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Tipping Etiquette


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21 hours ago, Dafadilia Wayfarer said:

It's up to the patron if they feel they wish to tip or not. There shouldn't ever be any pressure for them to do so and that is one of the few things I truly despised having to do as a hostess.

Totally agree with you.   I always tip if I'm in a club.  I tip the venue, the host, and the DJ or musician. Operating a club is not a way to make money.  Most places barely squeak by, if they're not operating in the red.  Musicians, DJs and hosts have expenses too.  Back when I hosted, I was lucky enough to host at a club that didn't have any rules requiring me to beg for tips. 

I had a job in RL, I didn't depend on my SL tips for a living.  I hosted for fun.  That being said, I did quite well as a host.  I didn't expect everyone to tip, and it didn't matter to me whether a person tipped me or not, I did my best to help them to have a good time.  It was rewarding in it's own right.  I got to help people.  I had some great conversations. I learned things.  And I made enough to support my shopping habit.  Now that I don't host any more, I've had to let go of my shopping habit.

 

 

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22 hours ago, Dafadilia Wayfarer said:

It's up to the patron if they feel they wish to tip or not. There shouldn't ever be any pressure for them to do so and that is one of the few things I truly despised having to do as a hostess.

Absolutely. Imagine if people just did not go to a venue, because they were unable to tip. This would lead to empty venues, which is a lot less fun for those who do go there and tip, and for those who are working there. People who can't or won't tip provide something to the venue too.

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On 8/25/2023 at 7:50 PM, Perrie Juran said:

Actually everything  that you have said here, and especially this last statement is all the more reason for why I should not tip. If the host is keeping the club running smoothly and making life simpler for you then the responsibility for compensating them (tipping) clearly belongs to you and the club owner and not me.

Gawd, my life is boring. I've actually thought about your response (above) for a few days! :)

I haven't read the entire thread through assiduously, so I'm probably reiterating what someone else has said.

But Perrie, your response confused me. So... don't tip someone for doing a good job? That's what I read you as saying. Huh?

Now, there could be a couple of different threads going on at once in this one thread, and I'm wondering if they are:

1) Employees should be compensated adequately by the company (be it a real life café or SL club) and tipping is a horrible, archaic way to make a living wage. (In SL a "living wage" is debatable, but in RL not as much.) So no one *should* be tipped? I'd posit it more like "and so we should need to tip someone as the expected course of frequenting an establishment, like paying a tax" and/or "someone shouldn't rely on tips for their work compensation." (I would actually agree with the latter statement.)

2) However, the system of a business underpaying employees, because the tip system IS in place, in both lives. So who do you tip and how much, if at all? Another conversation.

3) A side conversation is that so few hosts/hostesses do anything worthwhile, so what about the few that actually do contribute to your enjoyment and experiences. (This one is definitely a YMMV. Until being around Da5id and seeing various hostesses weekly, I had never experienced a "host" situation where they added anything but a mild welcome and a lot of annoying stuff.)

Edited by Seicher Rae
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3 hours ago, Seicher Rae said:

But Perrie, your response confused me. So... don't tip someone for doing a good job? That's what I read you as saying. Huh?

My question was pretty simple, "Why am I tipping this person?"  And there have been points and counter points made, pros & cons, etc. I've been tipping hosts for many years, and while I did not say this at the start, a couple of recent incidents led me to ask why.

The Second Life economy has some strange quirks.

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I host but only once a week. I see my job as two fold....1 is as an assistant to my dj and 2 is an enabler of entertainment. I really do it because I enjoy it so I don't care if anyone tips me or not and in any case I just throw whats in my tip jar at the end of the night to support the venue.

If truth be known I usually end up making a loss hosting because if chat is slow and everyone is buried deep in im's I will do stuff like throw out a quirky trivia question with a linden prize for the first correct answer in local to get people out of their shells.

 

 

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12 hours ago, Perrie Juran said:

My question was pretty simple, "Why am I tipping this person?"  And there have been points and counter points made, pros & cons, etc. I've been tipping hosts for many years, and while I did not say this at the start, a couple of recent incidents led me to ask why.

The Second Life economy has some strange quirks.

Well, that still doesn't answer my question regarding my confusion as to your response to @Da5id Weatherwax's comment, but since this is now going layers deep I'll just be satisfied with my confusion as to why someone doing a job well would be cause for not tipping them in the economy as it IS (versus how it should be).

The SL economy mimics or is part of the RL economy.

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On 8/24/2023 at 9:53 AM, Ajay McDowwll said:

I both DJ and host at different venues on the grid.  Others have covered tipping the DJ and live artist, so I'm going to focus on the hosting perspective for this response.

For hosting, the hosts are often required to create the event listing at secondlife.com (which costs money if they're not listing a repeating event as a Premium Plus member).  They're required to be at the venue generally 15 minutes ahead of time, minimum, send out inworld event announcements (generally once per hour), greet everyone entering the club, remind folks where the DJ/ live artist's tipjar is located, mention the venue tipjar and its location, offer group invites/ add people to the group manually, and keep conversation flowing in local.

When hosts are reminding folks to tip the DJ or live artist, we're required to do this by the venue.  How many times we point out the tipjars is also regulated by the venue.  This is why at one of my hosting gigs I remind folks 3x/ hour to tip the live artist and 1x/ hour to tip the club, whereas at another venue I remind once an hour for the DJ and once every two hours for the club.  I'm far more comfortable with the latter frequency; if it weren't for the live artist component in the former, I'd push back pretty heavily with venue ownership.

If we don't do this, we don't get work. 

I am aware that there are clubs on the grid where hosts are forbidden to request tips for anyone or anything, on the basis that people know what tipjars are and they know how to shove money into them.  I wish more venues followed this model. 

Refusing to tip on the basis of a host saying something about "linden love" (a phrase I've uttered maybe once in my hosting career -- I'll usually say about anything but those words, because they give me a nasty shiver up my spine) or any reminder they issue about tipping is absolutely your right, and it's also refusing to tip someone because they're literally doing their job.  A better move in my eyes would be to mention to the venue owner that a few less reminders to tip may go further than an endless barrage.  You might be surprised how many hosts agree with that assessment.

As for hosts who don't even greet, who are basically AFKing their host shift, churning out boilerplate gestures if they have text to local at all, and are only chatting with friends?  They're not doing their jobs.  I usually tip hosts pretty generously as well as DJs and live artists; my standard is 200 lindens.  I will go up to 500 lindens for DJs and as high as 500-1000 lindens for live artists, depending on how tight my SL budget is at any given moment.  Personally, most of my tips are in turn tipped out to others.

All that said, if a host is "working" and the most that I see are desultory greetings (if that), and never see text to local from them again?  Nope.  No tip.  Your mere existence does not entitle you to my precious lindens.

To draw that out further, no one is entitled to your lindens other than you.  Period.  However, if the person is providing a service that enhances an event, SL is a tipping economy and tipping is absolutely appropriate. 

Most of us who host are quite aware there are some people who will never tip us. I am friends with some of these people!  For me, it's not a big deal.  I'm aware of the bias, and I'm still going to do my job, send announcements, follow club procedures, and chat with anyone who feels like chatting back regardless of whether or not they wish to tip me.

The venue owner should view the host as staff and pay that person directly, as a percentage of their tips. Most venues end up having to have rental signs or booths to cover costs, so they can pay the host from there as well.

I think it is simply too much to ask to expect a patron to pay the live musician or DJ, the venue owner AND the host.

People pay live musicians in SL far too little in tips. If I went to the corner Irish bar, there might be cover of US $3 or US $5 and I think a live musician in SL should get at least that much. They might be able to sell a CD for US $5 or whatever; I bet it's rare for any musician in SL to get someone to buy a RL CD or music download online.

When the economy was better, I used to tip 1000L. And if I didn't have the 1000L, I stopped going. Maybe it would be better to go and just pay 100L, but then I'm taking up a slot on a sim from someone who might tip better.

Today, I usually pay 250L to live musicians, which is what I have, and might muster 100L or 150L for the club owner. It's sad, given the value of live music, especially if original, but there it is.

 

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On 8/25/2023 at 4:45 PM, Da5id Weatherwax said:

As a performer, thank you on behalf of ALL of us for your tips.

Also as a performer, thank you for supporting the venues - without them, we'd not be able to stand up and entertain you. One can't just roll up on a corner of Linden roads and start busking, the grid dont work like that.

Now, let's talk about the host(esse)s. They don't just stand around and greet people like a "hello bot." If I have a good host to work with at a particular venue, they handle representing the venue owner to me and representing ME to all the folks who might be familiar with the venue but who have never heard ME perform. They send out groupnotes and group chat advertising my upcoming set, they keep me informed about stuff going on at the venue I might need to be aware of. Their job is to make everything run smoothly and do all the irritating crap that a virtual venue demands so I don't have to fit all that in around a live soundcheck and warming up for a performance. They do a lot of work that, as an attendee, you never see - that you aren't supposed to see. So do tip 'em. Please. A good host is an absolute godsend to a performer of any kind. Show your appreciation of the work they do, so that all of us performers continue to have good ones available.

A lot of musicians and DJs I know send out their own group notices and list their own events, it's not that time-consuming. In fact, some DJ's have the annoying habit of friending you and then force-porting you to their venue.

But the venue owner should be the one present to prevent griefing and reduce spam etc and if they must have a hostess if it really is as much work as claimed, the venue owner should give them an hourly wage or flat wage every week. A store owner wouldn't make their CSR or blogger live off tips, but would give them a regular wage. 

The hostesses add to the noise, distract from the live music, and it's one more hand out in SL in a poor economy.

Edited by Prokofy Neva
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3 minutes ago, Prokofy Neva said:

The venue owner should view the host as staff and pay that person directly, as a percentage of their tips. Most venues end up having to have rental signs or booths to cover costs, so they can pay the host from there as well.

I think it is simply too much to ask to expect a patron to pay the live musician or DJ, the venue owner AND the host.

People pay live musicians in SL far too little in tips. If I went to the corner Irish bar, there might be cover of US $3 or US $5 and I think a live musician in SL should get at least that much. They might be able to sell a CD for US $5 or whatever; I bet it's rare for any musician in SL to get someone to buy a RL CD or music download online.

When the economy was better, I used to tip 1000L. And if I didn't have the 1000L, I stopped going. Maybe it would be better to go and just pay 100L, but then I'm taking up a slot on a sim from someone who might tip better.

Today, I usually pay 250L to live musicians, which is what I have, and might muster 100L or 150L for the club owner. It's sad, given the value of live music, especially if original, but there it is.

 

Geez. The world is ending. Both a relatively short post and one that I agree with in total.

I have very little budget for SL these days, and "expecting" to pay the musician/DJ, venue, host, dancers... I just can't, not in a meaningful way and yes, 100L$ in real money isn't all that meaningful.  The system is messed up, but it seems to be the system we have, for some reason (mostly mirroring RL).

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3 minutes ago, Prokofy Neva said:

A lot of musicians and DJs I know send out their own group notices and list their own events, it's not that time-consuming. In fact, some DJ's have the annoying habit of friending you and then force-porting you to their venue.

But the venue owner should be the one present to prevent griefing and reduce spam etc and if they must have a hostess if it really is as much work as claimed, the venue owner should give them an hourly wage or flat wage every week. A store owner wouldn't make their CSR or blogger live off tips, but would give them a regular wage. 

The hostesses add to the noise, distract from the live music, and it's one more hand out in SL in a poor economy.

Well, this one I understand, although don't entirely agree.  Thank the gods I have never had a DJ friend me and force-port! Unreal. :shudder:

The venue owner may not be able to be there all of the time, and hosts can act as a proxy. (Agree about the CSR/tip comment.)  Until I started hanging out at Da5id's sets, I never saw the point of hosts, but now that I am seeing things regularly, weekly, I'm seeing a different side of things... when the hostesses do their jobs (which imho "annoying" shouldn't be part of the job description and so much of what has been discussed in this thread is just annoying).

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Very rarely do I ever have SL music or sounds turned on. I listen to my own music or watch videos on the side. I don't recall ever visiting a live event in SL either as they're generally not my cup of tea. I remember once sitting in the audience of something Strawberry Singh did but can't remember what that was about. People just taking and feeling important.

From reading a few of the posts here it seems the tipping culture is very similar, if not the same, in SL as in RL. There's an expectation of a tip to cover the poor or non-existent wages of people working. Besides the DJ working at doing what?

Also, any venue which has a welcoming committee that announces my entrance by name in local chat before the venue and patrons are anywhere near to being rezzed will likely have me moving on elsewhere. I just don't like having attention drawn to me in general and have much better use for the small quantity of Linden $ sitting in my account.

Yes, I'm an absolute bundle of laughs, but I enjoy quiet more intimate gatherings or connections that do not include crowds, tipping, and faux fun. From time to time I get tipped for looking lovely in the form of L$ cash or Wishlist gifts. That's the only tipping I get involved with.

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16 hours ago, CandyCole said:

Very rarely do I ever have SL music or sounds turned on. I listen to my own music or watch videos on the side. I don't recall ever visiting a live event in SL either as they're generally not my cup of tea. I remember once sitting in the audience of something Strawberry Singh did but can't remember what that was about. People just taking and feeling important.

From reading a few of the posts here it seems the tipping culture is very similar, if not the same, in SL as in RL. There's an expectation of a tip to cover the poor or non-existent wages of people working. Besides the DJ working at doing what?

Also, any venue which has a welcoming committee that announces my entrance by name in local chat before the venue and patrons are anywhere near to being rezzed will likely have me moving on elsewhere. I just don't like having attention drawn to me in general and have much better use for the small quantity of Linden $ sitting in my account.

Yes, I'm an absolute bundle of laughs, but I enjoy quiet more intimate gatherings or connections that do not include crowds, tipping, and faux fun. From time to time I get tipped for looking lovely in the form of L$ cash or Wishlist gifts. That's the only tipping I get involved with.

This! I absolutely hate clubs calling out to me when I didn't rez yet and want to just go in quietly and not be centre of attention! If you really must, at least wait a few

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I pretty much don't bother now. If a dj has 5k in tips I'm not bothering. Maybe if there are 4 people present then I probably would toss in 100. Kind of tired of spending weeks working on a project that can't generate sales but then a dj rocks up at opening, opens spotify and plays and collects 5k. It's just an ego trip for them

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Thursday I hosted....was a tough crowd and trying to get them to chat in local was hard. I managed it in the end and got them talking. I ended up about 2,5k down on the night but I entertained and people I think went away thinking they had had a good time

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3 minutes ago, KanryDrago said:

Thursday I hosted....was a tough crowd and trying to get them to chat in local was hard. I managed it in the end and got them talking. I ended up about 2,5k down on the night but I entertained and people I think went away thinking they had had a good time

What annoys be about this thread is there is a lot here complaining about hosts and we do nothing, there are however a lot like me that do a lot of ***** to make your evening entertaining. I dont care if you dont tip it really wont bother me. But what does bother me is I suspect a lot of those complaining are also the sort to goto a club and and not even engage in local. You feel entitled to be entertained but wont even put being active in local back. Thats what most of us want....if I walk into the club and get 2000 in tips but all are silent I failed....walk into the club and get nothing in tips and people leave going wow that was fun I succeeded

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I find it interesting that whenever this subject comes up, all the hosts (or ex-hosts like me) feel the need to justify ourselves, or say "Oh, I don't do it for the tips!" 9_9

Which isn't completely wrong...I actually think the best perk you can have as a host is to win the owner's trust and have free rein to run your own slot as you want. I remember having real fun with certain DJs, doing themed nights and even temporarily redecorating the club just for our set B|

But it is weird...hosts always feel the need to justify what they do...but DJs and musicians believe they are worth every penny ¯\_(ツ)_/¯  Hosts shouldn't belittle their own skills! I don't care how people tip, really, but I find people saying "Oh, hosts just gesturbate and do nothing" a bit like saying "Oh, all SL musicians just play American Pie on acoustic guitar"...and anyone who thinks hosting is a doddle should maybe volunteer for a 4-hour hosting shift at an RFL event, helping 4 musicians and DJs connect to the stream without hiccups with 30+ people lagging out the sim, while sending notices to 6 different groups, thanking everyone who hits the RFL vendor and dealing with 10 IMs, including "hi hru" xD

 

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Well, at least I provoked a little debate with my earlier comment :)

(and I do mean "debate" not the usual internet poo-flinging that sometimes happens - thank you all for keeping it civil :) )

I guess, for me at least, the bottom line on tipping entertainers and venues in SL is simple.

If you want a particular performer to keep performing - wherever they happen to do it - chuck 'em a few lindens.
If you want a particular venue to stay open - whoever happens to be performing there - chuck a few lindens.
And if you've got a good host who isn't just a gesturebating greeter-bot, chuck them a few as well so that they keep doing it. Otherwise all any venue will have left is the other kind.

All three may not apply at the particular event you're attending and it's entirely up to you which ones, if any, you think do.

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  • 10 months later...

Good Day, I know this is an old topic but I kind of search for this topic trying to understand why some people don't tip the host but tip the Dj and the venue. I'm work as a host here on second life, and for me I do a damn good job at it. Hosting is not easy, and if you're a good host you can relate to what I'm about to say. Hosting starts before the event, they have to get spam ready, all of you gestures that are geared towards that event and or club. You have to start spamming groups, list Facebook etc., to get the word out. Once the events start yes you greet everyone coming in and leaving. The host is responsible for tping her list and asking others to do the same. The host have to get the crowd going and being engaged, reminding them if they need help to contact them. Host are responsible for reminding people they can join groups or even announcements of what may be going on. For me, I constantly work and being engaged with the Dj and the crowd. I also personally get in everyone's IM and thank them for coming, and how I appreciate them coming. it is sad when people come in and just tip the DJ and the venue and do not tip the host. I work too hard and even though, I'm not playing the music, I'm working the crowd, and making people feel good. So, I seriously have issues with people who think that why should I tip the host. Well, if it is a good host doing her job, then why not! Second life is what you make it, and if you are working and trying to build yourself up then I believe people need to take that in consideration than trying to ask why I should tip that host.

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3 minutes ago, Amir Jervil said:

Good Day, I know this is an old topic but I kind of search for this topic trying to understand why some people don't tip the host but tip the Dj and the venue. I'm work as a host here on second life, and for me I do a damn good job at it. Hosting is not easy, and if you're a good host you can relate to what I'm about to say. Hosting starts before the event, they have to get spam ready, all of you gestures that are geared towards that event and or club. You have to start spamming groups, list Facebook etc., to get the word out. Once the events start yes you greet everyone coming in and leaving. The host is responsible for tping her list and asking others to do the same. The host have to get the crowd going and being engaged, reminding them if they need help to contact them. Host are responsible for reminding people they can join groups or even announcements of what may be going on. For me, I constantly work and being engaged with the Dj and the crowd. I also personally get in everyone's IM and thank them for coming, and how I appreciate them coming. it is sad when people come in and just tip the DJ and the venue and do not tip the host. I work too hard and even though, I'm not playing the music, I'm working the crowd, and making people feel good. So, I seriously have issues with people who think that why should I tip the host. Well, if it is a good host doing her job, then why not! Second life is what you make it, and if you are working and trying to build yourself up then I believe people need to take that in consideration than trying to ask why I should tip that host.

I want to begin by saying that I am sure that everything you've said above is true, at least in your case. I am more than willing to believe that the success of your event is to a great degree dependent upon the hard work that you evidently do. You DO deserve to be recognized and compensated for that work.

I think the problem, though, is that most of the visible work that you do isn't of immediate benefit to your attendees. Setting up the venue, publicity, "spamming groups," urging people to join groups, and so on, is of immediate benefit to the venue rather than something directly enjoyed by patrons. Yes, you greet people, and perhaps do a good job of keeping local chat lively and fun -- but then, so do I, a mere visitor, when I'm at a club. It's not that this isn't valuable or "labour," but that it probably doesn't "stand out" from what other, unpaid patrons are also doing? (At least, this is true of the clubs I visit, which have lively and engaged communities.)

I don't think you get tipped for the simple reason that your hard work is not very visible to patrons, as opposed to the work of the DJ. You are producing value, but it's not value they can see.

I actually think that hosts should be paid directly by the event venue, because ultimately much of the work you've described above benefits the club owner more immediately and directly than the patrons. Or, alternately, the DJ should be sharing tips with you, as she is also benefitting from your work.

I know that's not the way it works in SL. But I think that's the way it should work.

(I should say that I do tip hosts, but the clubs I go to very rarely employ them, so it's seldom an issue.)

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While I don't mean to contribute to a necroed post, I do tip generously. I use the following formula when determining tip payouts at clubs I frequent:

  • I tip the DJ, but only if I enjoy the music.  I am known in some circles as a generous tipper.  If a DJ puts together a good mix, then that is worthy of monetary consideration.
  • I rarely tip the venue, I assume they skim off the top of the DJ's tips.  If I knew with certainty that the venue did not skim off the top, and the venue is an exceptional or interesting build, then I would consider tipping the venue.  I do not consider the build quality of a place like Muddy's to be worth tipping, though.
  • I never tip hosts, as I see hosts as a problem in SL.  Hosts invite only their friends, crowding the venue with a predetermined, cliquish vibe.  The worst part about going to clubs is enduring the regulars and hosts only exacerbate the problem.  They also cheapen the welcoming atmosphere with their greeter scripts.

TL;DR - I tip DJ's, I rarely tip venues, I never tip anyone else because I do not consider standing around pressing the Greet button to be conducive to a fun and immersive Second Life.

Edited by lovestofu
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Didn't read. Tipping should not be a thing anywhere in the world or in second life . Do your job, get paid by employer.  Have up front rates for whatever service you're doing. period . Don't expect more from me . :3

 

Employer doesn't pay enough without tips ? Don't work for them .

 

You think you deserve more for your service ? Include it in the flat rate . Done .

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Years back, I was head manager of one of the largest more popular clubs that sat in the top 5 in search for over 7 years..

Asking for money was against our rules, because the owner looked at the club as a center piece for all his sims and a place for entertainment.

We had a full staff that was on salary from, security for all the sims, to managers of the sims they were in charge of, as well as the full staff of DJ's for the club.

We had tip jars that were out for hosts, dancers and Leads and DJ's.

With the club being so popular there really wasn't a need for staff to ask for money, if they were blending well with the crowd and being entertaining they were making good money.

I know for myself, that I took a huge pay cut going from a Lead dancer which I could get in around 4 hours of dancing around 65k a night, to head manager salary of 5k a week.

Even a slow night when the club was more quiet than usually, I would still make around 7 to 10 k for a couple of hours of being on stage.

There wasn't too many clubs that were like that back then where you could generate that kind of income.. I know because I would personally try them out myself to compare to my main club.. A lot didn't have them as a centerpiece for something bigger, so it was more of their main income.

So I think asking for money was more part of their routines..

The club I worked at was never there to make money, So we didn't have the pressure to generate money to keep the club alive.

To keep our jobs, we just had to be respectful and entertaining  and a place that people wanted to keep coming back to.. The drama was always to stay within the confines of the staff and never leak into the crowd. If there was any..

Any personal drama leaking into the patrons and you were pretty much gone. Anyone caught begging in IM's, they were gone too..

There was no need for it..

You won't find many good clubs like it anymore these days..

Now, I can't speak for how things went after I left, I just know how it was when I was there..

hehehe

 

 

 

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