Mark Allgeier wrote:Bad Experience? Not so much.
Antonia L wrote:I In the case of the entree not being available when you asked for it, but you saw it served to another customer, it's entirely possible that the other customer called to make sure it was available, and the kitchen was able to reserve one for them. They were out by the time you asked for it, save for the one that was reserved for the other party. That really does happen - some people call to make sure their favorite entree is available and ask the kitchen to hold one for them.
Antonia L wrote:As far as the people sitting on the patio, perhaps they pitched a hissy fit, said it was their anniversary and they met out on that fateful patio, and the hostess/manager just let them have their way rather than make a huge deal out of it.
Antonia L wrote:Sometimes there are legitimate reasons for things like that happening - and sometimes it's just a mistake by a hostess or server or cook. If your experience was otherwise good, why base your experience on how others are treated?
Heather Y wrote:This has been told on this forum a hundred times..... speak up! If you are not satisfied, you MUST say something.
Steve H wrote:Confrontation is not enjoyable. So, we only do it when the opportunity of enjoyment has already been lost.
Robin Garr wrote:Steve H wrote:Confrontation is not enjoyable. So, we only do it when the opportunity of enjoyment has already been lost.
Steve, with respect, I think what folks are trying to communicate here is that there's a broad range of gray between the extremes of black and white. Confrontation and silence aren't the only possibilities; conversation falls in between. A gracious, open approach to management, without any demands or expectations, might have yielded an explanation that could have helped you see that what happened was a #$%#-up, but perhaps nothing personally intended at all. For me, that kind of knowledge goes a long way toward improving my mood, without any need for a confrontation at all.
I hear what you're saying, and respect it, but in the spirit of these forum discussions as round-table conversations meant for all, I'd like to re-emphasize that a quiet conversation with management about something that makes you unhappy doesn't have to be a confrontation, and it doesn't necessarily make you appear to be a noisy complainer or that you have an unreasonable sense of entitlement at all.
Steve H wrote:Obviously I have failed in that goal. Perhaps I'm not explaining myself clearly.
I was hoping to stimulate a conversation about situations when it is not worth complaining about, and how to tell the difference. Obviously I have failed in that goal. Perhaps I'm not explaining myself clearly.
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