Cowfold Seagull
Fan of the 17 bus
I am fast losing the will to live having read this thread.
I'll drink to that. But only at certain times (yet TBC)I am fast losing the will to live having read this thread.
That takes me way back, a Watney's house called the Warwick Arms, around the back of Victoria Station was where l stated drinking regularly back in the 1970's, pints of Red Barrel, something l would never tgouch now!I'm still outraged a watneys mild went up to 20p a pint!
Another penny, I'm going to a charringtons
The policy makes no sense to me, other than to try and cash in and make more money from your customer. In busier times, economy of scale means you generally can sell more per head of staff than at quieter times. TK acting like a politician imo and treating the general public as idiots.For those baffled by yet another thread started by the OP with no context and a missing negative, this is the thing.
UK’s biggest pub group to charge 20p more a pint at busy times under surge pricing
Owner of Slug & Lettuce and Yates’s to raise prices at times such as weekends to help cover costswww.theguardian.com
Tom Kerridge was interviewed about it on Today this morning and explained the '20p extra' is actually the real price when costs are taken into account - i.e. more staff needed at busier times. The rest of the time it's discounted so actually a happy hour.
Yep it's all about the marketing.It definitely comes over better if drinks are sold at a discount to the full price at quiet times - rather than calling it surge pricing.
No, they’ll have those electronic petrol station type displays. A bit like the ones that increased every minute last Summer whenever someone mentioned the price of oil.Aren't pubs legally obliged to display their prices?
Are they going to have to have rotating boards like McDonalds used to have when they switched from the breakfast menu?
The convenient sponge of amnesia has wiped the memories of those days.@Brighton Lines can attest that this was a thing in hotel bars in Taunton well over 30 years ago.
Where are you both going to sign and is it acceptable just to print your name ?I don't think so, certainly something myself and her indoors will sign up for.
One of the busiest times in pubs that was mentioned on Radio 4 is straight after work, particularly Wednesday and Thursdays since the pandemic, and particularly in the City and West End of London, and presumably other big cities.No problem with pub surcharges if there is something else being offered e.g. live music. Being busy doesn't really cut it for me.
My memory is fading these days, but I'm pretty sure that saloon bars tended to have more women in them, so to mix with these strange creatures, it would cost you a few pence per pint more.Thank you.
I'm trying my hardest to be outraged by this, but surely it's just the same concept as the traditional 'Happy Hour' but approached for another angle? When a pub wants to encourage trade drink prices are reduced. When they don't want/need to encourage trade then prices increase.
It reminds me a bit of the old days when pubs used to have Public and Saloon bars. The same beer in the same pub served by the same people at the same time would cost you a few pence more if the room had a bit of carpet on the floor.
"Wet" pubs are probably only just covering their costs right now. There's a tiny bit more margin if you're selling food too but that obviously comes with costs. I don't think what TK is saying is unreasonable for any pub where their only profit is in each pint they sell, which will likely be a few pennies,The policy makes no sense to me, other than to try and cash in and make more money from your customer. In busier times, economy of scale means you generally can sell more per head of staff than at quieter times. TK acting like a politician imo and treating the general public as idiots.
I get that and I know pubs are having a torrid time generally, I just don’t get his logic that it costs more to run a pub the busier it is. I know there are incremental increases, but surely the more you generally sell the more profitable you should be? I don’t have an issue with pubs putting up their prices, I just feel his explanation is a bit lame and misleading."Wet" pubs are probably only just covering their costs right now. There's a tiny bit more margin if you're selling food too but that obviously comes with costs. I don't think what TK is saying is unreasonable for any pub where their only profit is in each pint they sell, which will likely be a few pennies,