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Thread started 04/02/09 11:57am

ItsOnlyMountai
ns

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How much do you tip for delivery?

My office orders delivery (for lunch) fairly regulary on the company card--I am the one responsible for tipping the delivery guy. How much do I tip? I think 20% is kind of too much considering all he did was bring the food... But the total bill is usually between $60 and $100. What do you think is a reasonable tip?
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Reply #1 posted 04/02/09 12:03pm

Lammastide

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ItsOnlyMountains said:

My office orders delivery (for lunch) fairly regulary on the company card--I am the one responsible for tipping the delivery guy. How much do I tip? I think 20% is kind of too much considering all he did was bring the food... But the total bill is usually between $60 and $100. What do you think is a reasonable tip?

Don't be ungrateful. If all he did was bring your food, why didn't you go pick it up yourself? no no no!

I usually tip delivery guys 15-20%.
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #2 posted 04/02/09 12:05pm

Efan

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I might tip too much, but living in NYC, I use delivery a lot, and I know those guys work hard. So 20% seems right to me, and I'll do more if the weather's inclement. I'm okay with being a big tipper for good service here, because in a way, what they're doing is more in need of being right than what a server does--it's a gigantic pain to have to send something back when you've had it delivered. So if they get the food to me hot, with everything that I've ordered done the way I wanted, and done it speedily--that's all very valuable to me and I'll tip accordingly.
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Reply #3 posted 04/02/09 12:06pm

Genesia

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I usually do 15% and, as Efan said, 20% if the weather's bad.
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Reply #4 posted 04/02/09 12:17pm

CarrieMpls

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10% for delivery.
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Reply #5 posted 04/02/09 12:17pm

PANDURITO

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Tip?
Don't they have a salary?
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Reply #6 posted 04/02/09 12:18pm

CarrieMpls

Ex-Moderator

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Genesia said:

I usually do 15% and, as Efan said, 20% if the weather's bad.


Good call, I do up the tip if it's yucky weather.


Of course, I almost never order delivery.
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Reply #7 posted 04/02/09 12:23pm

Nikademus

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PANDURITO said:

Tip?
Don't they have a salary?



Yeah, but it's not much. Pizza drivers usually do not get much over minimum wage around here.
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Reply #8 posted 04/02/09 12:24pm

Genesia

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CarrieMpls said:

Genesia said:

I usually do 15% and, as Efan said, 20% if the weather's bad.


Good call, I do up the tip if it's yucky weather.


Of course, I almost never order delivery.


I figure, if the weather's bad enough that I don't want to go out, why would they? I mean, yeah - it's their job. But it can't hurt to give a li'l extra to someone who's willing to get cold and/or wet on my behalf. shrug
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Reply #9 posted 04/02/09 12:26pm

Mach

Lammastide said:



I usually tip delivery guys 15-20%.


Same here
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Reply #10 posted 04/02/09 12:30pm

CarrieMpls

Ex-Moderator

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PANDURITO said:

Tip?
Don't they have a salary?


Yes, but it's next to nothing. And I'm unsure about delivery people but servers I know are taxed on a minimum of what they should earn for tip, whether they get it or not. That's just how it works here.
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Reply #11 posted 04/02/09 12:38pm

Mach

CarrieMpls said:




Of course, I almost never order delivery.


lol There is ZERO delivery where I live lol
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Reply #12 posted 04/02/09 12:46pm

ItsOnlyMountai
ns

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Lammastide said:

Don't be ungrateful. If all he did was bring your food, why didn't you go pick it up yourself? no no no!


I'm not being ungrateful; it's not my job to go pick it up. It is their job to deliver it. I tip very well at restaurants -- at least 20%, but the server is refilling my glass, bringing appetizers, the table is already set, etc. Delivery service does not include those things. And they usually mess up the order.
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Reply #13 posted 04/02/09 12:47pm

Cinnie

PANDURITO said:

Tip?
Don't they have celery?


Yeah if they are bringin me hot wings, they better remember the celery
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Reply #14 posted 04/02/09 1:01pm

Lammastide

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ItsOnlyMountains said:

Lammastide said:

Don't be ungrateful. If all he did was bring your food, why didn't you go pick it up yourself? no no no!


I'm not being ungrateful; it's not my job to go pick it up. It is their job to deliver it. I tip very well at restaurants -- at least 20%, but the server is refilling my glass, bringing appetizers, the table is already set, etc. Delivery service does not include those things. And they usually mess up the order.

I was being a bit facetious. My point is if the act of bringing your food is so trivial, it would have been nothing for you to get it yourself. That you requested the service, despite having options, means that it is of substantive value to you... and that should translate into monetary value for the guy who braves traffic and weather in your stead.

And it's not the delivery guy who packs your bag in most cases, I don't think.
[Edited 4/2/09 13:18pm]
Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ
πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν
τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.”
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Reply #15 posted 04/02/09 1:06pm

Cinnie

I have to say I certainly would never tip if I go and pick it up myself, but if someone brings it to me, a certain amount needs to go to whoever got off their ass to move the product from the kitchen to my table.
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Reply #16 posted 04/02/09 2:22pm

PaisleyPark508
3

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I am so damn cheap...I pick it up myself or send my son boxed

If I am at work, on company money, 20%
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Reply #17 posted 04/02/09 2:29pm

JerseyKRS

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I always start at 20% and go down. If it was really exceptional SERVICE (not quality), I will go up.

My father left 2 dollars on the table recently when we went to this local pizza place. We were there with two of my daughters, also.

disbelief


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Reply #18 posted 04/02/09 2:31pm

BlueZebra

My neighbours ALWAYS order in when the weather is really bad ... strange



lurking
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Reply #19 posted 04/02/09 2:32pm

Cuddles

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BlueZebra said:

My neighbours ALWAYS order in when the weather is really bad ... strange



lurking



thats when i order out lurking
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Reply #20 posted 04/02/09 2:32pm

iloveannie

I'm English. We don't tip. Well I bloody don't anyway. Nobody ever tips me where when I do my job!
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Reply #21 posted 04/02/09 2:32pm

JerseyKRS

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iloveannie said:

I'm English. We don't tip. Well I bloody don't anyway. Nobody ever tips me where when I do my job!



sad


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Reply #22 posted 04/02/09 2:34pm

BlueZebra

Cuddles said:

BlueZebra said:

My neighbours ALWAYS order in when the weather is really bad ... strange



lurking



thats when i order out lurking


funny thing is that they don't seem to remember that they ordered something ... then bring me pizza smile
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Reply #23 posted 04/02/09 2:41pm

kimrachell

CarrieMpls said:

Genesia said:

I usually do 15% and, as Efan said, 20% if the weather's bad.


Good call, I do up the tip if it's yucky weather.


Of course, I almost never order delivery.

yeahthat
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Reply #24 posted 04/02/09 3:16pm

Cuddles

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BlueZebra said:

Cuddles said:




thats when i order out lurking


funny thing is that they don't seem to remember that they ordered something ... then bring me pizza smile



tips are always 1 dollar for every 5 spent shrug

sometimes more for the pizza guy cause I like him
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Reply #25 posted 04/02/09 4:21pm

wildgoldenhone
y

http://www.npr.org/templa...Id=4651531

They make less than minimum wage.

If I have one operating philosophy about life it is this: "Be cool to the pizza delivery dude; it's good luck." Four principles guide the pizza dude philosophy.

Principle 1: Coolness to the pizza delivery dude is a practice in humility and forgiveness. I let him cut me off in traffic, let him safely hit the exit ramp from the left lane, let him forget to use his blinker without extending any of my digits out the window or towards my horn because there should be one moment in my harried life when a car may encroach or cut off or pass and I let it go. Sometimes when I have become so certain of my ownership of my lane, daring anyone to challenge me, the pizza dude speeds by me in his rusted Chevette. His pizza light atop his car glowing like a beacon reminds me to check myself as I flow through the world. After all, the dude is delivering pizza to young and old, families and singletons, gays and straights, blacks, whites and browns, rich and poor, vegetarians and meat lovers alike. As he journeys, I give safe passage, practice restraint, show courtesy, and contain my anger.

Principle 2: Coolness to the pizza delivery dude is a practice in empathy. Let's face it: We've all taken jobs just to have a job because some money is better than none. I've held an assortment of these jobs and was grateful for the paycheck that meant I didn't have to share my Cheerios with my cats. In the big pizza wheel of life, sometimes you're the hot bubbly cheese and sometimes you're the burnt crust. It's good to remember the fickle spinning of that wheel.

Principle 3: Coolness to the pizza delivery dude is a practice in honor and it reminds me to honor honest work. Let me tell you something about these dudes: They never took over a company and, as CEO, artificially inflated the value of the stock and cashed out their own shares, bringing the company to the brink of bankruptcy, resulting in 20,000 people losing their jobs while the CEO builds a home the size of a luxury hotel. Rather, the dudes sleep the sleep of the just.

Principle 4: Coolness to the pizza delivery dude is a practice in equality. My measurement as a human being, my worth, is the pride I take in performing my job -- any job -- and the respect with which I treat others. I am the equal of the world not because of the car I drive, the size of the TV I own, the weight I can bench press, or the calculus equations I can solve. I am the equal to all I meet because of the kindness in my heart. And it all starts here -- with the pizza delivery dude.

Tip him well, friends and brethren, for that which you bestow freely and willingly will bring you all the happy luck that a grateful universe knows how to return.
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Reply #26 posted 04/02/09 4:27pm

ocean

We don't tip woot! ...We just pay a fortune to begin with neutral lol
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Reply #27 posted 04/02/09 4:38pm

Cuddles

avatar

wildgoldenhoney said:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4651531

They make less than minimum wage.

If I have one operating philosophy about life it is this: "Be cool to the pizza delivery dude; it's good luck." Four principles guide the pizza dude philosophy.

Principle 1: Coolness to the pizza delivery dude is a practice in humility and forgiveness. I let him cut me off in traffic, let him safely hit the exit ramp from the left lane, let him forget to use his blinker without extending any of my digits out the window or towards my horn because there should be one moment in my harried life when a car may encroach or cut off or pass and I let it go. Sometimes when I have become so certain of my ownership of my lane, daring anyone to challenge me, the pizza dude speeds by me in his rusted Chevette. His pizza light atop his car glowing like a beacon reminds me to check myself as I flow through the world. After all, the dude is delivering pizza to young and old, families and singletons, gays and straights, blacks, whites and browns, rich and poor, vegetarians and meat lovers alike. As he journeys, I give safe passage, practice restraint, show courtesy, and contain my anger.

Principle 2: Coolness to the pizza delivery dude is a practice in empathy. Let's face it: We've all taken jobs just to have a job because some money is better than none. I've held an assortment of these jobs and was grateful for the paycheck that meant I didn't have to share my Cheerios with my cats. In the big pizza wheel of life, sometimes you're the hot bubbly cheese and sometimes you're the burnt crust. It's good to remember the fickle spinning of that wheel.

Principle 3: Coolness to the pizza delivery dude is a practice in honor and it reminds me to honor honest work. Let me tell you something about these dudes: They never took over a company and, as CEO, artificially inflated the value of the stock and cashed out their own shares, bringing the company to the brink of bankruptcy, resulting in 20,000 people losing their jobs while the CEO builds a home the size of a luxury hotel. Rather, the dudes sleep the sleep of the just.

Principle 4: Coolness to the pizza delivery dude is a practice in equality. My measurement as a human being, my worth, is the pride I take in performing my job -- any job -- and the respect with which I treat others. I am the equal of the world not because of the car I drive, the size of the TV I own, the weight I can bench press, or the calculus equations I can solve. I am the equal to all I meet because of the kindness in my heart. And it all starts here -- with the pizza delivery dude.

Tip him well, friends and brethren, for that which you bestow freely and willingly will bring you all the happy luck that a grateful universe knows how to return.



my pizza guy is cool, and he will pick up shit from the store too if i ask him biggrin
To make a thief, make an owner; to create crime, create laws.
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Reply #28 posted 04/02/09 4:52pm

wildgoldenhone
y

Cuddles said:

wildgoldenhoney said:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4651531

They make less than minimum wage.




my pizza guy is cool, and he will pick up shit from the store too if i ask him biggrin

I've heard people ask for beer.

lol
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