Paul SL wrote:My wife, who waitressed in college, says servers were encouraged to fill up the least desirable tables first. I presume that's because it's easier to reseat a party who wants to move when the restaurant is less full.
First of all, it's great to have this confirmed as being actual restaurant policy. (It's better than thinking we must be crazy, or "oversensitive.") Thank you.
Second of all, my speculation about the reasoning behind it is very similar to your speculation. My only difference with it is in a shading of meaning. "Easier to reseat a party who wants to move" sounds like it's about making the customer happy. I think the objective is much more host-centric, or management-centric, than it is customer-centric.
Let's simplify things to say that the restaurant has just one bad table, which we'll call Table X. Every night, the restaurant fills up, so
somebody always has to sit there. The only question is who. Now let's posit that there are two kinds of customer: the Customer Who Won't Accept Table X, and the Customer Who Will Accept Table X. The necessary game for the host every night therefore becomes, Find the Customer Who Will Accept Table X. If the host can achieve this objective
before the restaurant fills up, he makes his life easier by solving a problem for the restaurant before it becomes an unsolvable one. (If he waits until Table X is the only table left, he risks that the next customer who comes in will be Customer Who Won't Accept Table X, and with nowhere else to seat this customer, now the restaurant has an issue on its hands that it would rather not deal with.) With each new customer who comes into the restaurant (or if the host himself is new), there is no way for the host to know in advance which kind of customer he is dealing with. Since there is a possibility this customer is Customer Who Will Accept Table X, the host figures nothing ventured nothing gained, and he attempts to fob off Table X on this customer. Who knows, maybe his gamble will pay off, and then he won't have to worry about who to seat at Table X for the rest of the evening. And all customers will be happy, arguably--because Customer Who Will Accept Table X is insensitive to the awfulness of his table, while Customer Who Won't Accept Table X is sitting at a nice table.
It's a stupid policy, because it ends up insulting and pissing off one Customer Who Won't Accept Table X after another as each is shown to Table X and refuses. And also, because Customer Who Will Accept Table X may
not be insensitive to the awfulness of the table--he may accept Table X only because because he is too meek to protest, or afraid of the "crazy look," or afraid of being thought "one of those people who always ask for a different table".