US workers are 'giving away the store,' costing firms billions

Feb 09, 2012

Nearly 70 percent of the nation's service employees give away free goods and services – from hamburgers to cable TV – costing companies billions of dollars a year, according to a groundbreaking study.

Clay Voorhees, study co-author and marketing expert at Michigan State University, said one of the best ways to combat this illegal practice – called "sweethearting" – is through better screening of job candidates.

"Our results show that by adding a few screening questions that focus on the potential employee's risk-taking, ethics and need for social acceptance, employers could identify 'bad apples' up front and simply avoid hiring them," Voorhees said. "In the long run, this approach would address the issue."

In the short term, Voorhees said, education and training are needed about the ramifications of sweethearting and how it damages a firm. "Simply reminding individuals of their ethical obligations can greatly reduce deviant behavior," he said.

The study, which will appear in an upcoming issue of the , is the first to look at sweethearting specifically. Voorhees, assistant professor of marketing, co-authored the study with Michael Brady and Michael Brusco of Florida State University.

In the United States, employee theft costs firms about $200 billion a year – 40 percent of which stems from sweethearting, according to previous research.

Voorhees and colleagues surveyed nearly 800 service employees and customers in restaurants, hotels, car washes, cable television installation and repair companies, tanning salons and other retailers and service providers.

Some 67 percent of respondents said they had participated in sweethearting in the past two months. Many employees surveyed said they were motivated by the prospect of receiving better tips and similar sweetheart deals at the customer's place of business ("tit-for-tat").

"I was surprised by how pervasive this behavior was across a wide range of service industries," Voorhees said. "I fully expected to see this behavior in bars and restaurants, but I was surprised at how prevalent it was in industries like retail, sports and recreation, and even with insurance claims."

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User comments : 11

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Star_Gazer
1 / 5 (3) Feb 09, 2012
Did the study include cost of defective products and services that these "Sweathearts" were substituting? You rarely can get something free from anyone unless they screwed up.

Disclaimer: my opinion is based on text of this article and not actual study that I did not read.
Zuls
3 / 5 (2) Feb 09, 2012
"You rarely can get something free from anyone unless they screwed up."

You sound jaded. As someone who works in the restaurant industry I have seen first hand how prevalent "sweethearting" is -- and no it's not motivated by someone screwing up... it's usually motivated by an employee liking a customer...
Vendicar_Decarian
4 / 5 (4) Feb 09, 2012
This practice is part of good customer service.

If you screw the customer for every nickel and dime you can get from them then they will feel as if they are being screwed for every nickel and dime you can get from them, and will be less likely to return.

This is a bean counter study that ignores the reality of customer loyalty and focuses only on the fractions of a penny a retailer can gain by treating their customers badly.
Vendicar_Decarian
4.3 / 5 (6) Feb 09, 2012
"In the United States, employee theft costs firms about $200 billion a year 40 percent of which stems from sweethearting" - Article

Here we see the study authors equating rewarding customer loyalty with "theft". What is next? Charitable donations being equated with theft? Free coffee at muffler shops equated with theft?

But lets assume the 40 percent of 200 billion "THEFT" is correct. This equates to 80 billion in an U.S. economy that is 14,500 billion in size.

So this bean counter "theft" accounts for a whopping 0.5% of the beans being exchanged.

Wow. What an astonishing non-problem that these vapid skin flints have discovered.

Lurker2358
3.5 / 5 (2) Feb 09, 2012
"Simply reminding individuals of their ethical obligations can greatly reduce deviant behavior,"


Lol?

An employer who HONESTLY promotes good ethics? I've almost never heard of such a thing.

Google officially has a company policy of "Do no evil".

I saw that on television the other day and was in disbelief. I was like, "Wow. That must be amazing to work for a company like that!"

Honestly, I've worked for places and eventually quit because their company policy amounted to "screw the client/customer at every opportunity."

I've never had a W-2 employer who genuinely promoted good ethics or good morals. Even what they do is only a matter of company loyalty, not "goodness".

They expect you to be loyal to them, but they assume no moral obligations to you or to their clients.

I am not defending employee theft or sweethearting, I'm just pointing out the fact that the employer's aren't exactly the gold standard of morality themselves.
fmfbrestel
5 / 5 (1) Feb 09, 2012
Our results show that by adding a few screening questions that focus on the potential employee's risk-taking, ethics and need for social acceptance, employers could identify 'bad apples' up front and simply avoid hiring them


Yeah, cause the unethical, risk-taking applicant who has a strong need for social acceptance wont lie during the interview....

kochevnik
3 / 5 (2) Feb 10, 2012
Completely believable. Americans are the first to "borrow" my things and the last to return them. But I doubt customer gifts can be tallied in the same category. That's actually a normal thing on some of the better places on planet Earth.
Turritopsis
3 / 5 (2) Feb 10, 2012
Mr Voorhees slogan:

I'll cut sweet hearts out of your workers, I'll take a scalpel and excise any unnecessary expenditures. We'll make a killing together.

I'm sorry, couldn't resist.

"Simply reminding individuals of their ethical obligations can greatly reduce deviant behavior," he said.


He followed that by saying "And if that don't work, my machete does the talking."

Hire Voorhees, he'll cut your expenses.

Employees are still considered expenses, ya?
Eric_B
5 / 5 (1) Feb 10, 2012
Whoa, Vendicar sounds like he is half way to the state of dreaded evil..SOCIALISM..all up and identifying with the "little man" the customer in this scenario. Next he'll be supporting worker right to collective bargaining and then... HEALTH CARE BENNIES!!!

Well, we wouldn't want companies to stop over-paying their CEOs to berate their employees so I guess employed disgruntlement is the 500-pound gorilla...
rowbyme
2.3 / 5 (3) Feb 10, 2012
Kochevnik: Go back to your third world pit and stop whining about Americans.
Shootist
not rated yet Feb 12, 2012
Mr Voorhees slogan:

I'll cut sweet hearts out of your workers, I'll take a scalpel and excise any unnecessary expenditures. We'll make a killing together.

I'm sorry, couldn't resist.

"Simply reminding individuals of their ethical obligations can greatly reduce deviant behavior," he said.


He followed that by saying "And if that don't work, my machete does the talking."

Hire Voorhees, he'll cut your expenses.

Employees are still considered expenses, ya?


One hopes. They damn sure aren't capital assets.

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