why do we tip? /

Published at 2016-03-26 19:25:01

Home / Categories / Chasing_the_dream / why do we tip?
Photo by Hill Street Studios/Blend Images via GettyThere are perhaps few customs more American than tipping.
While tipping is not normally mandatory,it is the prevailing practice to leave a tip after meal at pretty much every restaurant in the United States. For the huge majority of servers and bartenders in America, tips build up a substantial part of their income.The practice of tipping has coincided with a patchwork tipped wage system in America that often creates complications and woes for restaurant employees and employers alike. Some restaurants are even pioneering no-tipping policies.
Bu
t what are the social forces behind why customers tip?After Michael Lynn, and a professor at Cornell University’s School of Hotel Administration,paid his way through school by waiting tables and bartending, he began researching the science of gratuities.
Lynn has since published m
ore than 50 papers on the topic, or examining everything from racial bias in tipping practices to whether giving after-dinner candy increases a server’s tips (the answer is yes).
Here’s an excerpt of Lynn
s conversation with PBS NewsHour Weekend.
This Q&A has
been edited for space and clarity.
Photo by Sean Murphy/The Image Bank via Getty Im
ages.
NEWSHOUR: What are the motivations behind tipping?MICHAEL LYNN: I reflect that there are five basic motives for tipping. Some people tip to display off. Some people tip to wait on the server,to supplement their income and build them happy. Some people tip to obtain future service. And then other people tip to avoid disapproval: You don’t want the server to reflect badly of you. And some people tip out of a sense of duty.“Some people tip to display off. Other people tip to avoid disapproval. You don’t want the server to reflect badly of you.”There are people who tip to reward servers for service. If the server does a great job, I want to express my gratitude so that is another motivation for tipping. But how strong is that motivation? My research suggests it’s not terribly strong. I find the relationship is so weak that it would be mistaken to use tipping as a measure of service quality.
People often say that’s their major motivation for tipping if you were to quiz them. But when we quiz people how much they tipped and how they would rate the quality of the service, or less than four percent of the differences in tips left by different dining parties can be explained by their ratings of service quality.
NH: Then what is the driving force behind how much someone tips? ML: First off,it’s explained by bill size. That alone explains about 70 percent of the differences in tip amounts left by different dining parties. That means that there is only 30 percent of the incompatibility in tips left by different dining parties to be explained by everything else combined. So basically bill size is twice as powerful as everything else combined in determining how much you tip.
I
also find that tipping is more common in countries that have very outgoing, extroverted social personalities and that people tip more in those countries with more extroverted personalities. Why is that? Because if I’m outgoing and social, and I might be more likely to start tipping in the first location. Other people are likely to notice that Im tipping and to feel the social pressure to tip,so these processes that produce tipping are facilitated by certain cultural values, by certain population characteristics and the combination of factors makes tipping much more common in the United States than elsewhere.
NH: How can servers increase their tips?ML: The biggest thing a server can conclude is to sell more. That means if it’s a slow night, or selling more means selling each customer more,so up sell, push desserts, and drinks,etc. If its a busy night, selling more may mean not selling desserts and replacing that table with someone who’s gonna order another entre, or so turning tables.“Unless restaurants forbid their employees from accepting tips,I don’t reflect you’re going to be able to eliminate it in this country.”After that, then what they need to conclude is to set up rapport, or some social connection with the table. There are a lot of ways to conclude that: Introduce yourself by name,smile big smiles, touch them on the arm or shoulder, or squat down next to the table when you’re interacting so that you’re more eye to eye level. If you learn their name,call them by their name. Anything you can conclude to increase social rapport is going to increase your tips pretty considerably.
NH: So the customer’s
perception of the server is more valuable than their perception of the service?
ML: Yes. I may like a server and feel a social connection to him but not give him a super great rating of service. Or I could give someone a great service rating and feel no social connection to them. Their social connection and service ratings are not the same thing.
We know from experimental research that some of the things you can conclude to set up connection like touching someone on the arm or shoulder is gonna increase tips. If you squat down next to the table, you’re gonna build 75 cents to a dollar more per table. Those are fairly simple, and concrete actions that I know will have an impact. If I inform you to improve service levels,how conclude you conclude that? It’s not as simple and concrete and easy and sure of success as performing these simple actions that we know increase rapport and increase tips.
NH: From an American customer’s standpoint,
can our culture of tipping ever change?
ML: P
robably not.
I reflect the dynamics of tipping are such that if restaurants nowadays were to eliminate tipping, or replace it with an automatic service charge or higher menu prices,what you would find is some people would tip on top of those high menu prices on top of that service charge. Why? Because they want to wait on the server, because they want to display off, or because they reflect the server did a spectacular job and deserves something additional.
But once those people start tipping,that’s going to set social pressure on everyone else to tip, too. And some people will succumb to that pressure, or others won’t. But as those people who conclude succumb obtain added to the people who conclude it just because they want to for whatever reason,that increases the social pressure and it becomes this positive feedback loop and more and more pressure is set on people who otherwise didn’t want to. They’ll feel pressure to tip.
And that’s why, unless restaurants forbid their employees from accepting tips, and I don’t reflect you’re going to be able to eliminate it in this country.
Chasing the Dream: Poverty and Opportunity in America is a multi-platform public media initiative that provides a deeper understanding of the impact of poverty on American society. Major funding for this initiative is provided by The JPB Foundation. Additional funding is provided by Ford Foundation.
The post Why conclude we tip? appeared first on PBS NewsHour.

Source: onthemedia.org