Don’t worry; it’s nothing like you’re thinking.
I walked to my car and saw something pinned under my
windshield wipers.
And I hate hate hate hate hate haaaaaaaaaaate when people
put crap there (including parking tickets). It’s just creepy that someone was
out there touching my car. I mean- do
NOT put your icky stranger hands all over my property! When you put crap there, it’s really
anti-advertising because it angers me to the point that I want to not go to the
very thing that you’re advertising just out of spite.
But that is just an aside.
So there was an advertisement for Ruby Tuesdays under there
and they were like, “Hey! We’re actually doing something good for the
community!”
I read the ad, and apparently if you “enjoy a meal” with
them on this one arbitrary day, they will donate 20% of your bill to the
charity of your choice.
How thoughtful.
Those italics mean sarcasm.
ARE YOU KIDDING ME??!?!?
You may be like, “Whut? Allie J- whut r u tawlkin’ aboot?”
(Yes, in my fantasies you are half-redneck, half-canadian.)
But just hear me out:
Ruby Tuesdays is acting like they’re being a good corporate
citizen and socially responsible and other key terms that you may or may not
have learned in Introduction to Business. But what they’re really doing is siphoning
off a part of their revenue, supposedly making a donation, and then probably
taking the tax deduction for it. They are essentially using their customers to get
a tax benefit.
If nobody ate at Ruby Tuesdays that day, you think they
would still give the donation? NO.
Here’s a BETTER idea:
Give customers a 20% discount on their meal if they
make a donation. If they don’t donate, they pay full price. Tax deduction for
customer whose money is actually making the donation? CHECK. Still major
profits because their prices are so outrageous? CHECK. Good corporate
citizenship? CHECK.
Winz for everyonez.
So I circled their “deal” on the ad and wrote, “Why don’t
you just give me a 20% discount on my meal and let me take the tax deduction
for the charitable contribution?” And THEN I found a spare tack on a bulletin
board in COBA and posted that bitch up for all to see.
(That was the naughty thing I did.)
If Ruby Tuesdays really wanted to be charitable, they would
make substantial donations anyway and not have it dependent on customer sales
on one. Random. Day. Substance over form, guys. Come on.
I’ve also noticed something about myself.
(I have a giant butt.)
I really do. I was making these shorts the other day…
But I’ll save that for my seamstress blog.
For real though- I’ve noticed something else about myself. About
my values.
Over a year ago, I was almost dead set in being a member of
this prestigious accounting fraternity. There was a huge time commitment with
service and professional hours as well as a rather large up-front investment of
$150.
I was certain that
networking in this “club” would bring me great job prospects, and so I thought
all of it would be worth it.
But then I found out that candidates/members had to sell discount
cards, and this was honestly the deal-breaker for me. Never mind that I was taking
18 hours of upper division accounting courses or that I was spending plenty of
time being the secretary of the Accounting Association. The time management
thing I could handle. I knew I was good at that. Even the $150 I could work off
from answering phone calls in the bursar’s office.
But DISCOUNT CARDS?
I’ve discovered that fundraising goes against my core
values. Maybe it’s because I suck at it, but I just don’t believe it’s right to
con people into buying things they don’t really want.
“Oh- 10% off items I never buy at a restaurant I never go to
only valid one day a week? SWEET DEAL!”
Said no one in the history of ever.
Call it conning, call it persuasion, call it salesmanship:
pitching crap to people just to get money is WRONG, and I will NOT be doing
it!
And that’s what selling discount cards is like. How can I
sell something to someone when I don’t even believe in it?
Candidates who didn’t sell all their cards had to submit an
extra $50 as if they did.
So I didn’t join the club, and yet it turns out I got a
rockin’ awesome accounting job without it. Joining the club was the best thing
I ever didn’t.
Also, voting for a white president doesn’t make you racist.
Just thought I should point that out.
It’s boots and chaps; it’s cowboy hats,
TWS
(if someone comments and puts "It's spurs and latigo", I will give you hugs and a GIF of a really cute owl)
(if someone comments and puts "It's spurs and latigo", I will give you hugs and a GIF of a really cute owl)
It's the ropes and the reins
ReplyDeleteAnd the joy and the pain
Good old Garth B.
ReplyDeleteIt's like when people at work take their kids into the office and try to sell you outrageously overpriced cookie dough that DOESN'T EVEN MAKE TASTY COOKIES. It's like, why don't you just let me make a donation to your school, and skip the middle man?
Exactly!
ReplyDelete*hugs*
and
http://i.chzbgr.com/completestore/2012/3/19/4c3b3bb3-ea34-4594-8a9e-e58d6c4d092c.gif