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I understand the value of space for paying customers and the need to somehow limit sit down time.
I believe this has been solved by many shops with wifi by metering and charging for usage. No need to shut off power to outlets. No need to raise the prices of drinks. Just plain dump of a shop to use that method of communicating their needs to customers. Time for a friendly petition or letter to the ownership suggesting a win win solution.
Joe
i still don't understand why people can't just, you know, talk to their customers. be like "hey, we're crowded, and you've been here for two hours, taking up a 4 top, and you've only bought a seltzer water." clear, personal communication solves a lot of problems.
i still don't understand why people can't just, you know, talk to their customers. be like "hey, we're crowded, and you've been here for two hours, taking up a 4 top, and you've only bought a seltzer water." clear, personal communication solves a lot of problems.
Jared Rutledge said:i still don't understand why people can't just, you know, talk to their customers. be like "hey, we're crowded, and you've been here for two hours, taking up a 4 top, and you've only bought a seltzer water." clear, personal communication solves a lot of problems.
My issue with this is that if I am running a till and a bar, this is another thing that is going to slow down my drink output which is going to lead to customers complaining that my bar takes forever. Another issue is when you have to keep asking the same people continuously as if they don't know that their taking up table space. I personally feel that this is a clever way to cut down on the issue. Should they have covered the plug-ins? Probably. But I shouldn't have to explain to nearly every customer that comes in that "Some people take advantage of this and ruin it for everyone." Saying, "The outlets don't work." seems pretty clear and direct to me.
i still don't understand why people can't just, you know, talk to their customers. be like "hey, we're crowded, and you've been here for two hours, taking up a 4 top, and you've only bought a seltzer water." clear, personal communication solves a lot of problems.
I have to say, I feel the sentiment in Slinger's move, as in the cafe I used to work at, and from a lot of people on this site, it seems to me to be a frustration that moves toward hostility, and I think is a bit of an overreaction on the shopowner's part. It seems like what happens is the owner/baristas see a couple people throughout the day pulling the whole "buy a cup of tea and take up valuable real estate all day thing", and in your mind everyone that comes in with a laptop becomes an annoying pest. Add to this the romanticized nostalgia of the cafe with no clickity noises, just people talking or reading and sipping coffee, and suddenly everyone wants to cut their wireless.
I understand the nostalgia, and annoyance at the techno squatter. But there really are a lot of people like that blogger, people who are sensitive to the fact that a cafe doesn't want to be an office space. But for one, we can't really limit the amount of time people hang out in your cafe, and you can't fairly enforce dollar amount per time spent per customer. We make cafes inviting and comfortable because we want people to stay longer in the hopes that they will buy more as time goes on. McDonald's looks the way it does because they want you to get the hell out the second you're done (ever "hang out" in a fast food place?). People can only go without food for a few hours at a time, so if you have some decent cafe grub, chances are good you'll sell some (no outside food is an easy line to draw. It's to be expected).
I know laptops take up slightly more space than just someone with a book, and people are more likely to stay longer because teh internets is more engrossing in our culture than books are. Yeah, it's sad, but let's not alienate people just because they want to use their laptops instead of talk politics. I stand by my original point; if you want no wireless, you better market the hell out of yourself as an "old school cafe" or something like that, and definitely give people fair warning before they show up with their laptops and leave pissed off, otherwise this seems like a really bad business move. You don't need to be a martyr.
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