Overseas visitors to India always ask
me for advice on tipping. There is such a bewildering variety of people to tip!
Drivers, porters, doormen, car attendants, elephant handlers, tour guides and
waiters at restaurants, they're all part of The Great Tipping Challenge.
But never fear - they all fall into a
neat pecking order when it comes to tips. All you need is this - Deepa's
Official Guide to Tipping.
Arm yourself with this Guide, and you can waltz in
and out of India with a song on your lips, secure in the comfort that you're
not over-paying or being downright stingy.
Let's start with the lowest guy in
the tipping spectrum, the doorman. The doorman comes in two varieties. Let's
call Type 1 the Moustachioed Turbaned Doorman. You'll see Type 1 Doormen at the
Taj Hotel, or the Sheraton, or any of the grander sorts of hotels. They usually
open car doors, both when you arrive at the hotel, and when you're leaving.
They also open the main door to the hotel.
Type 1 Doormen have perfected several
arts:
1 - The Art of Opening Door with a Bow
and a Flourish
2 - The Art of the Broad Unctuous Smile
3 - The Art of Greeting Foreigners in
English
4 - The Art of Looking As If They
Should Be Tipped
These guys are a Grade 1 Challenge. In
the first place, they look, um, intimidating. They're tall, broad-shouldered,
colourful, and of course, that moustache is nothing to scoff at. What do you
tip such guys? They look as if they'd scorn a ten-rupee note. But surely fifty
is too much? And when do you tip these guys? Surely not when you arrive tired
from the airport at some odd hour of the night?
Deepa's Official Guide to Tipping
recommends a 20 rupee note, judiciously kept ready, handed over subtly when you
leave the hotel in the morning for work or sightseeing. It will earn you an
Extra-Flourish when you come back to the hotel in the evening. If you are staying at a super-posh hotel, make that a 50 rupee note.
And if you want to do that very
touristy thing - ask the Type 1 Doorman to pose for a photo - then please be
ready to pay a crisp 100-rupee note. Anything less than that is, er, shoddy.
Payment is logically made after the photo is clicked, with a pleasant thank
you. Women can get away with Payment By Giggle, but honestly? Doorman Type 1
prefers cash.
And what of the Type 2 Doorman? The
Type 2 Doorman, like Aesop's fable of the Town and the Country Mouse, is the
poor cousin of Type 1. Found at less plush hotels, Type 2 still rush about
opening and closing doors, but alas, they lack both the moustache and the
turban. The Type 2 Doorman, horror of horrors, is the Doorman with the Faded
Uniform And The Whistle.
Type Two has perfected the Art of The
Whistle as Weapon. Unerringly and shrilly, the Whistle summons cars, stops
incoming traffic, and lets you exit the hotel in a grand if noisy style.
The Tipping Guide recommends 20 rupees,
handed over before you get into the car. Your reward? Frenetic whistling and
much rushing about to block traffic in person, so that your car can sail forth
undisputed like the Queen Mary.
....(to be continued)
2 comments:
Wow, this is critical reading for us Indians too, who more than anyone else could do with lessons in tipping.
Cant wait to see the rest of the rules.
You have really great taste on catch article titles, even when you are not interested in this topic you push to read it
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