imthatgirl
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2008
- Messages
- 4,127
In all of my meals at Disney, I have not experienced the servers trying to upsell, which is sort of strange. You would think that Disney would be all over that.
When I began serving (circa 1990), I had the good fortune of being trained by someone who is a master at quality service. She explained that a good server is almost invisible. You do not even know that he or she is there, but somehow your drinks are magically refilled and your food magically appears before you. She taught me to anticipate and meet a customer's needs before the customer even realizes that something is needed.
She also taught me that customers dining at the restaurant want to believe both the food and service are excellent. Therefore, to do or say anything that indicates otherwise, is to disappoint the customer. You should be proud of the product that the restaurant sells and offer it to customers, because you are proud of it. Every customer should be encouraged to order appetizers, soup, salad, entrees, dessert, and beverages, because those things are special and will add to the customer's experience.
If you offer these items because you sincerely believe in them, no customer will feel as though you are trying to jack up the bill. Of course, customers should not be pressured if they decline. But to not offer something to a customer is to not look out for their needs, and customers will feel slighted.
I am surprised that servers at Disney do not upsell more often. It rarely happens unless I am at a signature dining (and often, it does not even happen then). Truthfully, as long as it is handled respectfully, the upsell is a mark of good service. I am there at the restaurant to spend money, and if the restaurant does not offer me the best of what they have, then I am disappointed.
I ihre and train servers and we use these principles. These are all the basics. One thing I teach is to educate guests. No one likes to be "sold", but everyone who comes into the building is there to spend money. there are lots of clever ways to sell a product without "selling" it.
I think it's poor service to not be informed of all the options on the menu. Obviously no one wants a walk through of the entire menu, but to mention your favorite drink or appetizer and dessert is like you said the mark of good service. So when I dine and I am not suggested anything at all, It's a sign that the server can't be bothered.
Even in WDW I find this happens, as it should. At Whispering Canyon they talk about the shakes in so many flavors. At Ohana it's the dessert, they even walk you by it at the beginning of the meal(hands down the best way to sell dessert) same thing at Captains Grille. Our server at Coral Reef was the first experience I have had where there was no mention of "something good"(tell them something good should be the first thing a server does). Well to us there was no mention of anything. To the diners around us she had tons to say. now anyone can tell me that it wasn't because we were on the plan, but what else could it be? The other tables she greeted, took drink orders and then came back. Us, we sat there for about 7 minutes(I teach you never leave a person sitting there for more then 60 seconds without acknowledgement) then she came to us and asked us what we wanted to drink, what meals we wants and our desserts. The first thing out of her mouth was "I see you're on the dining plan"...not even hello. It was horrible. I don't and won't believe that that is how Disney wants them to treat guests, to not even engage them. Because I saw her engage other. I am left to only believe it was the fact that we were on the dining plan that caused this.
Sounds like a top notch server to me! 


If the majority of the people value eating fast and only being offered what they get on their plan then the default service will reflect that. There are far less people who will be upset about too fast service over too slow service at WDW.