When the Hotel Statler, in Buffalo,
announced that a guest need not tip its employees
in order to get satisfactory service, a sensation was
sprung upon hotel managers and the traveling public.
Nothing more emphatically shows the abnormal state
of mind toward tipping than that such an elementary
right should be affirmed and cause surprise in the
affirmation.
A SOUND CODE
Following is its Code to employes
on the practice of tipping:
“The patron of a hotel
goes there because he expects to receive
certain things served with
celerity, courtesy and cheerfulness.
“The persons who are to fetch
and carry him these things will be those whose
portion it is to render intimate, personal services
to others. Since time immemorial, this class
of servitors has been of the rank and file.
“Now and then a server is found a
waiter, a bootblack, a barber or a bell boy who
adds a bit of his own personality to his services.
Such a one shows a bit more intelligence initiative perspicacity than
his fellows. The patron finds his smaller
wants anticipated, and is pleased. He feels
that the servant has given him something extra and
unexpected and he wants to pay something
extra for it.
“He tips.
“Of course there are
abuses of the tip. A rich bounder wants
something more than other
hotel guests, and he futilely tries to
get it by throwing money about.
“His tips are insults,
and his reward Servility instead of
service.
“Or
“An individual wishing
to be thought a ‘good fellow’ ADMINISTERS
tips with the advice to ‘buy
a house and lot,’ etc.
“Or
“An infrequent traveler,
having the time of his life, tips out
of sheer goodheartedness.
“These types help to
constitute the ‘Public.’
“It is the business
of a good hotel to cater to the Public. It
is the avowed business of
the Hotel Statler to please the public
better than any other hotel
in the world.
“Statler can run a tipless
hotel if he wants to.
“But Statler knows that
a first-class hotel cannot be maintained
on a tip-less basis, for the
reason that a small but certain per
cent. of its guests will tip,
in spite of all rules.
“Statler can and does
do this: He guarantees to his guests who
do not wish to tip, everything EVERYTHING in
the way of hotel
service, courtesy, etc.,
that the tipper gets.
“Let’s make that
a bit stronger guests do NOT have to tip
at
Hotel Statler to get courteous,
polite, attentive service.
“Or, for final emphasis, we say
to Statler guests: Please do NOT tip unless
you feel like it; but if you DO tip, let your tipping
be yielding to a genuine desire not
conforming to an outrageous custom.
“Any Statler employee
who is wise and discreet enough to merit
tips is wise and discreet
enough to render a like service
whether he is tipped or not.
“And he is wise and
discreet enough to say ‘thank you’ when
he
gets his tip.
“In this connection
let this be said:
“The man who takes a
tip and does not thank the tipper does not
feel that he has earned the
tip any more than a blackmailer
feels that he has earned his
blood money.
“Any Statler employee who fails
to give Service, or who fails to thank the guest
who gives him something, falls short of the Statler
Standard. We always thank any guest who reports
such a case to us. Statler does not deal
summarily with his helpers, any more than he deals
perfunctorily with his guests but the tip-grafters
get short shrift here.”
FOR THE BENEFIT OF GUESTS
To understand the spirit of management
which could issue such instructions to its employees
in the face of the opportunity to exploit the public,
as most hotels do and so throw the whole cost of wages
upon the patron, it is necessary to consider other
sections of the Code treating of professional hospitality.
“Hotel Statler is operated
primarily for the benefit and
convenience of its guests.
Without guests there could be no
Hotel Statler. These
are simple Facts easily understood.
“The Statler is a successful hotel.
The Reason is, that every Waiter in this hotel,
every Hall-Boy, the Chambermaid, the Clerk, the
Chef, the Manager, the Boss Himself, is working all
the time to make them FEEL ‘at home.’
“Hotel service that
is, Hotel Statler service means the limit
of Courteous, Efficient Attention from Each Particular
Employee to Each Particular Guest. This is
the kind of service a Guest pays for when he pays
us his bill whether it is for $2.00 or
$20.00 per day. It is the kind of Service
he is entitled to, and he NEED NOT and SHOULD
NOT pay ANY MORE.”
NOT HOSPITALITY
Compare the attitude of management
toward guests as revealed in this code with the bristling,
belligerent attitude of employees in other first-class
places where tipping is undisciplined! In the
average hotel where the management encourages the
tipping for economic reasons the bell-boy will make
a scene if you fail to tip him after he carries your
suit-case from the lobby to your room. Every other
employee has the same spirit he has to
have it if he is to be compensated at all, for the
employer puts it squarely up to him to work the guest
for his wages.
Apparently this hotel reached the
conviction that this was not hospitality.
Then the conviction was reached that
a guest “need not and should not pay any more”
for hotel service than the rate paid at the desk.
From this it was logical to bring the employees to
a new conception of service and to stop the piratical
practice toward guests who do not tip.
It is particularly significant to
note the assertion that the proprietor can run a tipless
hotel if he wants to. That is an interesting
declaration. It proves that those managers who
exploit the tipping propensity deliberately do so
for reasons of greed.
Then the reason for not running a
tipless hotel is stated to be that “a small
but certain per cent. of its guests will tip in spite
of all rules.” Here is evidence that the
public has its measure of blame for the custom as
well as the avarice of managers. This hotel declares
that its conception of hospitality is to leave the
guest free in his relation toward employees.
But note this! It does not leave the employees free
in their attitude toward guests.
UP TO THE EMPLOYER
The foregoing distinction is the crux
of the whole tipping problem. If managers will
restrain and discipline employees so that they will
not run riot in their eagerness to exact toll from
patrons the tipping evil will be reduced to a minimum.
THE FIRST STEP
It is not the idea underlying this
discussion to consider that a satisfactory disposal
of the tipping custom has been made when managers
insure equal treatment for those who do not tip in
comparison with those who do tip. Nothing short
of the complete abolition of the custom can be the
goal in a republic. But as a long stride toward
the goal, the Code cited above is noteworthy.
It constitutes the first immediate step that any hotel
may take.
The public would find immense relief
in the general adoption of the foregoing idea that
tipping must “be yielding to a genuine desire not
conforming to an outrageous custom.” Inasmuch
as the vast majority of Americans who tip do so only
because they are afraid not to conform to an outrageous
custom, this plan, honestly enforced upon employees,
will reduce the followers of the custom to the small
percentage of the public who tip because of pride
or moral obtuseness. A way can be found to handle
this element when the majority have been freed.
Once the proof is at hand that tipping
can be handled the conclusion is unescapable that
the managers who knuckle to the custom are “corrupt
and contented.” They are on precisely the
same moral level as their employees.
THE GUEST’S RIGHTS
In the meantime, the individual patron
has the right to and should proceed on the theory
that he is entitled to EVERYTHING in the way of service
for the one payment. This is his common law right
even if no special laws regulating tipping are in
force.
The public is at a great disadvantage
in combating the tipping evil when the managers leave
the issue to be settled between the patrons and the
employees. A bell boy can commit an offense to
a patron who does not tip that is perfectly tangible
to the patron but difficult to report to the manager.
Unless the manager takes a positive hand and instructs
his employees in a manner similar to the above Code
it is likely that most persons will continue to pay
tribute rather than be insulted and neglected.
In Chicago, the Young Men’s
Christian Association operates a nineteen-story hotel
where tips are prohibited, and this organization generally
discourages the custom in its enterprises.