Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • When was the last time you purchased something

  • and you weren't asked for a tip?

  • Yeah, I can't remember either.

  • Tipping culture has gotten out of control.

  • I get up to the pay window and she's like,

  • How much do you want to tip? What am I going to

  • tip you for?

  • I'm in the drive through.

  • Oh my God. Tips have been on the rise for

  • decades. During the 1950s, people commonly

  • tipped 10% of the bill.

  • By the 1970s and 1980s, that jumped to 15%.

  • Today, people tip anywhere from 15% to 25%.

  • According to one 2022 survey, consumers said

  • they tipped more than 21% on average.

  • Nowadays, there are people who argue 20% is

  • kind of a cheap tip.

  • While the percentage that consumers are tipping at

  • full service restaurants in the past couple of

  • years has remained about the same, in the fourth

  • quarter of 2022, the number of tips provided

  • at full service restaurants grew 17%.

  • Meanwhile, the tip frequency at quick

  • service restaurants such as coffee shops and fast

  • food chains rose 16% during the same time

  • period.

  • What we're seeing now nationwide is something

  • that is known as tipflation.

  • At every opportunity, we're being presented

  • with a tablet that's asking us how much we'd

  • like to tip.

  • In many cases, not only replacing the old

  • fashioned tip jars that you could feel good about

  • throwing some spare change into, but actually

  • suggesting tip amounts, often right in front of

  • the employee receiving that tip, not to mention

  • also your dinner date and the dozen or so

  • people standing behind you in line.

  • And it's gone beyond just the tablets.

  • The other day I was using the Hopper app to

  • book a hotel, and it wasn't until I confirmed

  • my payment that I realized my hotel was $10

  • more expensive.

  • It turns out, Hopper assumed I wanted to add a

  • tip and I had to go back to a prior page in order

  • to opt out. Tipflation refers to not just that

  • we're tipping more, but we're tipping everyone

  • for everything.

  • You're being guilted into tipping on something that

  • is not technically a service.

  • Someone simply doing their job.

  • In those situations, consumers are feeling

  • resentful. Where do you draw the line?

  • Tip stands for "to ensure promptness." Tipping may

  • go back as far as the Roman era, but according

  • to most experts, the practice likely has its

  • origins in medieval Europe.

  • Noblemen taking passage on roads would throw

  • coins to the rubble to ensure safe passage.

  • One theory is that it evolved in eating and

  • drinking establishments as a way to forestall

  • envy that when you're eating and drinking,

  • you're having fun and the people who are

  • serving you are not.

  • Fast forward to the 19th century when waiters who

  • received a full wage went on strike demanding

  • higher wages. They were replaced with women who

  • employers could pay less. A decade later,

  • there was the population of newly freed slaves.

  • The idea from these restaurant owners was

  • that they were giving the luxury or privilege

  • of a white person's tips .

  • That was without a full wage.

  • Ironically, as tipping exploded in the United

  • States, it became less common in Europe and was

  • replaced with service charges.

  • While the first federal minimum wage law was

  • passed in 1938, it wasn't until almost three

  • decades later when the tip minimum wage was

  • established. In 1991, the federal minimum wage

  • for tipped employees was set at $2.13, which is

  • what it remains at as of March 2023.

  • As far as I know, the United States is the only

  • country that exempts tipped workers from

  • having to receive the full minimum wage.

  • In 43 states, it is legal to pay tipped workers

  • less than the standard minimum wage because tips

  • presumably make up that difference.

  • In recent years, you might have found yourself

  • asking, Do I tip this barista for pouring that

  • hot coffee? What about when I'm going to a

  • restaurant and picking up takeout?

  • And how much do I tip that doorman, driver or

  • dog walker? When those in the service industry

  • were feeling the brunt during the coronavirus

  • pandemic, consumers started tipping for

  • things they never had before, and the

  • percentage of remote transactions when tipping

  • was an option in which the consumer tipped

  • soared from about 46% before the pandemic to

  • around 86% in January 2022.

  • If people were willing to tip the person

  • delivering food to their home 30%, why not ask if

  • they'd like to tip when they come pick up?

  • During the pandemic, businesses who lost a lot

  • of traditional customers and transactions were

  • looking for alternative ways to make up that

  • income. And if asking for tips was one way to

  • do it, they were willing to try it.

  • And since then, that ask hasn't dissipated.

  • Another reason consumers say they feel pressured

  • to tip more? They're being asked to tip prior

  • to service completion.

  • Asking for a tip beforehand is almost like

  • a bribe, right?

  • It's, I'm afraid not to tip because would you do

  • less good work?

  • Customers might not be concerned about the

  • barista's perception of their tip before getting

  • their latte, but what about the mechanic

  • repairing your car?

  • I don't know about you, but I'm certainly going

  • to make sure to tip them well to ensure my safety.

  • Another reason consumers are tipping more: newer

  • technologies.

  • Kiosks and tablets with three large tipping

  • suggestions that pop up on the screen in front of

  • you. Three Options chosen by the business.

  • I have not yet been to the restaurant where they

  • recommend 5, 10 or 15% for quick takeout.

  • It normally always starts at 15 as a bare

  • minimum, sometimes even starting at 20, 25 and up

  • to 30.

  • According to a 2022 CreditCards.com survey,

  • 22% of respondents said when they're presented

  • with various suggested tip amounts, they feel

  • pressured to tip more than they normally would.

  • They use those options as an indication of kind of

  • what the normative range is and feel compelled to

  • tip within that range.

  • So the more you ask, the more you get.

  • The three prominent companies with that

  • trendy, sleek look are Square, Toast, and

  • Clover. They launched a bit more than a decade

  • ago to help businesses run smarter, faster and

  • easier, all in one point of sale or POS systems.

  • In some cases, fewer fees so it's less of a

  • burden to accept multiple credit cards, no

  • long term contracts and multiple other useful

  • tools, including inventory and employee

  • management.

  • They got credit card processing into the hands

  • of individuals and very small merchants.

  • Square did a great job and it's been a

  • tremendous growth story.

  • That's half of the business today.

  • Do you think these companies are responsible

  • for this turn of events that we've seen with

  • tipping?

  • I would say they could take some of the credit

  • for helping restaurants gather more tips.

  • Robert Sanchez manages Eli's Essentials in New

  • York City. One of the business's locations uses

  • Toast while the other uses this.

  • He says the storefront that uses Toast sees more

  • and higher tips.

  • The Clover, Square and Toast terminals to a

  • consumer are very easy to use.

  • Big buttons, big areas to sign the tip, and easy

  • way to tip a different amount if you don't like

  • the starting at 20% option.

  • There are others that do it.

  • They're just not as cool looking.

  • We've come a long way from being able to just

  • throw your spare change into the jar by the cash

  • register.

  • The new tablets have turned what used to be a

  • sin of omission, I simply didn't put money

  • into the tip jar, into a sin of commission.

  • I have to hit a button and say no tip.

  • I have to actively choose not to tip.

  • Whereas before, not tipping was a kind of a

  • passive thing.

  • Glancing at the tip jar could have also been a

  • way to get a sense of how many others are

  • tipping on that service and maybe even how much

  • money. Meanwhile, not only can the tipping

  • options be customized, but the tipping feature

  • can be disabled as well.

  • So it's the merchant's choice to ask or not to

  • ask for tips.

  • From the business side, it makes employees want

  • to perform better and do a better job.

  • It's seriously significant.

  • It really pays for the software.

  • You'd be a foolish business owner not to

  • install it based on what the numbers display.

  • Even a mammoth company as large as Starbucks has

  • decided that they need to sink or swim.

  • And the best way for them to do that is to

  • offer the tip screen.

  • Starbucks rolled out the tipping feature in stores

  • in September 2022.

  • It's one thing to have a happy staff.

  • It's another thing to have customers that are

  • feeling resentful.

  • I think it's a calculus that all business owners

  • really need to make.

  • Do you think that they're somewhat going to start

  • seeing that they're getting lower tips

  • because people are paying tips to so many

  • services or they're resentful of the act of

  • tipping in general?

  • I think that's a very real danger.

  • Servers in a sit down restaurant, they were

  • greatly affected during and immediately

  • post-pandemic by restaurants doing all

  • sorts of fees.

  • Their tips were actually going down because

  • consumers were saying, well, if I'm paying for

  • their health insurance and I'm paying for

  • inflation and I'm paying for this and I'm paying

  • for that, enough is enough.

  • The more you levy these line items onto

  • consumers, guess who's being penalized?

  • It's the one area that's still quasi

  • discretionary, which is the tip.

  • I went door to door talking with waitresses,

  • bartenders and baristas, and while they wanted to

  • remain anonymous, they told me it's happening

  • already. With inflation and being prompted for

  • tips left and right, they say customers have

  • already started to tip less and sometimes not at

  • all. A 2022 study found that 17% of Americans are

  • tipping less because of inflation. However, 10%

  • report tipping more.

  • At the same time, more than half of Americans,

  • or 60%, want to do away with tipping entirely.

  • The extent of pandemic-influenced

  • generosity has also gone down.

  • 43% of consumers typically tipped servers

  • 20% or more in 2022, compared to 56% of

  • consumers in 2021.

  • Meanwhile, the average tip for full service

  • restaurants has gone down only slightly during

  • the same time period.

  • According to Toast, 19.6% in the fourth quarter of

  • 2022, compared to 19.8% in 2021.

  • However, according to surveys conducted in

  • those same years, respondents said they're

  • tipping higher percentages: 21.2% and

  • 18.9%, respectively.

  • It can genuinely hurt the people who truly, truly

  • rely on gratuities for their livelihood.

  • I firmly believe that the tipping invasion we

  • are experiencing right now, I think it's a net

  • negative for society.

  • And with that tablet at just about every counter,

  • no matter where you go, the question is, where is

  • the tipping point?

  • I'm wondering how long before I'm tipping my

  • doctor after an annual physical?

  • If you want to seem especially generous after

  • an exceptional meal, you might decide to go big

  • and tip 30%.

  • But it's a cycle.

  • As more people seeking to make a good impression

  • then up their tips to 30%, maybe even 35%.

  • What becomes a generous tip?

  • I have to believe tips are going to go up from

  • where they are today.

  • But I also think there's got to be a logical

  • ceiling somewhere.

  • I just don't know where it is.

When was the last time you purchased something

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級 美國腔

Why Tipping Is So Out Of Control In The U.S.

  • 10 0
    林宜悉 發佈於 2023 年 03 月 31 日
影片單字