Business Strategy and the Social Norm of Tipping
32 Pages Posted: 10 May 2011
Date Written: May 10, 2011
Abstract
Tipping is an important economic phenomenon, involving about $47 billion a year in the US food industry alone, and trillions of dollars across different occupations and countries over the years. Moreover, tipping is a major source of income for millions of workers. This article discusses the implications of tipping for business strategy in the relevant industries. For example, firms can choose to impose a compulsory service charge in lieu of tipping – what are the advantages and disadvantages of doing so? How does tipping change the profit-maximizing level of investing in screening job applicants, training workers, monitoring them, and providing performance-based incentives by the firm? Can industries such as the music industry use tips (i.e., prices being voluntary and determined by the customers) as an alternative business model?
Keywords: tipping, social norms, business strategy, service industry, restaurant industry
JEL Classification: M10, M50, D03, D10, L80, Z13
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
The Implications of Tipping for Economics and Management
By Ofer H. Azar
-
What Sustains Social Norms and How They Evolve? The Case of Tipping
By Ofer H. Azar
-
The Social Norm of Tipping: Does it Improve Social Welfare?
By Ofer H. Azar
-
The History of Tipping - from Sixteenth-Century England to United States in the 1910s
By Ofer H. Azar
-
The Social Norm of Tipping: A Review
By Ofer H. Azar
-
Optimal Monitoring with External Incentives: The Case of Tipping
By Ofer H. Azar
-
Why Pay Extra? Tipping and the Importance of Social Norms and Feelings in Economic Theory
By Ofer H. Azar
-
Who Do We Tip and Why? An Empirical Investigation
By Ofer H. Azar
-
Tipping in Restaurants and Around the Globe: An Interdisciplinary Review