Re: The decline of Canadian chess?
I knew somebody would be silly enough to take my comparison to mean I'm trying to equate the restaurant business to the chess tournament "business".
No one would work as a waiter / waitress if the "wages" they were paid from the restaurant owners were their only income. They DEPEND ON earning tips on top of wages. Wait staff wages are (legally) BELOW the normal minimum wage, although I know some places are experimenting with doing away with tips and paying higher wages. But that model takes away the right of the consumer to respond to bad service with little or no tip. So it's a bad model imo. The tipping model is more responsive to the consumer, and I'm saying that is the model chess tournament organizers should use if they want some renumeration for their services.
Bob's insistence on being paid up front is putting the emphasis where it doesn't belong when it comes to chess tournaments. It's the first step in a slippery slope leading to Neil Frarey's full "chess as a business" concept which is doomed to failure. The Millionaire Chess debacle should teach everyone that chess tournament organizing can never be a normal business -- without any changes to chess, that is.
Roger Patterson's post in this thread sets the record straight on this matter. The one thing I would say to Roger is that it is always possible for someone like Neil to find an illegal immigrant to run the business for 1/10th the cost that Roger outlined. That is the Trump methodology. And what you would eventually end up with are shady characters being paid a pauper's sum to run tournaments in church basements, doing whatever they can to cut costs, much the same as the present situation except that we currently don't have (afaik and with one notable exception) shady characters doing the organizing.
Originally posted by John Coleman
View Post
No one would work as a waiter / waitress if the "wages" they were paid from the restaurant owners were their only income. They DEPEND ON earning tips on top of wages. Wait staff wages are (legally) BELOW the normal minimum wage, although I know some places are experimenting with doing away with tips and paying higher wages. But that model takes away the right of the consumer to respond to bad service with little or no tip. So it's a bad model imo. The tipping model is more responsive to the consumer, and I'm saying that is the model chess tournament organizers should use if they want some renumeration for their services.
Bob's insistence on being paid up front is putting the emphasis where it doesn't belong when it comes to chess tournaments. It's the first step in a slippery slope leading to Neil Frarey's full "chess as a business" concept which is doomed to failure. The Millionaire Chess debacle should teach everyone that chess tournament organizing can never be a normal business -- without any changes to chess, that is.
Roger Patterson's post in this thread sets the record straight on this matter. The one thing I would say to Roger is that it is always possible for someone like Neil to find an illegal immigrant to run the business for 1/10th the cost that Roger outlined. That is the Trump methodology. And what you would eventually end up with are shady characters being paid a pauper's sum to run tournaments in church basements, doing whatever they can to cut costs, much the same as the present situation except that we currently don't have (afaik and with one notable exception) shady characters doing the organizing.
Comment