Things that make life easier often cost more than their do-it-yourself counterparts โ this is not a new concept. For example: You pay a valet to park your car when spots are few and the weather is bad. You buy a meal at a restaurant and tip the wait staff rather than make food or serve yourself. You shell out extra cash to take a cab rather than ride a crowded bus or train.
But as convenient as these things are, thereโs something that can make them a little awkward: paying someone to serve you.
Itโs not that we donโt want to compensate people for their work; itโs figuring out how much to pay that gives some people trouble. When youโre in a tipping situation, youโre making a numerical assessment of a workerโs performance, and you often do it to the personโs face โ which might sometimes be uncomfortable.
One solution: Remove the physical exchange of money. Hereโs where we all can say, โThank you, technology.โ
Removing the Middle Man
Apps that streamline the service-payment process are everywhere, allowing us to use smartphones to pay for parking, coffee, car rides, restaurant bills, odd jobs โ if thereโs not an app for it yet, someoneโs probably working on it.
Take, for example, Cover โ an app that allows you to pay for restaurant meals without having to end the experience with money concerns, splitting a bill or calculating a tip. Or, as Mark Egerman, Coverโs founder, puts it: โAt the end, you always have to do the same dance.โ Itโs an unenjoyable one, he says.
Cover is accepted at select restaurants in Manhattan and continues to expand. A customer walks in, tells the server they want to pay with Cover, and everything else happens on the mobile device. Users have a default tip amount they set when they set up their Cover account, but they can change the tip whenever they want. At the end of the meal, they leave, the restaurant closes out the bill and a receipt is emailed to the user.
It may feel a bit like a dine-and-dash the first time you leave a restaurant without that physical transaction, but Egerman says people find it very liberating.
โItโs not about time, itโs not about convenience โ you leave on a high note, as if you have an account,โ Egerman says. In other words: Itโs about having a good feeling.
The Bliss of Simplicity
Swine, a restaurant in the West Village, accepts Cover, and owner Cris Criswell says customers seem to enjoy the ease โ they donโt exactly stick around to talk about the experience, of course.
โItโs quite easy,โ he said. โThey seem to be very happy.โ
Thatโs the key right there: Happiness.
โThe consumer is always in control,โ Egerman said. โI think the ability to just get up and go is so powerful.โ
That feeling isnโt unique to Cover. People who use services like Uber and Lyft, which are essentially a twist on hailing a taxi, describe a similar experience.
โItโs such a relief,โ said Jessica Gambacurta, a Columbus, Ohio, resident who has used public transportation most of her life and has loved having the option of Uber. โThereโs no stress, too. Thereโs not any exchange of money, thereโs no tipping.โ
The Uber model is structured so users donโt have to worry about gratuity โ the amount a rider is charged at the end includes everything, though thatโs not always clear to first-time users (if you take a close look at the Uber website, it mentions thereโs no need to tip). Lyft, an Uber competitor, allows riders to choose a tip for their driver.
Gambacurta has used both services.
โI do like (the tipping option) for Lyft, because I do think tipping does incentivize service,โ she said. โThere are times I donโt really want to think about tipping or anything. โฆ Sometimes you just want to get where youโre going.โ
Michael King, an Uber VIP user in New York City, knows the feeling. He says he uses Uber about twice a week and enjoys the convenience.
โOne of the things I really love about Uber over taxis is I often donโt carry cash,โ King said. New York taxis accept credit cards, but that slows down the exit process. โYou just get there, and you know you donโt have to jostle through your pocket and wonder, โDo I have enough on me?'โ
But that comes at a price.
King takes Uber a lot more than he used to take cabs before he started using the service, and he knows a trip in an Uber car will cost him more than a cab ride.
โItโs definitely more expensive, but I donโt really think about it,โ King said. โThe comfort of the ride, the quality of the drivers โ itโs just so much better that itโs worth it.โ (For the record, not everyone loves the Uber or Lyft experience, but you can find plenty of those stories with a simple Web search.)
Ask and You Shall Receive
Itโs pretty clear that many people donโt like calculating tips, and theyโre willing to pay more to skip or automate that process, whether they realize it or not.
King talked about the times he takes a traditional taxi: โI donโt mind doing the tip when I take cabs,โ he said. โYou just hit 20% and youโre done.โ
Heโs talking about the gratuity option that pops up on the screen when a passenger swipes a credit card in an NYC Taxi. The options are 20%, 25% and 30%, or you can choose your own amount or tip in cash.
Thatโs a little ridiculous, according to etiquette and tipping expert Jodi R.R. Smith. Smith, who has tracked tipping trends for decades, says a 10% tip is appropriate for cab drivers. But when people are given options, they often go with whatโs in front of them instead of thinking through the calculations.
โWhen you give consumers a choice between good, better or best, theyโre almost always going to choose the middle option,โ Smith said. โYou donโt want to feel cheap.โ
But hereโs the other thing: Who really knows whatโs โappropriateโ? Thereโs no master list of tipping guidelines out there.
โTipping can seem arbitrary because it is,โ Smith said. โTipping develops over time, and it develops differently in different countries.โ
All the more reason to have someone do it for us, right?
Thatโs certainly the trend. As payment technology changes, you may find yourself prompted to tip more often.
Hereโs a recent example: In March, Starbucks released a new edition of its payment app that now prompts you to tip 50 cents, $1, $2 or no tip when you pay with your smartphone. More than 14% of weekly in-store Starbucks transactions happen through the app, and nearly 10 million customers use it. As for the reason behind the preset tipping options:
โWe figured this is a good starting point,โ said Maggie Jantzen, a spokesperson for Starbucks. She said customers have requested a mobile tip option for a long time, and theyโre open to feedback on the tip amounts. โThis has actually been one of the most requested ideas.โ
So in some cases, consumers have wanted to tip through a smartphone and havenโt had the option. In other cases, merchants have decided to tap this compulsion by prompting patrons to tip in situations they may not typically do so.
The mobile payment system Square gives its merchants the ability to do that. If youโve ever gone to a business that uses Square, you may have noticed this. For instance, perhaps youโre checking out at the counter at an ice cream shop, and the cashier shows you an iPad with the Square payment system. You may be prompted to tip โ but do you normally tip someone who scoops your ice cream? Maybe. Maybe not.
โWe really want to give sellers that are using our app the options they need to set up the experience that makes sense for their business,โ says KC Simon, a Square spokesperson. โWe want to encourage more tips.โ
And they do.
โWe find that our sellers definitely report seeing more tips when they switch (to Square),โ Simon says. โThey also report that their customers like to have that option and have it be so seamless: They donโt have to do any math, they donโt have to think about taking change out.โ
The payment landscape is changing. The convenience aspect can be really exciting, for both the shopper and the seller, but the thing consumers need to focus on is keeping their expenses in check. If you connect a debit or credit card to your Uber or Cover account, the ease of payment could lead you to drive up large balances on your cards, even overdraft your account.
Thereโs no harm in taking advantage of technology, as long as youโre smart about it and know what youโre paying for.
More Money-Saving Reads:
- How to Get Your Free Annual Credit Report
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- How Credit Impacts Your Day-to-Day Life
Image: PashaIgnatov
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