среда, 24 октября 2012 г.

The range of persons standing in line in these collective sites ranges from 8 to 26.  The shorter li


As a social researcher, I observe as much of my surroundings as possible.  If I notice brock plaza hotel history a pattern that raises a question in my mind, I start testing it when I have the time.  If my pilot tests begin to pan out, then I spend some intentional time on the same question for a cross-sectional, qualitative brock plaza hotel history investigation.
Such is the case with Starbucks lines in the morning.  Having spent many a day at the back of the line, I've been privy to comments brock plaza hotel history such as, "Oh Holy Mother of ____, this line is too long…never mind…" or, "Hey, not bad.  I think I've got time to wait."
Some of the funniest people to me are those whose body language clearly shows conflict between the need for a coffee fix and their next obligation.  I've actually seen people brock plaza hotel history almost spin in place – stop, hesitate, mutter to themselves, turn back around…and eventually make a decision.  Sometimes their decision is reversed in the middle of the line.  I've even seen a "struggler" decide to stay, then get through half the line, then decide to leave, THEN come back and ask the person she was standing next to if she could have her place back.
Having already observed this line-length brock plaza hotel history tolerance threshold pattern and conducted a few pilot tests, I've been using this past two weeks as my actual cross-sectional study.  For this post I've included five Starbucks stores in the mornings: brock plaza hotel history 2 in a hotel, 2 in a southern regional airport, and one in a north central regional airport.  Here are my findings:
The range of persons standing in line in these collective sites ranges brock plaza hotel history from 8 to 26.  The shorter lines (8 and 9) were in hotel establishments, the longer lines (15, 19 and 26) were in airport sites.  The tolerance level on length of line seems to be positively correlated with the actual amount of space available.  For example, the areas within the hotels were smaller, one was cramped, brock plaza hotel history and people were in very close proximity. brock plaza hotel history The line in the Atlanta airport was long, had families brock plaza hotel history and strollers brock plaza hotel history camped out (see my two photos) along the way, and there was no "self-negotiation" going on at the end.  It appeared that people could clearly approach and assess the line, easily leave the line, and had the greatest length-tolerance, perhaps because several of them were waiting for a flight that offered ample time for their coffee.
Therefore, my recommendations would be that if you see a line at a hotel espresso bar with less than 8 persons, you should feel glad about the opportunity to breach the "lower brock plaza hotel history than threshold" opportunity.  If you see an airport line with less than 14 or 15, then you're also beating the odds.  If you are a "struggler," my advice for your peace of mind is this: do not approach brock plaza hotel history lines at the airport around the 20-ish mark because you'll get even more frustrated than you already are.
Disclaimers: The limitations of this study are obvious, no literature review was conducted, brock plaza hotel history and given the number of Starbucks embedded in hotels and airports across the country, these findings could even be counter-representative to national averages.

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