In last week's installment
I wrote about experiences I had involving two companies that are
seeking to use technology to reduce the number of actual human
employees on their payroll. In the Comments section, my friend Bob
opined,
”As for
McDonalds... anything to enhance their employees' ability to take an
order and get it right would be welcome.”
And there's the rub. That
part about getting the order right.
Whether the customer
inputs his/her order via a kiosk or tells it to a clerk behind the
counter who does the same, the possibility of getting the order
screwed-up does not change if the food is
cooked/handled/bagged/distributed by a human.
I went into our local
McDonalds early one morning recently. The drive-thru line was long,
so thinking (erroneously, as usual) that I'd be in and out more
quickly, I parked and walked in. I was the only customer at the
counter, and one of only three in the whole place.
I ordered a "two
burritos meal" by number (let's just say it was a #7). The
young girl behind the counter asked if I wanted hash browns with
that? I said, patiently but somewhat sarcastically that I believed
hash browns came with the #7. She seemed surprised. After ringing
me up she grabbed a medium soda cup and plunked in onto the counter.
I shook my head and asked for coffee. Again, it was breakfast. She
withdrew the soda cup and stopped, looking confused.
Someone eventually
appeared from the back of the store, carrying a bag, looking at me
and announcing, "One breakfast burrito?"
I sighed heavily (as I do) and corrected him. This resulted in a
call for the manager, a beleaguered middle-aged woman who looked like
she really didn't want to be there. Said manager looked at my
receipt, rolled her eyes and told the guy with the bag to get me
another burrito and a hash browns.
The cashier turned to the
manager and said (and I shit you not), "But he wants a coffee,
not a soda." The manager sighed again and poured me a black
coffee. This McDonalds does not put out cream and sugar at the
soda/ice tea station. Does nobody drink McDonalds' crappy coffee
anymore? I had to give it back to her and ask for cream and sugar to
be added. But she had filled the cup so completely that there wasn't
any room for cream.
All in all, three humans
screwed up every aspect of my McDonalds breakfast
- which was inputted correctly into the computer!
I should add that on my way out of the store I fished the hash browns
out of the bag and tossed them in the trash can by the door because
they're horrible. I didn't care about them so much...I just wanted
my two damn burritos and a coffee! And that's what I just should
have ordered.
I had to laugh. Well, it
would be funny if it wasn't so sad.
Customer service has
gotten really bad in the U.S. - not just with fast-food dispensaries
but in general. The people behind the counter seem to forget the
"service" part of the phrase.
High school kids in
America used to be grateful to snag a job, even a part-time
entry-level job at a fast-food joint. They used to be proud to work!
Not anymore. Now they view jobs as some sort of inconvenient
obligation, and all they need do to get paid is show up and socialize
with the other employees. Actually doing the job
well is not a requirement.
In my Uber the other day I
picked up a young woman at her apartment. She was headed to work at
the mall. She asked if we could run through the McDonalds drive-thru
so she could get a Mocha-something. It was already close to nine a.m.
”What time do you have to be at work?” I
asked, knowing we were still a good ten minutes away from the mall.
”Nine,” she replied, "but they give us a
fifteen-minute grace period."
I was dumbfounded...literally
speechless. Employees are so bad at being on-time these days that companies are forced to give them “grace
periods.” Just try and make it here between ten and
ten-fifteen, mm-kay? Un-bleeping-real.
Heck, maybe we're seeing
the unintended consequences of having fast-food restaurants at every
major intersection in every Podunk town. Maybe there are too many entry-level, minimum wage jobs. Trouble is, here in dinky Pensacola
we have so many fast-food places that they all can't even stay in
business, much less keep an adequate staff of employees. Google Maps shows eleven McDonalds right here in the Pensacola area.
The Hardee's (on a busy
street right near the airport) closed and moved up the same street to
a shopping center with a Winn-Dixie supermarket. The new location
doesn't seem to do much better than the old. The Arby's which was
right next door to Hardee's also closed but did not relocate. (I
suspect that the Arby's chain of restaurants may not survive. None
of them seem to be doing well when I drive by. Or it may get conjoined and siamesed with another fast-food place like so many Taco Bell's and KFC's are now.)
The Burger King on
the mall property! closed and a brand-new one was built
just up the road not far from where the Hardee's and Arby's failed.
The shiny, new, modern-looking BK store just recently opened. It's right near my house. Every
time I pass it looks ominously deserted. The store is
open and yet it has big banners outside announcing
that they do walk-in hiring on Monday and Tuesdays. Didn't they
staff-up before the Grand Opening?
Fast-food franchises used
to be gold mines. Has the tide turned? Will lower sales volume and
ever-increasing labor costs result in a downturn in that industry? I
kind of hope so. More competition for the available jobs might make
the people who actually need them and get them be more appreciative
of having them. And then maybe, when I walk up to the counter they
might say, "Good morning! May I help you?"
instead of just staring at me blankly and then getting my order
wrong.
3 comments:
I have two girls and am always having people comment on how well behaved they are and asking how I get them to be so helpful to others. I always have a hard time answering that because I'm just teaching them to behave as my parents taught me to behave and to help others. I think a lot of what is wrong with the youth these days is due to their parenting or lack there of.
I think the fast food phenomenon in Pensacola is a regional or perhaps an urban thing. In our area, the only places with long lines are the fast food places. It is the sit down places that can't stay open for any length of time. But I suspect a lot of that has to do with living in one of the poorest parts of the nation. Whenever a new sit down place opens up, all I see on social media is how high priced their $8 burger is when McDonalds (or name your fast food place) sells them for $4. Nobody understands the other costs going into that burger that make it $8.
Ed, your daughters sound like a joy, and I'm sure you're very proud of them. If anyone asks you how you get them to behave and act as they do, I'd simply shrug and explain it as you just did: "I just taught them as my parents taught me." You must leave unsaid the inevitable, disconcerting conclusion that maybe they didn't do the same.
Now, restaurants... I don't pretend to understand the restaurant business, especially the vagaries and fickleness of public taste and preferences. I read and see that Subway's have apparently fallen out of favor. And although I keep hearing how badly the Olive Garden is doing, the one here is always packed - so it seems that Pensacolians haven't gotten the memo that the OG is out of style.
You may be right about the economies of different parts of the country. Here in Pensacola, we certainly have a lot of sit-down restaurants, and they seem to do pretty well. (Errr...except for IHOP; two local IHOP's owned by the same franchisee closed their doors recently.) Owning a Chinese buffet restaurant is like having a license to print money, evidently. We loves us some "Chinese" food down here! Breakfast places do surprisingly and consistently well.
The fast-food restaurants struggle, unless there are golden arches on your sign. I stopped in at the McDonalds near the Navy Base the other day. They're renovating and installing those new kiosks. I didn't get a chance to order anything with them though as I was only there to use the restroom. No wonder the lines for the drive-thru get longer and longer: People want to order from a human!
Not to be racist, but there are a lot of blacks in this town (as in most southern towns). Yet we had a KFC in a "bad" neighborhood fail, followed shortly by the closing of the Church's Chicken joint two blocks away! Maybe the explanation is that Walmart sells fried chicken and it's pretty damn good! Maybe people are just getting it there now?
In the time since I wrote the blogpost above, I've driven by the new Burger King a number of times - it's right on the main drag near the house. And I've never seen it crowded. Unless business picks up drastically, I can't see it staying open for too long. I hope the franchisee hasn't made a huge mistake.
Whatever...I just wish that the people waiting on me, whether they be behind a counter or at my table, would smile and at least act as though they were happy to see me. After all, we customers do pay their salaries - something I think these kids tend to not realize.
So funny, right after your post about McDonalds and the digital ordering, my daughter was in town celebrating her 30th birthday and said she wanted to go to MIckey D’s for breakfast - she loves sausage biscuits there! So in we traipsed and fvdfd was the big kiosk where you could place your order. I must say it all worked beautifully and the new and improved McDonalds really was new and improved.
Interesting you don’t mention Chick FIL-A which I think is a cut above across the board when it comes to traditional “fast food.” Still not my first choice when I need to grab something to eat, but better than most of the others in my opinion, for both food and service.
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