Got hired last night, manager told me NOTHING about job
Hello. So, after months of preparation I finally got hired at a small Tucson club. The audition was awkward because no one told me how the stage sets worked. Turned out theres a normal dance round and a second tipping round. Hm. Afterwords i went hack to fill out my paperwork, and asked the manager about dress code, tipping out, house rules, etc. I got NOTHING! All his answers were super vague and gave me the impression I could do what ever the fuck I wanted. Im really worried about accidentally breaking rules or stepping on the other dancers toes though. What do I do?
Ps. I'm sorry abut any weird spelling or grammar errors, I'm writing this on my phone.
Re: Got hired last night, manager told me NOTHING about job
You're right to be concerned-Managers are often weird and vague and one will tell you one thing another something different-on your first night I'd speak to someone else, if there are no other managers or housemoms, ask a girl who has worked there a long time, or ask the manager again say sorry I'm a bit confused about XYZ and ask him again.
Re: Got hired last night, manager told me NOTHING about job
I would definitely ask the house mom if there is one, and if not, approach another dancer politely and ask her.
Kinda weird they don't tell you about tipouts and fees though, do they not want money out of you? Geeze.
Re: Got hired last night, manager told me NOTHING about job
There are clubs where management really gives no fucks about what the girls do. When you have your first shift, check with the manager on duty what the rules are. If you still get a vague answer, you might want to check with a nice dancer at some point during your shift. Really though, if management isn't clear about what they want, just use common sense based on local laws.
Re: Got hired last night, manager told me NOTHING about job
^ Yes. I've basically worked at clubs without rules.
He might just be ornery or not wanting to take the time to explain things so just watch what it going on and you'll get the hang of things when you start.