Jump to content

Why is Thai service so abysmal


Recommended Posts

30 minutes ago, Ajarnbrian said:

“Why is Thai service so abysmal?” as a headline suggests this is general. Yet the story is a gripe focusing on one business. A sample of one or two does not warrant such a misleading headline.

 

I mentioned three businesses, not one, and in one of those the farang manager responded as management should, not ignored me as the new place I highlighted has. Scruffy Murphy's knows how to treat customers. Credit where it's due.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I haven't read the whole thread - so a lot of this may be covered...  two points I'm responding to.

 

1) - Cashless - Does the Op not have a local Bank Account linked to his phone ?

It would be very surprising for anyone to go to an establishment and find out they don't accept cash, but I guess that issue is growing. 

Its a very foolish policy IMO. BUT... its also foolish not to move with the times, especially when going to places such as this (i.e. more modern places which  may be following more modern trends).

 

2) - Response to e-mails / being able to get hold of a person....  I completely agree, customer service in this aspect is very poor. Some businesses do better than others - international and local. 

E-mail just doesn't work in Thailand any more - no one replies to a mail.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, Bangkok Barry said:

EVERYONE should have a choice of how to pay. You think they shouldn't, that they should be dictated to by a business that is MEANT TO SERVE YOU, not the other way around? I've read of many people, including on this thread, who refuse to use a business that refuses to accept legal tender.

 

I agree with this...     we should have a choice of how to pay - any smart business will give the customer as many payment options as possible to avoid disappointing the customer - especially in a service industry where repeat custom is often essential. 

 

 

That said, there are many 'anti-cashless' arguments are are highly flawed and revolve around a lot of 'whativery'... 

 

Many systems have their pro's and cons...    Cash, Credit Card, Debit Card, Tap'n'go, QR Payment, PromptPay, ApplePay, GoogleWallet etc...   

 

In these times, even for those who for whatever reasons are against cashless payment it would be sensible for anyone to have a back-up option... especially in Thailand where that backup option is  local account with QR payment - its not hard to set up at all. 

 

 

Also... many argue against cashless payment yet forget credit cards and debit cards have been around for years - are they also uncomfortable using these ?

 

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

Does the Op not have a local Bank Account linked to his phone ?

It would be very surprising for anyone to go to an establishment and find out they don't accept cash, but I guess that issue is growing. 

 

I don't want to use my local account. I want to use cash via ATM from an account in the UK. Why is my business.

 

2 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

Its a very foolish policy IMO

 

Yes. I've read too many tales of potential or actual fraud, or the bank app not working here. I do internet banking only on my laptop. I see no advantage at all in putting my account at risk just to join the 'modern age'. Putting your finances at risk isn't progression, it is the opposite.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, Peterphuket said:

Thanks for the message, sure I'll never visit it because I only want to pay cash.

Cash is King.

 

Are you allowed to make a statement like that here?  Maybe lose the capital K 🤭

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Posted (edited)
21 hours ago, Liverpool Lou said:

Obviously, in that specific circumstance they would accept another payment method.

They are talking about not being able to pay at all, obviously, because they did not have alternates ready.

 

Likely the Op would be escorted to an ATM neaby for cash. If they can't access cash it's treated as a dine and dash. Those usually are just let off or police are called, maybe tourist police. I don't think many places will restrain you, but who knows.

Edited by JimTripper
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, JimTripper said:
23 hours ago, Liverpool Lou said:

Obviously, in that specific circumstance they would accept another payment method.

They are talking about not being able to pay at all, obviously, because they did not have alternates ready.

No, that was not what was being talked about, it was a hypothetical, he was never there in that situation, obviously, you'd know that if you bothered to read the OP.   If it had been a real situation he'd have been an idiot for taking a crowd of business colleagues to an expensive venue with no means to pay except a foreign credit card that he wouldn't have been able to use.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 5/8/2024 at 10:09 PM, Bangkok Barry said:

On the second time of calling them they answered the phone and couldn't answer my question. They said they would ask the manager and call me back. They didn't. 

I'd guess that they probably couldn't be arsed wasting their time calling back someone who suspected that his credit card may not work when they had real customers who could pay the bill without issues. 

  • Sad 1
  • Thumbs Up 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, JimTripper said:
23 hours ago, Liverpool Lou said:

Obviously, in that specific circumstance they would accept another payment method.

They are talking about not being able to pay at all, obviously, because they did not have alternates ready.

 

Likely the Op would be escorted to an ATM neaby for cash.

That's what I said, they, obviously, would (have to) accept an alternative payment method, such as cash. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

29 minutes ago, Liverpool Lou said:

No, that was not what was being talked about, it was a hypothetical, he was never there in that situation, obviously, you'd know that if you bothered to read the OP.   If it had been a real situation he'd have been an idiot for taking a crowd of business colleagues to an expensive venue with no means to pay except a foreign credit card that he wouldn't have been able to use.

If he was talking about it, he did not have to really be there, obviously. It could be a hypothetical situation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, Bangkok Barry said:
17 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

Does the Op not have a local Bank Account linked to his phone ?

It would be very surprising for anyone to go to an establishment and find out they don't accept cash, but I guess that issue is growing. 

 

I don't want to use my local account. I want to use cash via ATM from an account in the UK. Why is my business.

 

Then it is your inflexibility which is causing you issues, then you complain about it.

 

I get your point and agree that all payment options should be available to the customer, but they are not - so you are just making life harder for yourself. 

 

I expect that more places will become cashless.

 

14 hours ago, Bangkok Barry said:
17 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

Its a very foolish policy IMO

 

Yes. I've read too many tales of potential or actual fraud, or the bank app not working here. I do internet banking only on my laptop. I see no advantage at all in putting my account at risk just to join the 'modern age'. Putting your finances at risk isn't progression, it is the opposite.

 

I'm nearly 100% cashless here... never an issue.   

You're over egging the risk - that said, I use a 'smaller' account for the day to day transactions, QR payments etc...  and only have that one ATM card in my wallet (as there is a risk of skimming too)...   only a little amount is kept in that account which is topped up when needed

 

 

Sometimes our own stubbornness causes us problems or issues - its seems this is the case here (no offence intended with that, but it does appear to be the case).

 

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

14 hours ago, Bangkok Barry said:

Yes. I've read too many tales of potential or actual fraud, or the bank app not working here. I do internet banking only on my laptop. I see no advantage at all in putting my account at risk just to join the 'modern age'. Putting your finances at risk isn't progression, it is the opposite.

 

Dealing with this specifically...  How is making payment via prompt pay or QR code putting your finances at any greater risk than using internet banking ??

 

You seem to be expressing a degree of paranoia or just looking for reasons not to evolve with the times.

 

I agree with something just being a 'personal preference' but that is an emotional choice which you are attempting to back up with some flaky reasoning and bias - potential issues which are most commonly cited by those who don't like cashless payments are extremely rare, these same people who don't like PromptPay and QR code payments etc... must surely have been using debit cards for years, no ? - thats also cashless...

 

So, it seems its the use of the mobile phone itself to make the transaction which develops some resistance for some, but the excuses are often quite flawed when looking at the bigger picture pro's and con's in comparison with cash. 

 

- I have had the Bank App not work once, for about 5 mins... (that was a few years back)....

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

46 minutes ago, JimTripper said:

If he was talking about it, he did not have to really be there, obviously. It could be a hypothetical situation.

 

I blocked Liverpool Lou for a reason, long ago.

  • Thumbs Up 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

25 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

Then it is your inflexibility which is causing you issues, then you complain about it.

 

What I complained about had nothing to do with them not accepting cash. It was finding their contact address didn't work, the fact that such a place couldn't even get their opening hours correct on their website, and I was told my call would be returned and it wasn't. Abysmal customer service all round.

  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Always call them out by name. Never let cowardly defamation laws deter you from doing the right thing. Those laws were written by cowards, for cowards, who are afraid of truth. 

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

24 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

 

Dealing with this specifically...  How is making payment via prompt pay or QR code putting your finances at any greater risk than using internet banking ??

 

You seem to be expressing a degree of paranoia or just looking for reasons not to evolve with the times.

 

I agree with something just being a 'personal preference' but that is an emotional choice which you are attempting to back up with some flaky reasoning and bias - potential issues which are most commonly cited by those who don't like cashless payments are extremely rare, these same people who don't like PromptPay and QR code payments etc... must surely have been using debit cards for years, no ? - thats also cashless...

 

So, it seems its the use of the mobile phone itself to make the transaction which develops some resistance for some, but the excuses are often quite flawed when looking at the bigger picture pro's and con's in comparison with cash. 

 

- I have had the Bank App not work once, for about 5 mins... (that was a few years back)....

 

 

 

 

We've had at least two occasions when people's accounts have been drained by small withdrawals being made, lots of them and too small to raise an alarm, and as far as I know they all occurred with mobile banking apps. I prefer not to take chances with my money when I don't have to, and that is my personal choice. Your personal choice is to mostly not use a system that has operated flawlessly and with no risk of fraud for hundreds of years. Each to their own.

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, spidermike007 said:

Always call them out by name. Never let cowardly defamation laws deter you from doing the right thing. Those laws were written by cowards, for cowards, who are afraid of truth. 

 

And if you do that, right on cue we have this lead story in the afternoon email from AN.

Screenshot 2024-05-10 130722.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Bangkok Barry said:

 

And if you do that, right on cue we have this lead story in the afternoon email from AN.

Screenshot 2024-05-10 130722.png

 

That wasn't one review... It was a lot of negative and reportedly false reviews in a 'targeted campaign' after a disagreement about access to accommodation which was apparently 'through a restaurant'....  (which seems very odd in itself)...

 

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Many places avoid cash to avoid theft from the staff.

 

Service can be awful and  more the place is popular, the worse it can get. And not only in Thailand.

 

But with all the foreigners in Thailand, trying to play it jet-set-two-week-millionnaires,  who just smile and say no problem, why should tthe local popular restaurants bother to consider better forms of service ?

 

Last but not least, often they don't care when it's a foreigner, as they only want the falang's money and not really have the falang around. Not everywhere of course, but it's the case in many restaurants. And the more popular the town with foreigners, the worse it can get.

 

Just post the name of the place and mention how bad it is...but only once you are out of Thailand of course😁

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
On 5/10/2024 at 6:24 PM, Middle Aged Grouch said:

Many places avoid cash to avoid theft from the staff.

 

Service can be awful and  more the place is popular, the worse it can get. And not only in Thailand.

 

But with all the foreigners in Thailand, trying to play it jet-set-two-week-millionnaires,  who just smile and say no problem, why should tthe local popular restaurants bother to consider better forms of service ?

 

Last but not least, often they don't care when it's a foreigner, as they only want the falang's money and not really have the falang around. Not everywhere of course, but it's the case in many restaurants. And the more popular the town with foreigners, the worse it can get.

 

Just post the name of the place and mention how bad it is...but only once you are out of Thailand of course😁

 

Is theft from the staff an issue?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.








×
×
  • Create New...