Does anybody have any advice on how to increase tips as a barista?
I might be opening up a can of worms here. I’m not trying to start a discussion on whether or not baristas should be tipped. I just want some tidbits of advice for baristas so that I can include them on my website.
I have a few common sense suggestions including:
Any other advice?
Thank you,
Rick
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I guess ive always thought that owners should be giving the tips to the employees but that also assumes that the owner is not generally doing the majority of the work that is being tipped. If you are strictly an owner opp setup then I suppose that would be a non point and you should just take what tips you get. But even if you have only one employee the tips should be going to the employee. The entire point of a tip is to make up for low wages when exceptional service is delivered. With an owner that simply does not apply, owners are compensated on weather or not they run a good business or not. I found several bits and pieces through a search that agree with my point of view as well as several that do not. Most were not worth the read but I did find an article on tipping that I think is worth the 2 min read.
http://www.smellingthecoffee.com/2007/04/the_point_of_tipping.html
Well written, good points, and humorous.
Joseph Robertson said:Jerred,
I guess another shop owner like me might ask, in what book of regs. is it taboo? Do you mean unethical? or? Grant, at this point in our business we have no employees. I guess this leads me to the next question what kind of relationship do you have with your staff?
Joseph
Jarred Hoffpauir said:You take tips as an owner? Isnt that tabu?
Sorry I meant 30 to 40 a night.
Here are some of the things we do at our shop...
*Always make consistently quality drinks.
*Know your customers names, stories and drinks.
*Make sure you are honest, if someone asks you how your day is and you are just okay, you say "I'm doing alright today". (This is especially true for those regulars who really know you..our customers hate fake)
*If it is someone who comes in less frequently, be helpful in answering their questions.
*Treat everyone like a friend, not a customer.
That is just a few... what we do notice is that our morning and afternoon staff make a ton more in tips than our evening staff. Anyone else experience this?
yeah... the same thing happened at our shop. People were fighting over morning shifts because the tips were better so we started pooling them. Now they're divided up weekly proportional to labor hours. Seems to be working alright.
Sara Appleyard-Pekich said:Here are some of the things we do at our shop...
*Always make consistently quality drinks.
*Know your customers names, stories and drinks.
*Make sure you are honest, if someone asks you how your day is and you are just okay, you say "I'm doing alright today". (This is especially true for those regulars who really know you..our customers hate fake)
*If it is someone who comes in less frequently, be helpful in answering their questions.
*Treat everyone like a friend, not a customer.
That is just a few... what we do notice is that our morning and afternoon staff make a ton more in tips than our evening staff. Anyone else experience this?
My theory is this, if you want more tip money, increase your average ticket...
At my shop, we pool tips by the day and split them up according to the hours you worked that day. This makes it pretty fair. The openers have to deal with 200+ customers, the closers have to clean up everything...
That being said, we average around $7 an hour in tips.
-We are personable, but not in your face. We know most of our customers on a first name basis, as well as their kids, and where they've been when we haven't seen them in two weeks.
-We make stellar drinks.
-We keep the bathrooms clean. (The regulars really appreciate that)
-All of our employees are authorized to give away two free drinks a shift (rather than have a punch card buy 10 get 1 free deal).
-Most of our employees live in the neighborhood the cafe is in . . . this helps with knowing the regulars.
-We are accomodating. You want that espresso to go, no problem. It's much better in a demi, but anything for you.
-We love what we do, and it shows. In our product and in our faces.
-We leave our personal problems at the door. We are here to serve you tasty coffee, not sulk or be pissy.
-We work efficiently when we're busy, but still find time to talk and make nice.
That's about all I've got...
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