who actually does this
who actually does this
who actually does this
People will use Venmo for anything but splitting a bill. It's fucking wild. We regularly have parties of up to 80 people in our restaurant, and they just can't seem to understand that 80 different checks is a nightmare for the waitstaff, let alone the kitchen and the bar. They will fight tooth and nail to not have combined checks.
Edit: Guess I should have specified that these are reservations that we communicate with before hand. Typically office parties and corporate events or large weddings. You know, things that would typically go on a single tab. I don't think anyone here appreciates how long it takes to take individual orders for 80 people. Even at 30 seconds an order, thats half an hour of order taking, not to mention the time it takes to input it. Then you have special requests and questions about ingredients. It's a lot of effort to split that up.
you mean 80 people didn’t walk in with a joint bank account, or open a subcommittee to figure out how to pay the bill? shocking that they’d expect the professionals selling the food to tally up how much it cost.
The problem is not different bills. Is asking for a split afterwards. If you are going to demand different bills per person, then say so before ordering. Because splitting afterwards makes it prone to errors. Service systems have been designed from the ground up, from the way waiters divide the floor down to the way the software at the cashier station works, to operate on a per table basis. Often times, this systems aren't flexible at all, so the staff has to use workarounds to defeat the system in place. Newer systems and software are better on that regard but it is still a pain having to go item per item to assign them to new bills per person.
The other side is also service quality. If you are one party, and you are attended as one party, then the kitchen and waiters can coordinate to provide all the food and drinks, roughly at the same time and the same temperature. If you demand to be treated as individual customers, then don't get mad when food arrives at different times for different people. There's a logistic mini-nightmare involved in the service industry. Splitting bills at the end of a service is not the end of the world, but it is an annoyance that sort of insults staff by throwing extra unexpected work right when you thought the service was done. Because now the waiter has to sit with the cashier to argue whether the chicken wings were the blond girl or the bearded guy, or if the glasses dude is on the 5th or 7th beer. Because god knows if they go to the table to ask, people will act annoyed and entitled “how come they don't remember!?”, we don't remember because you are the 300th person I've served today Karen, that's what the system is for and you just fucked with the system by not asking to split the bills from the beginning.
🤡
How is it any different than 80 people coming in individually and ordering?
well I haven't worked in a restaurant but I imagine a queue of 80 people will have more tolerance for waiting for their food separately and not want it to arrive in a similar time frame.
If it happens regularly why not have a system in place for that kind of thing? 80 people is bigger than even two beer-league sports teams coming in after a game, this sounds kinda special but there’s nothing ready to handle it?
Real homies pay for their homies food. I know my buddy can barely make rent, he ain't paying $7 for that burger. My buddy knows my cat's at the vet, I ain't paying $7 for that taco bell.
Can't imagine having homies that keep a tab. Surely one of us has paid hundreds more than the rest. Who cares? If you're looking at your friendships as a financial transaction, you ain't got friends
Real friends listen when the order is made, and pay what they can after
Sometimes everybody is broke
And when that happens I can throw $2 worth of pasta and $2 worth of pasta sauce on the stove