decent hourly wage just tip 10% to 15%. I always tip at least 15% no matter how bad the service because I worked in the industry and know even the best servers can have a bad hour or two. But I am a really generous tipper when I get good service and I worked in the industry at one point. It shouldn't be expected for others to tip like I do.

If you get bad service on a meal where a tip percentage higher than what you think is deserved is automatically added to your bill, ask to speak to manager before you pay your bill. Most places will adjust the charge to what you believe is appropriate for the service.

The sad fact is if you go to the higher hourly wage to replace tipping, tipping is going to basically disappear for quality service. In almost every restaurant where prices have been raised to support a higher hourly wage, servers have been banned by the employer from accepting any tip. If a customer still leaves a tip on the table the money must go to a charity if the customer refuses the return of the money. So good servers have had to take a huge pay cut and have been leaving the business in areas where local ordinances have required that servers be paid a full minimum wage amount.
 

marni1971

Park History nut
Premium Member
A current tip actually isn't a subsidy. It encourages people that otherwise wouldn't get into or stay in the profession to do so. Because providing excellent service will result in greater monetary reward than what a higher established hourly wage would. The higher hourly wage is actually the subsidy because it subsidizes poor service. Their is no reward for quality service because you are going to get paid the same as the person busting their but to deliver quality service.

Look, if you don't want to reward bad service while still not denying a server some sort of decent hourly wage just tip 10% to 15%. I always tip at least 15% no matter how bad the service because I worked in the industry and know even the best servers can have a bad hour or two. But I am a really generous tipper when I get good service and I worked in the industry at one point. It shouldn't be expected for others to tip like I do.

If you get bad service on a meal where a tip percentage higher than what you think is deserved is automatically added to your bill, ask to speak to manager before you pay your bill. Most places will adjust the charge to what you believe is appropriate for the service.

The sad fact is if you go to the higher hourly wage to replace tipping, tipping is going to basically disappear for quality service. In almost every restaurant where prices have been raised to support a higher hourly wage, servers have been banned by the employer from accepting any tip. If a customer still leaves a tip on the table the money must go to a charity if the customer refuses the return of the money. So good servers have had to take a huge pay cut and have been leaving the business in areas where local ordinances have required that servers be paid a full minimum wage amount.
Look, the Cambridge English Dictionary definition of a tip:

“to give someone who has provided you with a service an extra amount of money to thank them”

The sad fact is if you go to the higher hourly wage to replace tipping, tipping is going to basically disappear for quality service.
It works outside of the US. It’s not my fault your system is flawed.
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
If the service is good then they deserve a tip. If it’s not then it’s the fault of the employer for not paying the going rate in the first place.
Which in effect is what the tip is. So increase the price by 20% and receive a tip on top if service warrants it.

A tip is a tip. Not a subsidy.

The Cambridge English dictionary of a tip:

“to give someone who has provided you with a service an extra amount of money to thankthem”
In the US...a tip is not a subsidy.

It is basically the entire salary. Its whether a person can live or cannot.

That’s what it is.

And to be clear: this is something we do stupidly...it’s a terrible model and a way for employers to schlept costs on the consumer above what they charge for their product.
 
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Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
A current tip actually isn't a subsidy. It encourages people that otherwise wouldn't get into or stay in the profession to do so. Because providing excellent service will result in greater monetary reward than what a higher established hourly wage would. The higher hourly wage is actually the subsidy because it subsidizes poor service. Their is no reward for quality service because you are going to get paid the same as the person busting their but to deliver quality service.

Look, if you don't want to reward bad service while still not denying a server some sort of decent hourly wage just tip 10% to 15%. I always tip at least 15% no matter how bad the service because I worked in the industry and know even the best servers can have a bad hour or two. But I am a really generous tipper when I get good service and I worked in the industry at one point. It shouldn't be expected for others to tip like I do.

If you get bad service on a meal where a tip percentage higher than what you think is deserved is automatically added to your bill, ask to speak to manager before you pay your bill. Most places will adjust the charge to what you believe is appropriate for the service.

The sad fact is if you go to the higher hourly wage to replace tipping, tipping is going to basically disappear for quality service. In almost every restaurant where prices have been raised to support a higher hourly wage, servers have been banned by the employer from accepting any tip. If a customer still leaves a tip on the table the money must go to a charity if the customer refuses the return of the money. So good servers have had to take a huge pay cut and have been leaving the business in areas where local ordinances have required that servers be paid a full minimum wage amount.
Most of this is counteract by labor studies and/or effective models in other countries.

It’s what I call “Gipperwashing”
 

Sirwalterraleigh

Premium Member
A tip is a tip. Or it would be called a subsidy.

Or is like football vs soccer?
What i’m saying is that in practice a tip is the difference between having staff or not.

I get what you’re saying about semantics and oxford English...but you know we Americans are terrible at English🤪...

Trust only what we do...not what we say. Tips are salaries for tens of millions of service workers. Because it’s better for the business owners. And so it shall be.
 

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