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When I worked at BW-3s, we split the place up usually by the number of servers. Most nights, there were two, and we split the place in half. Sometimes we'd split it into three. On a two person night, you're looking at probably 10 tables, three person nights were about 5-6 tables.
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Re: Question for anyone who's been a server...
Say this: You get a tip when you learn some manners. Until then you depend on food stamps.
-Rudey Quote:
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Here all you waitstaff types go..
www.shockwave.com Go for the diner dash game! Diner Dash game It is so cute! |
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I've never been a server, but a lot of my sorority sisters were when I was active... some worked at Chili's (or Applebee's) where it was more of a sit-eat-go type place.. and they usually had way more tables a night than the people who were servers at places like Olive Garden which got less tables at a time or even the local country club, where they got even fewer tables, but it was b/c of the atmosphere of the restuarant (i.e. they didn't have that sit-eat-hurry-up-and-go atmosphere that gave them so much traffic that they had to have 10-15 tables at a time) |
i work at a chain restaurant, and how many tables we have depends on the night. on a saturday night, we have 11 servers on and each have about a 4 or 5 table section. on a monday or tuesday night there are 5 servers on and we have way bigger sections. our hostesses are supposed to rotate sections so noone gets triple sat, but on a busy night when you only have 4 tables in your section, if they all get up at the same time and theres a wait then we sometimes get triple sat.
as for sidework...we have front of house (foh) and back of house(boh) sidework that we have to do. front of house sidework isnt bad though. we have to make sure our section is clean at the beginning of our shift and the end of our shift and that its ready for the next shift. it gets checked out by the foh closer at the end of the shift and we get signed before we can leave. boh is harder though. we have a boh sidework chart and u have to make sure that every dressing by your name is done at the beginning of your shift with a backup in case we need it. and then theres running sidework which is like stocking glasses, or getting ice, or something else like that. then at the end of the shift we have closing sidework for boh. that would be like cleaning a side station, restocking the coffee station, closing the salad bin. of course its a lot of work if there arent a lot of servers on the floor, but the less sidework you have to do, the more servers are on and the less money you make. we have to tipout the hostesses because our chain is cheap and wont pay the hostesses minimum wage so we have to tip them out. |
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NO way would I want to do that for a living!!! heheheheheh |
Oh man, that Diner Dash game was WAY too familiar. Its my night off, what am I doing playing that?? haha
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hehehehehe |
I am a restaurant manager-been in the business for 11 years. The concept I work at now, our servers have 3-5 tables on Fri/Sat/Sun depending on how good the server is. The servers tip out an automatic 1.5% to the bussers and 5% to the bartenders-if they sold any bar drinks. The bussers are responsible for bussing tables, and restocking the boh for the servers-ice, chips, salsa, cups, etc. The servers just wait their tables, roll silverware, usually 70-ish on weekends, turn in a cashout and go home. This is the first concept I have worked for where the servers didnt have running/closing duties and FOH cleaning to do. We pay people to do all that for the servers.
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that game is so much fun! I want to buy it but have a hard time justifying paying money for a game that i could beat in one sitting probably
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As far as tables go, servers will usually have 3-4 to a section early in the night. As the floor is cut, the sections get bigger so that at some points, if you're one of the last ones out, you could have about 8-10, but no more than one or two is usually ever being used, if that. The place where I work is pretty old-fashioned in that we don't have a computer system, so when we ring in an order we have to write out the ticket by hand and turn it in at the kitchen window. Servers are also responsible for making the salads, dishing out the soup, coleslaw, and potato salad, and getting other side dishes/dressings. No wonder I'm so tired by the end of the night. :p I talked to some of the other girls I work with and many of them had the same problem with the day hostess as I do until they called her out on it. Apparently, she treated them the same way until they let her know it wouldn't fly, so maybe I should've let loose on her the other day when she practically threw me across the room. Today I overheard Miss Thang The Hostess talking about how she's retiring soon and I got all excited...until I heard her say that she's only retiring from her other job. :( Looks like we're stuck with her. |
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i wanna work for you too!!! wheres your restaurant?? and im interested in opening a restaurant someday...any words of wisdom???
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Well, anyone in Texas is welcome to come apply!!
As for starting your own restaurant-My boyfriend, his dad, and a partner started a restaurant from scratch in Colorodo, and it is super hard. So much investment, time, etc. But my mom's boyfriend bought a restaurant and its doing so incredibly well. What I have seen so far is starting from scratch=hard, buying=hard, but easier. |
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