May 2014 - Page 17 of 24 - I Hate Working In Retail

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More Restaurants Are Banning Tips. That Might Be A Good Thing.

 

TIPPING

In the United States, customers are expected to add an extra 10 to 20 percent to their tab at the end of a meal – but increasingly restaurants are foregoing these tips.

Leaving a gratuity is de rigueur when dining out because pay for restaurant servers is so low.

While the US federal minimum wage is $7.25 an hour, wait staff can legally be paid as little as $2.13 in some places. In New York, one of the most expensive US cities, salaries for waiters start at $5.00 per hour.

For wait staff, tips help bolster pay in line with other restaurant workers who don’t receive gratuities.

However there is a new trend: Riki Restaurant in New York is one of a growing number of establishments eliminating tips by taking the unusual step of paying their staff higher wages.

“Riki Restaurant is now a non-tipping establishment,” read notices at the popular Japanese eatery. “Tipping is not required nor expected.”

– Protection from customers’ whims –

The no-tip policy is especially being adopted by upscale restaurants, said Michael Lynn, a professor at Cornell University’s School of Hotel Administration.

Folding tips into the meal tab protects waiters from being shortchanged by the occasional tight-fisted diner, said Lynn, who specializes in issues related to marketing and consumer behavior.

It’s seen as an issue of equity, as restaurants attempt “to equalize the pay between the front and the back of the house,” he said.

A downside is the sticker shock that patrons sometimes suffer when browsing through menus that have tips factored into the prices.

“American customers tend to not think of the tip as an expense, and they don’t really factor that into their assessment of how expensive a restaurant is,” Lynn said.

“It makes a restaurant look more expensive than a restaurant that has 15 percent lower prices, but expects tips.”

Gabriel Frem, owner of the upscale Brand 158 restaurant in the Los Angeles suburb of Glendale, also sees his establishment’s no-tipping policy as a way to protect staff from the whims of diners.

“We interview and hire our employees, not the guest, and we expect to pay them, and be responsible for their actions,” he said.

“If they do great, we keep them, and if they don’t, we let them go.

“We don’t want their pay to be at the mercy of a guest’s random calculation, based on unpredictable factors.”

 

– Tips vary wildly –

 

As it turns out, tipping can vary wildly from guest to guest — and not always because of the quality of the table service.

Some patrons withhold tips because they feel the server was not sufficiently cheerful (“I don’t like her smile”).

Others do so because they didn’t particularly care for the food — even if a meal’s preparation is not under the control of the wait staff.

It’s also a problem, Frem said, if workers don’t know how much income they can count on from week to week.

“We want to ensure that they can pay their bills,” he said.

Other managers say greater pay security in tip-less restaurant reduces turnover and improves morale.

The tipless restaurant is still a long way from becoming the norm, but some New Yorkers are beginning to warm to the idea.

“At first, I really thought that if a waiter was rude, I would want my discontent to be reflected in their tip,” said Noel Warren, a young New Yorker who dines out at least twice a week.

“But then I thought, why would a waiter be disrespectful in the first place? Probably because he or she has lost faith that customers are going to tip well — so why put in any effort?”

Warren mused that it might in fact be fairer to take the decision about tips out of the fickle hands of restaurant patrons — which might even improve the table service that patrons.

“If they were properly compensated for their work, they might treat their customers better,” Warren said.

 

Sourced from thehuffingtonpost.com

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“Barista Wrist” Is a Real Injury You Can Get From Making Too Many Lattes

espresso-barista-cc.jpg
Jonathan Lin/Flickr
Coffee shop workers can fall victim to repetitive strain injury, or “barista wrist.”

Add this to the reasons your Starbucks barista secretly hates you: barista elbow. Apparently, making complicated lattes and other coffee drinks is more than just annoying (what’s so bad about regular coffee?); it also can be bad for your health.

 

An increasing number of coffee shop employees are developing elbow, wrist, and other joint problems due to the repetitive stresses such as lifting large gallons of milk and stamping espresso. One of the most common issues is repetitive strain injury.

See also: 5 Things Your Barista Really Doesn’t Want You to Do

Recently, the New York Post interviewed a former Starbucks employee who developed “medical epicondylitis” from working as a barista. The 23-year-old had to wear a brace for six months, though the pain from her injury eventually caused her to quit her job altogether.

A certified hand specialist told the paper that she’s seen “all kinds of barista injuries,” which tend to be chronic in nature.

“The motions involved in making and serving coffee are far more dangerous than the average person knows,” the Post writes.

Dangerous? Sounds a little dramatic though one Australian newspaper reports that Christine Joy D’Amico, 52, won $555,720 US in court for injuries she got while making coffee at Madeleine’s Cafe.

Some cafes and coffeehouses have moved to building ergonomically correct bars to help their employees avoid injury but until Starbucks invests in that technology, we’ll just make sure to tip a little extra to cover our barista’s pain and suffering.

 

Sourced from thepheonixnewtimes.com

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The Internet Has Opinions About Morrisons Advertising On The Angel Of The North

Want to spark debate online? Project a giant baguette onto a national monument.

Supermarket chain Morrisons has projected a giant bread advert across the wings of The Angel of the North.

Imagewise

The 66-foot structure was designed by Antony Gormley, and has stood in Gateshead in Tyne and Wear since 1998. It is one of the country’s most recognisable pieces of public art.

2. “I’d rather the Angel is not used for such purposes,” Antony Gormley told The Guardian. “But it’s out there.”

Imagewise

3. And the internet wasn’t happy at all.

That Morrisons Angel of the North ad isn’t real, is it? Is it? For fuck’s sake.

.@Morrisons Please tell me you didn’t really advertise a cheap baguette across the Angel of the North?

The Morrisons baguette advert on the Angel of the North is so philistine and disgraceful I … I don’t even have a joke here. Depressed.

Morrisons presumably working on the principle all publicity is good publicity. Even when ruining artworks with dreadfully ugly ads.

angel of the North being used to advertise a shitty supermarket ( or anything) makes me burn with fury

Welcome to Britain, where we’ve slapped a Morrisons advert across the Angel of the North. We really are a shit hole.

9. Some people felt strongly enough to boycott the supermarket.

I think it’s disgraceful of @Morrisons to deface the Angel of the North with an advert. Reason not to shop there I reckon.

Well I for one am never shopping in #Morrisons again. Obnoxious, Angel of the North ad, with its glibness, thinking they’re being clever.

11. While others desperately pleaded with Morrisons to reconsider.

@Morrisons please remove your advert from The Angel of the North. I beg of you. It’s embarrassing for us all.

please take the morrisons ad down from the angel of the north PLEASE IT’S SO TACKY AND EMBARRASSING PLEA SE

13. Yet others were so furious they became positively lyrical.

“I am in the pit, and gone so deep that I can see the brightness of the stars at noon.” “Sorry Ken?” “A baguette on the Angel of the North.”

First they came for our utilities, then our rail service, and then for our public works of art. #Morrisons #AngelOfTheNorth

15. Some people’s complaints were that the advert wasn’t local enough.

Advertising on the Angel of the North, where to start?! I mean, it’s not even a stottie …..

16. Plenty of people, meanwhile, saw the funny side.

I personally hope there’s a sex shop with a big enough budget to advertise on the Angel of the North

Morrisons advertising bread on the Angel of the North. Durex is advertising as well but you can’t see at this angle.

trying to watch a film but the Morrisons guy is sat at the back of the cinema w/ his own projector, inserting images of bread into the movie

20. But some just didn’t know what to think.

Morrisons flogging a baguette on the Angel of the North is both genius and tragic.

The Angel of the North doesn’t do much for me as an artwork, but imagine being the miserable fuck that looked at it and thought “billboard”.

So Morrisons bagget on the Angel of the North is not ok but a naked Gail Porter on the House Of Commons is? #baffled

23. Then there were the people who doubted it even happened in reality.

Seriously. Just find me one person who actually saw the Morrisons ad on the Angel of the North, and I’ll believe it happened.

24. And the ones who were determined to keep it real.

It would take over 250 million Hula Hoops to weigh the same as the Angel of the North. Fact.

Sourced from Buzzfeed.com