Brandini Wrote:Because waiters are underpaid, and they are doing the labor.
Its like asking "Why do I have to tip the bag boy and not the hotel manager?"
"Why do I have to tip the cab driver and not the mechanic?"
My way of seeing it:
The chefs are the one's who are constantly doing all the labor.
The waiters just bring the tray to and from.
The waiters don't:
Cook the Food
Clean the plates
Perfect the order
The chefs do:
Cook the food....constantly for every customer and guest.
Why would I want to tip someone to bring my food to and from the kitchen, which is only a 15 second walk?
Likewise, why should I tip the bag boy? I could carry my own bags for a few minutes / seconds and save a buck or two <_<.
Waiters are underpaid, sure.
People have in their mindset to "tip the waiter when paying for the check."
But people like me...I'd rather tip someone whose done REAL labor.
I'm not saying that waiters don't have labor, they do, but just not tip worthy enough.
It's like tipping someone to hold the hold for you when you come in and when you leave.
The chefs are the masterminds in the whole situation. They are the one's who perfect the foods, prepare the dishes...everything you are PAYING for, however, you aren't paying the CHEFS, you are paying the COMPANY. Therefore, the tips should go to the chefs.
For example, why would you tip the sushi chef?
1) You're generous
2) He's making the food in front of you and you personally asked him.
3) You like sushi.
4) You got what you wanted.
5) I'm not doing well with this example.
However, in the sushi chef case, I don't like to tip them because I have to save that money to tip the dang waitress (yea, I'm SUPER poor...I save pennies <_<)
The cab driver and the mechanic:
You're never near the mechanic. The cab driver does the labor to complete your ultimate request.
You don't tip the hotel manager because you are already paying him for the hotel fees. The bag boy responds to action of your every will.
The waiter brings trays to and from the kitchen. The Chef completes the transactions of your requests.
I guess you could say that I value those that complete the request ultimately, not the little events in between the request.