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Kevin Brennan's avatar

Gad, great article. It will be interesting to see how the industry evolves through this, I hope with a new appreciation and respect emerging for this other cadre of "front line" workers for the lifestyles we all enjoy. You made me think, "huh, maybe I should go get a part-time restaurant job" (for first time since being a student) to help the cause locally!

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Ritvik Rangaraju's avatar

It seems that the root cause of the friction between service workers and customers is a long-standing imbalance in the power dynamic between the two. While the service industry at large could certainly benefit from restructuring in the delivery of those services, I think some social reengineering is needed.

When looking at any interaction between hospitality workers and customers, there is a stark difference in the amount of oversight and accountability that each party has. Regardless of industry, hospitality workers have a multitude of incentives such as customer tips, raises, livelihood, and fundamentally, day-to-day sustenance and satisfaction. But on the customer side, the platitude "the customer is always right" seems to have a direct correlation with the accountability they have, with the exception of Uber's customer ratings as you mentioned. In essence, there is currently no common or effective way to more directly shape customer psychology or interactions with the business's workers.

Given this imbalanced dynamic, how do you think the service industry ought to innovate and adapt in a world where customer patience has been slashed by the convenience of online platforms?

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