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Are you a complainer?

An Officer

Vice Admiral
Admiral
If you are served an off meal, or you use a service, and they botch your things, do you complain? Do you take names and kick ass? Or do you take it and move on? Suck it up and forget about it?

Tell us, are you a complainer, or a taker...
 
Depends on the degree of fuck up. I try not to sweat the small shit or take it personally. A long of what I do is dictated by whether I think it was an honest accident, stupidity, or someone just being a ass.
 
Imagine you ordered a plate of food, and you found the bun of your burger soaked with actual free flowing blood, would you send it back and let them know how unhygienic that is, or just set it aside uneaten and pay for it too, when they include it in the bill, in order to avoid confrontation?
 
Imagine you ordered a plate of food, and you found the bun of your burger soaked with actual free flowing blood, would you send it back and let them know how unhygienic that is, or just set it aside uneaten and pay for it too, when they include it in the bill, in order to avoid confrontation?

Complain, send it back and request a either a discount or a comped meal.
 
Some people are very happy complainers, and others prefer to keep their silence and never say a thing, even in the face of great rudeness.

Has anyone here ever found themselves so upset, they sat down to write up a complaint letter to the head of whichever organisation caused the offense?
 
When a fast food place messes up my order, and they do about 50% of the time, I go back in and politely ask for the right thing. I'm careful not to be mean about it.
 
Put tomato on my burger when I specifically asked "without"? Forgivable, I'll take it off and let it slide.

Steak is cooked well when I asked for it rare? I'll sometimes forgive it depending on a taste test.

Completely wrong item/wrong sides/disgusting/unhygenic/etc. Will be sent back and depending on the service I may ask to talk to the manager or otherwise make a fuss.

The more expensive my meal, the more likely I am to be a stickler. An 8-dollar Denny's cheeseburger is far less worth pissing the staff off about than a $40 steak.
 
I think that's a good point. If you were expecting something of value, and got shit instead - good reason to complain... just how far would you follow it up though? Say if the manager you spoke to did nothing and was also rude, what then?
 
I will send it back if it's something I can't undo myself or if I think it's just gross. I usually put up with things, unless it's really rude or disgusting or whatever. Terrible service leads to little to no tip, though.

I usually don't go very far - I can't recall ever asking for a manager, but I do let people know if I don't like something. I try to be firm but polite. Not that I've always succeeded...
 
I'll express dissatisfaction when they get something wrong, but I'm not one of those who starts on a crusade whenever I feel slighted.

My mother comes from a family of those. It can be....trying.
 
I guess it's not always fun to be with a complainer, bent on making sure the world provides excellence at all times. :lol:
 
This is true - I know someone who never orders things exactly off the menu and has complained about something every time she has gone out with us. She does get great discounts, though...
 
I think that's a good point. If you were expecting something of value, and got shit instead - good reason to complain... just how far would you follow it up though? Say if the manager you spoke to did nothing and was also rude, what then?
You take up the table all night, order the cheapest drinks on the menu, don't leave a tip and never come back.
 
Has anyone here ever found themselves so upset, they sat down to write up a complaint letter to the head of whichever organisation caused the offense?

Well, I've written three complaint e-mails so far, not to the heads but to the address complaints were supposed to be sent to. I stayed pretty polite, though.
 
Well, the things I complained about weren't really tangible. So I only got apologies. In one case, something did change (it was about the public TV online archive only using proprietary formats), but I think that was already in the works by the time I complained.
I didn't really expect anything else, though. I just wanted to make my voice heard, I guess.
 
I don't complain in public, so the answer to the opening question is probably no. But boy can I complain my ass off in private. And do I ever.
 
Since fast food joints are notorious for screwing up your order (as I expect bored teenagers who don't really wanna be there to be), I seldom use the drive-through, and instead go in, placing my order, then checking the food before I leave to ensure it is correct. Yeah, it's about 50-50 in terms of correct to incorrect, no matter how specific you get with the front-counter kid, and your mileage may vary depending on what restaurant you use (McDonalds and Burger King, I have noticed, are the worst, and Runza is the best). But I never castigate the front-counter kid if it's wrong, especially if they've recited it back to me correctly, and you can tell on most receipts if they've entered it correctly.

I handle sit-down restaurants are pretty much the same way. If the wait staff person recites my order back to me correctly (and I'm one of those finicky eaters who likes things a certain way, much to Mrs. SicOne's chagrin at times, and messy or liquidy foods in separate bowls or plates from solid foods (example:today, at Cracker Barrel with Mrs. S1, I ordered the farm-raised catfish platter:drool:, with sides of mashed potatoes and butter, steak fries, and corn, and requested (and received) the taters/butter and corn in separate bowls/plates, so I didn't have corn juice soaking the fish and fries, nor liquid butter soaking them; hence the finicky), and the kitchen gets it wrong, I will ask them to correct it (if it's really messy, and I have plenty of time) sometimes and go ahead and eat it (if it's not too bad or I'm pressed for time or don't want to make an issue out of it) at other times. But I never take it out on a wait person.

Well...one of my pet peeves is when the wait person takes your order without writing it down, listens to your detailed request, then heads off to the kitchen. When the kitchen screws it up, in that circumstance I am more inclined to believe the wait person screwed it up, and had they written it down, I'd be more understanding. Especially when I've spent a minute detailing what I want, and how I want it done. Seldom have I had cause to complain to a manager, though, as usually a kind word to the wait staff person is sufficent to adjust whatever problem there is, and most wait persons would also prefer (1) not to involve their boss in something negative, and (2) to correct bad service to help their chances at tipping.

If I have received excellent wait service in a sit-down restaurant, especially if one person is juggling multiple busy tables, I tip well, and frequently tell the manager on the way out (with the wait person close by, if possible, so they can get the good feedback right from the horse's mouth, so to speak) that I received great service.

Who knows, that nicety might make the difference between how the rest of that server's day goes?:)
 
If you are served an off meal, or you use a service, and they botch your things, do you complain? Do you take names and kick ass? Or do you take it and move on? Suck it up and forget about it?

Tell us, are you a complainer, or a taker...

Well...I did write a strongly worded letter to the Hershey's corporation.

They used to sell the little bite-sized candy bars, called Fun-Size, in 10-bar packages. Last year, they reduced the package size from 10 bars to 8 bars. Simultaneously, they reduced the size of the individual bars by about 15% (as measured by my eyeball...I did not weigh before-reduction and after-reduction bars for a more precise weight). In addition, "they" (not necessarily Hershey's, but more likely the retailer, though if asked I'm sure the retailer would say the cost escalation came from the manufacturer) raised the price from $0.99 for a 10-pack to $1.39 for an 8-pack. And finally, they changed the formula for the bite-sized bars, and the chocolate tastes kind of plasticky, kind of foamy, and not as creamy and delicious as before. I believe it was a change to the type of vegetable oil being used, and maybe a reduction in sugar.

I did notice that this change was only for the bite-sized bars, however, and the full-sized bars still taste quite good. In fact, I almost exclusively purchase the full-sized bars now, but for several years carried a small Rubbermaid container chock-full of bite-sized candy bars in a wide variety (and was very popular with my coworkers) in my grip (railroad duffel bag).

In my letter, I humbly asked the good folks at Hershey's to please return to the original formula and size and packaging...don't screw with what works. I thought I would at least receive a polite reply from the Public Affairs department, and maybe a coupon or something for my inquiry, but so far nothing.
 
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