Quoth EvilEmpryss
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The Salt-y SC, the ripoff attempt, SC needs a GPS, or a phone book....and more...
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Any fool can piss on the floor. It takes a talented SC to shit on the ceiling.
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Around here, the combos that provide cheaper prices are NOT clearly marked, and often not on the menu at all.
Therefore, yes, I WOULD be annoyed if you decided to 'tax' me for not knowing the magic meal deal.
Also, you can't tell just by looking whether someone is illiterate, illiterate in the language the menu is written in (but perhaps literate in five other languages), dyslexic, dyscalcic, has poor vision, or for some other equally valid, out of their control reason, cannot both read the menu and do the math. Is it fair to charge them extra?
Rhetorical question. I don't want the answer. It's for you (the original poster, others who are interested) to answer for yourselves.Last edited by Seshat; 01-24-2013, 10:04 AM.Seshat's self-help guide:
1. Would you rather be right, or get the result you want?
2. If you're consistently getting results you don't want, change what you do.
3. Deal with the situation you have now, however it occurred.
4. Accept the consequences of your decisions.
"All I want is a pretty girl, a decent meal, and the right to shoot lightning at fools." - Anders, Dragon Age.
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Quoth Freak View Post#2 makes me feel very glad that I live in Australia, and work in a place with good security cameras. Basically, a customer (I honestly think she was honest here and thus not an SC) thought she had given me a $50 note instead of a $20 note, which obviously changed the amount of change to which she was entitled. My manager was able to look at security camera footage and see that it was clearly a $20 note she gave me. The customer was satisfied, we didn't have to count the register (which would have taken forever at that time, because our system only tracks the total amount, not the amount of each note and coin), and I got to keep my job.
Of course, this works in Australia because our notes are all different colours. Assuming the OP is from the USA, it wouldn't work over there, unless your cameras were really high-res.Skilled programmers aren't cheap. Cheap programmers aren't skilled.
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Quoth mjr View Post
#6:
This one my wife and I go back and forth on.
I say that if you order the burger, fries, and drink that would normally come in a combo, but separately, you deserve to pay more. She says that it should be a courtesy that if the food is ordered that way (i.e. separately), that it should be rung up as a combo.
My argument is that most of the time, there's a picture of the combo itself. And it usually shows the sandwich, french fries, and a drink. And if you calculated the price, it would indeed be cheaper to buy the combo.
Ergo, if you order those three items separately, well, that's not really my problem is it? I can't help it if you can't figure out that the burger, fries, and drink you ordered are actually the combo #1!
So yes, I would occasionally ring them up that way. If they ordered items that normally cam in a combo, but separately, I would ring them up separately.
Is that mean?
What I do, depends on the customer. If the customer is a nice person, then I tell them about the deal. If they're rude, ignore my greeting, glare at me, or otherwise act in an SC way, then I ring them up as they are without telling them. That way, nice people get rewarded and nasty people get shafted.
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Quoth Ophbalance View PostFor #1, was there a quarter in that shaker? Not that I'd know about such things.Any fool can piss on the floor. It takes a talented SC to shit on the ceiling.
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one problem I've noticed with the whole "4 x 6-packs being cheaper than 1 x 24-pack" thing lately is that some of the places here often have fine print saying "Maximum of 3 packages, otherwise full price", so if you are not paying attention at the cash register once the 4th one is cashed up it still ends up being more expensive than the single 24-pack.
(I've had to start paying close attention to per-can prices ever since they switched away from post-mix soft drinks at work in favor of cans, the boss likes it if I can let him know when a place has them on special)Violets are blue,
Roses are red,
I bequeath to thee...
A boot to the head >_>
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Quoth Seshat View PostAround here, the combos that provide cheaper prices are NOT clearly marked, and often not on the menu at all.
Therefore, yes, I WOULD be annoyed if you decided to 'tax' me for not knowing the magic meal deal.
Also, you can't tell just by looking whether someone is illiterate, illiterate in the language the menu is written in (but perhaps literate in five other languages), dyslexic, dyscalcic, has poor vision, or for some other equally valid, out of their control reason, cannot both read the menu and do the math. Is it fair to charge them extra?
Rhetorical question. I don't want the answer. It's for you (the original poster, others who are interested) to answer for yourselves.
But if I'm at McDonald's which lists all of their major food items as combos first with a side note for buying it separate and don't order the combo, that's on me, you know?
And NotAlwaysRight has taught me that people are really stupid about ordering stuff the way they want...even if it's more expensive that way.
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Quoth mjr View Post#6:
This one my wife and I go back and forth on.
I say that if you order the burger, fries, and drink that would normally come in a combo, but separately, you deserve to pay more. She says that it should be a courtesy that if the food is ordered that way (i.e. separately), that it should be rung up as a combo.
My argument is that most of the time, there's a picture of the combo itself. And it usually shows the sandwich, french fries, and a drink. And if you calculated the price, it would indeed be cheaper to buy the combo.
Ergo, if you order those three items separately, well, that's not really my problem is it? I can't help it if you can't figure out that the burger, fries, and drink you ordered are actually the combo #1!
So yes, I would occasionally ring them up that way. If they ordered items that normally cam in a combo, but separately, I would ring them up separately.
Is that mean?"Life is tough. It's even tougher if you're stupid" Redd Foxx as Al Royal - The Royal Family - Pilot Episode - 1991.
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Quoth wolfie View PostLots of people don't do the math. A few examples:
- The "mini-cans" of soda are sold in 6-packs. Regular cans are sold in 12-packs. A pack of regular cans costs less than 2 packs of "mini-cans" (and when there's a really good sale, it can cost less than ONE pack). What this means is that, never mind the price per unit volume, the price PER CAN for the regular size is less. Why not buy the regular, drink what you want, and toss the rest?It's floating wicker propelled by fire!
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Quoth wolfie View PostWhy would there be a quarter in a saltshaker (especially a pre-filled, non-refillable one)?
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haha evil ass stories haha as far as the combo thing, i had people ask for food like that but i would simply say "sir/mam that is actually a combo do you just want the combo it's cheaper?" i only had 1 person out of the thousands of people i served there over the years so no lmaoi've learned that about this world... there's always one!!!
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Quoth wolfie View PostThe "mini-cans" of soda are sold in 6-packs. Regular cans are sold in 12-packs. A pack of regular cans costs less than 2 packs of "mini-cans" (and when there's a really good sale, it can cost less than ONE pack). What this means is that, never mind the price per unit volume, the price PER CAN for the regular size is less. Why not buy the regular, drink what you want, and toss the rest?Quoth Pagan View PostYou'd still be costing yourself money that way.
Quoth suburbandecay View PostOn the off chance this isn't a rhetorical question, you spin a nickel (or a quarter in this case) on the table. While it is spinning you slam the shaker down on the coin. Next person to pick up the shaker gets a mess and a coin.Any fool can piss on the floor. It takes a talented SC to shit on the ceiling.
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Heh, I obsessively examine the 'per-unit' price, a habit I learned from my mother. It generally saves me quite a bit of money on groceries and that's important to me. Just the other day my usual brand of TP was on sale. 3.98 for the 8-pack, 7.98 for the 12-pack. I now have 4 8-packs in my cupboard. I can math.
Which reminds me, TP is a good example of how the per-unit price can be deceiving. TP isn't exactly standardized, as we all know. 2-ply, 3-ply, different sized squares among brands, varying number of squares per roll (check it out, 200, 220, 270, 300, this changes the actual unit price considerably), thickness of layers, omg it's a pain. So you have to know the product as well as check the price carefully.
Grocery shopping is not for amateurs.What colour is the sky in your world and how high of a dosage do you need before it turns back to blue? --Gravekeeper
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Quoth Lace Neil Singer View Post
What I do, depends on the customer. If the customer is a nice person, then I tell them about the deal. If they're rude, ignore my greeting, glare at me, or otherwise act in an SC way, then I ring them up as they are without telling them. That way, nice people get rewarded and nasty people get shafted.
I used to do this same thing when I worked in a restaurant. When they ordered in a way that would cost them more, I ALWAYS told the nice ones and gave them the better deal.The SC's, I remained silent and rang it up the (more expensive) way they ordered it. I called it the asshole tax.
I'm sorry, but I've reached my maximum allowable exposure to stupidity limit for the day. I'll have to get back to you tomorrow.
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Quoth mjr View PostLook around. There's signage EVERYWHERE that tells you!
Quoth mjr View PostThis one my wife and I go back and forth on.
I say that if you order the burger, fries, and drink that would normally come in a combo, but separately, you deserve to pay more. She says that it should be a courtesy that if the food is ordered that way (i.e. separately), that it should be rung up as a combo.
So yes, I would occasionally ring them up that way. If they ordered items that normally cam in a combo, but separately, I would ring them up separately.
Is that mean?
I am a big proponent of good customer service. And part of good customer service is advising customers of such things, or just doing it for them. Do you have to do it? No. It's one of those "letter of the law" versus "spirit of the law" type things.
An example from my own work place is our happy hour food menu, on which we have several items that are severely discounted during happy hour (at the bar only, of course). An imaginary example would be the Jester Burger, which on the regular menu is $12, but on the happy hour menu is $5, for the exact same thing. If a customer at the bar orders a Jester Burger, I am going to automatically ring it in at the happy hour price, saving them money, whether or not they specified that they were ordering from the happy hour menu, and whether or not they even knew about the happy hour menu. I do this to be nice, yes, but also to avoid complaints. After all, it would be just my luck to ring it in at the normal price when they ordered from the regular menu, only to have them know about the happy hour menu and complain about the bill after the fact. Doesn't look very good for me in management's eyes, does it? Now, I won't do this automatically if there is a difference between the happy hour version and the regular menu version, say in size or quantity, as there is on some items. For these, I will ask them whether they want the regular version or the happy hour version, and explain the differences to them, thus allowing them to choose.
Do I have to do this? No. Do I think it is better customer service? Absolutely. And I pride myself on providing excellent customer service.
Let's forget the good customer service part about it for a moment and examine the rest of it. You say it's not your problem if someone can't read the sign or calculate the difference. You are correct. But many people are in a rush (especially in a fast food setting), or they could be tired, or could have just gotten off work, or might be distracted by their kids, or might have something else on their mind, or might just be lousy at math. But they know they want a Rhino burger, T-Rex fries, and a Brontosaurus coke, so they don't bother looking at the menu board, since they already had their mind made up.
Make sense?
Quoth AmethystSquirrel View PostNot mean IMO. When I had a franchise owner on my neck to make more $ I would charge separately unless customer threw a major tantrum.
Quoth wolfie View PostWhy not buy the regular, drink what you want, and toss the rest?
Quoth wolfie View Post- A few years back, one grocery chain had the large (28 ounce) tins of pasta sauce on sale. The regular price was a few cents more than that of the 14 ounce tins (same brand), and the sale price was less than that of the 14 ounce tins. People still bought the 14 ounce tins.
Quoth wolfie View PostPeople still buy the smaller sizes.
Quoth EvilEmpryss View PostI wouldn't, either, so I filled the large cup only half-way, paid my $1 and went on my way.
Quoth b2addm View PostI used to do this same thing when I worked in a restaurant. When they ordered in a way that would cost them more, I ALWAYS told the nice ones and gave them the better deal.The SC's, I remained silent and rang it up the (more expensive) way they ordered it. I called it the asshole tax.
"The Customer Is Always Right...But The Bartender Decides Who Is Still A Customer."
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