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Back about 2004/2004, my mentor John Sanders decided that he'd had enough of squatters and cut off the power to the outlets. It was a bit of a crazy move but it worked on keeping the squatters there a reasonable amount of time. Back then, the max battery time was two hours. Two hours seemed to be enough time to hang out and move on.
I agree with much that has been said in this thread but it sounds like much of the execution has been poor. A company needs to decide decisively what it is and what it is going to provide. Going to give away free internet? Then expect squatters. There certainly is a demand for free internet.
At Spro Hampden, we do not offer internet access, music or art on the walls. We offer coffee and supporting products in a clean, quiet environment designed for our guests to enjoy time to themselves or with friends. People come in asking about WiFi and we politely tell them we do not offer WiFi. Some are okay with that, others leave and I'm okay with that.
We want to be known as the place to come for great coffee and great service. Not for free Wifi.
The point is: if you're going to do it, then give it to them in spades. High speed wireless with all the doohickeys, plenty of seating with wide tables and an outlet at each station. Make it so that anyone considering a need for WiFi will immediately want to be there. Create a registry so that other laptop warriors can see who's there and connect. Certainly there's going to be a need for services and when that need arises, you've created the network to help your customers.
When you're living in poverty and can't even afford diapers for your baby, spending $50 bucks a month on coffee and WIFI sounds a lot better than spending $120 on cable internet and never being able to leave the house or see the light of day.
They should not be doing immature things like randomly shutting off power to their paying customers.
Katherine said:When you're living in poverty and can't even afford diapers for your baby, spending $50 bucks a month on coffee and WIFI sounds a lot better than spending $120 on cable internet and never being able to leave the house or see the light of day.
So, you're OK with taking up a four-top and getting to pay the coffee house less for the same service that you should be buying at home because you're got cash-flow issues?
This is a tad illogical, and smacks of the rampant entitlement that has been remarked on so many times.
Why is it up to the coffee shop to subsidize your poverty? I mean, yeah, it's nice, but using that as a reason that they should do it is just wrong.
To be clear; there is no reason OTHER THAN TO TURN MORE PROFIT, either by getting you to stay longer and buy more product, or by getting you to come in the door, for a coffee shop to provide wi-fi or electricity. If you're not part of that profit, you're stealing. If your being at the table means that they lose customers, you're stealing.
Katherine said:They should not be doing immature things like randomly shutting off power to their paying customers.
Tell it to the folk that have had their registers unplugged by laptopians. Tell it to the shop that had their fridgers unplugged by laptopians. Tell it to the shop owners that have had people come in and move the couch and bookshelves to unplug the lighting to plug in their laptops.
I'm going to go out on a limb, and suggest that the selfish, snobbish, myopic and oh-so-special entitled folk that were visiting this shop were guilty of more than just squatting to get to the ends that they had to resort to. I'm guessing, like Paul Harvey used to say, that there is a rest of the story somewhere.
The point of my comment was not to say that customers are entitled to any kind of charity.
It is more profitable for many customers to use WiFi at a coffee shop than to buy it themselves, just as it is sometimes more profitable for people to enroll in car-sharing or for businesses and farmers to participate in facility or equipment co-ops.
The point of entrepreneurship is to offer a service to fill a demand, after all.
If you are a coffee shop that offers free WiFi, then that is what many of your customers are paying for when they buy your coffee, and is therefore, a part of your service. Naturally people will be using it. It is ridiculous to assume otherwise.
You are perfectly entitled to run a coffee shop sans WiFi.
Many shops have set up ways to deal with the over-usage of free WiFi while still managing to be honest with their customers by placing signs on large tables asking for solo customers to surrender larger table-tops to larger groups. Other businesses have the WiFi turned off on weekends or rush times and have this clearly indicated for their customers. If you outline your expectations clearly to your customers they will usually respect them, and if they don't, they have no reason to be surprised when you confront them about it, or even ask them to leave.
If you create an atmosphere of honesty and respect in your business, your customers and your employees will respond in kind. If you are caddy and passive-aggressive, then everyone that walks in your door will be also.
Chris said:
Katherine said:When you're living in poverty and can't even afford diapers for your baby, spending $50 bucks a month on coffee and WIFI sounds a lot better than spending $120 on cable internet and never being able to leave the house or see the light of day.
So, you're OK with taking up a four-top and getting to pay the coffee house less for the same service that you should be buying at home because you're got cash-flow issues?
This is a tad illogical, and smacks of the rampant entitlement that has been remarked on so many times.
Why is it up to the coffee shop to subsidize your poverty? I mean, yeah, it's nice, but using that as a reason that they should do it is just wrong.
To be clear; there is no reason OTHER THAN TO TURN MORE PROFIT, either by getting you to stay longer and buy more product, or by getting you to come in the door, for a coffee shop to provide wi-fi or electricity. If you're not part of that profit, you're stealing. If your being at the table means that they lose customers, you're stealing.
Katherine said:They should not be doing immature things like randomly shutting off power to their paying customers.
Tell it to the folk that have had their registers unplugged by laptopians. Tell it to the shop that had their fridgers unplugged by laptopians. Tell it to the shop owners that have had people come in and move the couch and bookshelves to unplug the lighting to plug in their laptops.
I'm going to go out on a limb, and suggest that the selfish, snobbish, myopic and oh-so-special entitled folk that were visiting this shop were guilty of more than just squatting to get to the ends that they had to resort to. I'm guessing, like Paul Harvey used to say, that there is a rest of the story somewhere.
Three Years? That's gotta be some sort of record.
Wow, it's funny to look at my response from so long ago now. I seem to be more in line with Katherine now. I think you have to either offer wifi or don't offer wifi full-stop. Anything in between will lead to confusion which will lead to people crossing you off their list of possible places to get coffee, if wifi is something that's important to them. By all means, advertise as a "no-wifi zone" if that's what you want, but you can bet you'll lose a certain percentage of customers. But hey, the ones that come just for the coffee or the conversation or to read a book will be super appreciative.
Just everyone stop whining about people using a service that you clearly provide. Trying to police it will only end in customer dissatisfaction.
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