Darren72 wrote:NeroW wrote:If we have the luxury of having an extra room and a person to run a coat check, then you customers must promise to use it. You don't have to tip. Just hand over your damn coat before we spill on it/step on it/burn it/it takes over another guests space. We promise to give it back. You'd be surprised by the existential crises people have when faced with the prospect of a coat check.
Some restaurants don't make this promise. It's more like: we'll probably give it back. But there's a small chance that we'll accidentally give your coat to someone else. It will be a mistake and we'll feel bad. But, no, we're not buying you a new coat.boudreaulicious wrote:NeroW wrote:
I may start a thread titled Small Ways Guests Can Make Me Less Grumpy in 2013, but this would be the wrong forum for that
I would actually really enjoy that (and I think you'd be surprised by how many industry folk might contribute!!!)
Agreed.
D.G.Sullivan wrote:Website...check.
Attentive yet not overly familiar servers...check.
Coat room, yeah, not so much.
Proper attention to non-eaten meals...ok, usually is the best I can do there. We ask our servers, note we call them "servers" not "waiters" as I don't expect them to "wait" I expect them to be "serving", to try to box the left-overs and present them when the check is finalized. Reality is that occurs maybe 65% of the time because there are times we can be so thankfully busy that it is just this side of impractical to try to keep everyone's bag of goodies set aside to just that right moment. But I'm solidly with you on not leaving it to the guest to transfer the left overs into our containers at the table. It's just not "right". That said, I see about 50-50 on folks asking to do it themselves for whatever reason, and as we know, the customer isn't always right...they're just always the customer.
So, 3 out of 4. I think we might be able to keep you at least slightly above grumpy so where 'ya been?
boudreaulicious wrote:NeroW wrote:
I may start a thread titled Small Ways Guests Can Make Me Less Grumpy in 2013, but this would be the wrong forum for that
I would actually really enjoy that (and I think you'd be surprised by how many industry folk might contribute!!!)
boudreaulicious wrote:NeroW wrote:
I may start a thread titled Small Ways Guests Can Make Me Less Grumpy in 2013, but this would be the wrong forum for that
I would actually really enjoy that (and I think you'd be surprised by how many industry folk might contribute!!!)
Geo wrote:Hammond, I really can't decide who's nuttier, you (for ending up with Wayne at *your* initiation!) or Wayne (for being Wayne).
NeroW wrote:If we have the luxury of having an extra room and a person to run a coat check, then you customers must promise to use it. You don't have to tip. Just hand over your damn coat before we spill on it/step on it/burn it/it takes over another guests space. We promise to give it back. You'd be surprised by the existential crises people have when faced with the prospect of a coat check.
riddlemay wrote: In restaurants with a coat check, customers who nevertheless insist on draping their coats over their chairs are the modern-day equivalents of Vandals and Visigoths.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
I was watching People's Court recently while eating lunch. A woman's coat disappeared from the coat rack. The restaurant claimed no responsibility for it. If I recall correctly, the judge supported the restaurant's position. Since this event, the restaurant has put up signage declaring no responsibility for any coat loss or damage.
I am inclined to keep my coat near, too.
Regards,
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,I was watching People's Court recently while eating lunch. A woman's coat disappeared from the coat rack. The restaurant claimed no responsibility for it. If I recall correctly, the judge supported the restaurant's position. Since this event, the restaurant has put up signage declaring no responsibility for any coat loss or damage. I am inclined to keep my coat near, too.
ronnie_suburban wrote: I guess the ideal solution would be for the staff to bring the empty container(s) to the table and ask the customer "would you like me to pack these up for you or do you prefer to do it yourself?"
Katie wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote: I guess the ideal solution would be for the staff to bring the empty container(s) to the table and ask the customer "would you like me to pack these up for you or do you prefer to do it yourself?"
I almost agree with this, but would reverse the order. I think the ideal solution would be for the server to ask the customer "would you like me to pack these up for you or would you prefer to do it yourself?" and depending on the customer's answer, bring an empty container to the table or take the leftovers to the kitchen and pack them up there.
Josephine wrote:I have a hilarious set of photos of first puzzled, then annoyed, then pissed off customers waiting, exactly as I did.
Josephine wrote: I don't know how it works, but for me, next time, I hit McDonalds.
Josephine wrote:My grumpiest half hour in recent memory was spent at the Frontera Tortas concession on the K Concourse at O'hare.
JoelF wrote:The first page you land on should have the address and hours...
David Hammond wrote:Josephine wrote:I have a hilarious set of photos of first puzzled, then annoyed, then pissed off customers waiting, exactly as I did.
Yo, Jo, would love to see those photos.
mamagotcha wrote:JoelF wrote:The first page you land on should have the address and hours...
This is the single-loudest complaint I have about business websites! (Not just restaurants.) Why pay a penny for web hosting/design if you don't give out instantly and clearly the ONLY information that 99% of your site visitors are looking for? Thank goodness for Yelp!
JoelF wrote:Websites have been mentioned here and elsewhere, and I think I could lay out some simple rules, that fall into two categories:
1) Don't be a dick
2) Make it easier on mobile users
In the first category, if I can't see information about the restaurant on the first page I land on, your web designer is a dick. If music starts playing, your web designer is a dick.
The second category is what frustrates me so much. These days I'm much more likely to be browsing for restos on a phone or tablet than I am on my laptop.
a) The first page you land on should have the address and hours, as text and not embedded in a graphic
b) Don't use PDFs for the menu. Sure you paid somebody for design, but it makes it harder to give someone a quick idea of what they're serving. If I have to download, then click to open an app just to see whether you have anything that my vegetarian friend can eat, we're approaching dick level again
JoelF wrote:Websites have been mentioned here and elsewhere, and I think I could lay out some simple rules, that fall into two categories:
1) Don't be a dick
2) Make it easier on mobile users
In the first category, if I can't see information about the restaurant on the first page I land on, your web designer is a dick. If music starts playing, your web designer is a dick.
The second category is what frustrates me so much. These days I'm much more likely to be browsing for restos on a phone or tablet than I am on my laptop.
a) The first page you land on should have the address and hours, as text and not embedded in a graphic
b) Don't use PDFs for the menu. Sure you paid somebody for design, but it makes it harder to give someone a quick idea of what they're serving. If I have to download, then click to open an app just to see whether you have anything that my vegetarian friend can eat, we're approaching dick level again
merkay wrote:I have a request for this thread: Stop it with the high-top tables already. Please.
I'm 5' tall on a good day. I do not enjoy climbing into and out of my chair. I also don't like trying to jump off it. I'm too clumsy for that. Especially if I'm wearing heels. These tall tables used to just be in bar areas, and I could overlook that. But, now they seem to be everywhere, and I hate them. They make me look like an undignified child climbing up to the adult table. At 35, that's not an image I want to project.