Do you also pay a delivery charge for getting stuff sent out? Enforced tipping sounds like a scam to me, pay for item, pay delivery, pay extra wages.. I'd rather goto a highstreet shop. Or use amazon, where I get free delivery etc. Only places I seen tips being given out are in like Bars/Pubs for waiting jobs/barman jobs, hotel cleaners/baggage handlers/car valets. I guess probably entertainment type jobs or related.
The only time I have to pay shipping for Amazon is if I buy through the Marketplace (it's been $6.49/book or $3.49/video, but I think these prices are going up). For all other Amazon orders I make sure to order the minimum to qualify for free shipping ($35.00), and I recently decided to try out Amazon Prime. It's been really nice to know exactly what day to expect the item, and the last time it even came a day early. (please note that the dollar amounts here are in CAD, not USD)
Most takeout places here have delivery charges, and those don't go to the driver (I think they should, but then I don't get the sayso over that). Some places have free delivery if you order over a certain amount (which is always pretty high). So tipping is extra on top of the delivery and GST.
It's funny that there are jobs where you're explicitly told you cannot accept tips or they must be added to a communal pot and there's people I would tip that aren't allowed to accept them. Like street or toilet cleaners, gardeners etc. I always think people who do cleaning jobs and keep places clean and tidy deserve a little extra, especially if they work outside, but for people who are just doing their job.. not so much.
What annoys me are tip jars in food courts. Since the customer is the one who does the fetching, carrying, has to pour their own drink (if they order pop), and clear their own table (dishes in the garbage, tray in the space so it can be cleaned and returned to the kiosk), I can't see what actually merits a tip. I tell the person behind the counter what I want, they pile it on a tray, and I pay for it. It's not like they have to bus a table or bring me anything after that. And the lunch kiosk at the library doesn't even use trays. If you order soup, you'd better have a way to get it to where you intend to eat (at a nearby table or up on the 4th floor quiet area where people are allowed to eat, provided they clean up after themselves).
As for complaining, I don't really do that, at least not for most things, I just buy from someone else in future. I feel unemployment is a great motivator for improving service.
They won't ever improve if they don't know what the problem is.
Even with grocery orders, I make sure that the store knows if something isn't right. There were several mistakes with my order a couple of days ago. As I told them, I was very specific about what I wanted, the sizes, types, brands, and what I wanted them to do if they were sold out of anything or had questions (the answer is always to call me so I can decide to either substitute something else, ask for a rain check, or just not bother with the item).
Multiple mistakes with this past order means the manager himself is coming over later today (he's the one who usually does the deliveries) to exchange the wrong stuff for the right stuff.
The people involved in putting my order together are going to be reminded to follow the directions. I'm always organized and specific in ordering, and the person who took the order wrote everything down... and the picker paid no attention at all to the notes.
I made the mistake of pre-tipping the driver when I placed the order. The sauce was only $1 so I wasn't going to raise a stink about that though it's dumb.
It's still worth a phone call to say "my order is missing something I ordered and paid for. It's a small amount so I won't make a big fuss about it
this time, but please don't let it happen again."
As I told the restaurant in my case, fish and chips without tartar sauce is not very enjoyable, particularly when the only other stuff I had around the house was ketchup - which does not go well on fish. That's the time when they gave me a free fish & chips with my next order (they keep notes for such things, and by that time I was a regular customer and I usually order enough stuff to do for several meals, so I'm a customer worth a bit of effort to keep).
My building is super confusing, I posted in the rants thread when I moved in that twice I got lost in the parking garage for close to an hour - and I have excellent dead reckoning skills. It's actually four buildings that are only connected at a few points. But from the outside it looks like one massive building. There is no way to know that all of the entrances will not let you access the other buildings, they only get you into a single building with only a few ways to cross over that involve running through an internal maze with no reference points.
Are there no signs on the walls to give people directions? I've lived here nearly 4 years, and still get turned around on the ground floor, since that doesn't have the same standard layout as the upper floors. There are extra offices and other rooms here and some things aren't in the usual location, so even a few months ago I got lost trying to find the laundry room.
At least each residential wing has a sign on the wall saying which range of suite numbers there are.
So while I get frustrated when delivery drivers can't find my way to my door, I am still understanding and don't undertip them on account of that. Particularly if they actually try and find me and wind up lost. But this guy, like I said, just pulled over down the road at a random spot and asked me to come get it.
The only reason why I didn't tell him to get off his butt and do his job is because of the threat of having my food spat on. I felt I was over a barrel. I thought about pretending I was handicapped or something to guilt him into doing his job but I'm not a ****.
One of the security ideas a former manager had here was to tell the tenants that if we order food, we should meet the delivery person in the lobby. As far as I'm concerned, I paid for the stuff to be delivered to my suite, and I don't live in the lobby.
I've never felt threatened by any food delivery person here. The Canada Post driver? Yeah, he got verbally abusive because I complained about him. They must have given him one hell of a talking-to, though, because he's been very nice and sociable ever since.
And yeah, there was that incident last summer when another tenant decided he was going to barge in here "for massages" at 12:30 am.
But in my experience delivery drivers mostly just want to get everything delivered, get paid, and go on to the next place. There's one of them who usually chats a little about soap operas; some of his other customers are into them, so after I'd mentioned once that I watch General Hospital, he asks about it now.
In your situation, would it be a reasonable compromise for you to stand outside the building and wave your arms to indicate where you are? Not that you should need to do this, but I did it a few times when I still lived in my house and the drivers were math-challenged as to how to count by 2 (the house numbers in my neighborhood went up by 2 on each side, not 4). Sometimes the driver would park several houses away, and so help me one started complaining and whining about the house numbers, as if it's my fault how the city designed the neighborhood.
I also always used to tip regardless of sucky service because of how low minimum wage is. Well I just found out that in California the full minimum wage applies to tipped servers, so I'm no longer going to tip crappy drivers/servers.
There's no reason to tip for bad service. None at all. A tip is supposed to be a gift from the customer, optional and at the customer's discretion.