re: #255 plansbandc
We’ve noted a huge increase in “no problem” instead of “you’re welcome” from millennial waitstaff.
I’ve worked in recent months on breaking myself of that habit as I work in a hotel and the new GM thinks “no problem” doesn’t sound particularly nice to the guests. But I still say it on occasion because really, some situations involve me doing something that the guests see as a bother to me. So “it’s no problem” sounds more reassuring that “my pleasure” or “it’s part of my job.”