Foodservice.com Express.  Please turn on your graphics - this looks a heck of a lot better that way. :)
Advertise October 5th, 2009 My Profile Subscriptions
News in Review     Market Reports    Food Quiz     Industry Discussion

Chick-fil-A Wins 6th Drive-Thru Title
US lit up by 13,000 McDonald's
Steak and Ale's Dead. Long Live Steak and Ale!
Restaurant jobs are economic rescue for hundreds
Cornell Releases Comprehensive Compilation of Wage-and-Hour Laws
Behind Starbucks' instant-coffee rollout
Coca-Cola Puts Calories on Front of Packaging
Remixed Fast Food Looks Like Fine Dining
The lowdown on airline food
Foodservice workers found more likely to smoke
Advocacy group sues KFC over grilled chicken
European Coffee Wars: McDonald's Versus Starbucks
CEO plans to make Boston Market chain fly again
Advertisement



Advertisement



Featured Article

What makes a successful restaurant?

By: Brandon O'Dell

You won't be able to find the answer as to what it is exactly that makes a restaurant successful in any forum. Without experiencing it for yourself, it's tough to imagine that a restaurant is one of the most complicated businesses you can run. Most businesses are pretty simple. You buy a product, mark it up enough to cover your overhead, and hire people who can sell it effectively and count change, or you manage a warehouse, a sales team, a manufacturing line or a specific service your business offers.

A restaurant is so much more complicated than that. First, you are more than a retailer. You are running a warehouse. You have to have the same skills a good warehouse manager has, including a system for checking everything in and out of inventory, protecting your product from theft, knowing how to keep your vendors honest in their pricing and their service, tracking and recording all your purchases and usage. All of this for a 200 item inventory of PERISHABLE goods, not just pieces that can be stored indefinately.

You are also a manufacturer. You have to run several assembly lines at once, and fill the orders for your product faster than any manufacturing line ever has to. You're not just making one product either. Usually, it's at least 20, sometimes as many as 100 different products, all with the same employees. The parts for these products are also perishable. If your warehousing systems aren't good, it can ruin the manufacturing of the products. If your products aren't getting made efficiently, consistently, and cost effectively, the whole ship will go down.

You are also a delivery service. You have to have systems for delivering a product with a very short life span to the right place within a time limit, all the while doublechecking that the manufacturing of the product meets standards. The delivery systems inside your restaurant is even more important than any you might offer outside the four walls.

You're running a sales team too. Your front of house staff have to not only be experts on your product, but also know how to sell customers your highest profit products. You're margin for error on staffing sales personnel alone could sink you. Without effective sales staff, or staff with the ability to communicate work with the other systems in place, the whole system won't work.

You are also a service provider. In addition to being your sales force, your front of house staff are also customer service representatives. The number of things that can go wrong within this entire complicated system are enormous. Your FOH staff have to make sure none of those mistakes ever effect the customer. That's a big task.

You may also be a repair service and a custodian to your own building if you don't want to pay someone else to do it. There is a lot of equipment in a restaurant to break, and a lot of square footage to keep clean. A breakdown in either of these operating systems could also ruin your business.

All...

Read More


Notable Quotable


"Whenever I was called a gourmet, I suspected I was being accused of something at least slightly unpleasant. But that was before I heard the term "foodie." I am still not sure that a gourmet is a good thing to be, but it must be better than a foodie."

Mark Kurlansky, 'Choice Cuts' (2002)

Weekly Market Reports

The Market Reports are not available this week. They are brought to you 50 weeks per year. Reporting will resume next week.

Discussion Forums

Menu Pricing Help Needed

Community member htl1975 writes...

I desperately need help on how to price my menu correctly to increase sales. I am totally new to doing food costing. After researching about software that can help you with food costing, I am left confused with how to incorporate the overhead expense of running the restaurant into the menu pricing. I have read that doing this will truly allow me to know exactly when I am making profit instead of the default 33% food costing. Please if someone could guide me how to do this. Currently I am...

Read More

Alternative CO2 Supplier?

Community member Howard writes...

Has anyone worked with a company, other than their drink company to supply CO2?

How did you find their cost compared to the drink companies?

...

Read More

How do you answer the question, "How's business?"

Community member Nancy writes...

Customers are always asking how's business? I sway on whether to say the truth - well, things could be better, or just smile & say things are just peachy.

Actually, just typing this seemed to give me the answer to my question, which is, that nobody likes to heard a sob story, so I'll just keep on smiling & saying "We are doing great!"

Do any of you have a preset response for this question?

...

Read More

Food Quiz

The only berry a silkworm will eat

I am a berry. I am the only berry plant a silkworm will eat. I am black, white, pink, purple, or red. My black variety is most preferred by humans, my white variety is most preferred by the silk worms, and my red variety is most popular in the United States. I must be allowed to ripen fully before being picked. For this reason I am usually left to fall off my tree onto the grassy ground on which I am often planted. Devotees will regularly place a drop cloth under my medium sized, attractively untidy tree during maturity. Those who do harvest me, either by picked or gathering from the ground often wear purple so the stains I create don't show lest their clothing turn that color. I stain hands as well, so gloves are the order of the day. Eaten with fresh cream I'm best, but I perform quite well in puddings, compotes, or plates with pears.

What am I?

The Food Quiz has is brought to you by Culinary Specialty Produce, a specialty produce broker that scours the world for the very best in specialty produce. Contact them at 908-789-4700 or by sending an email to info@culinaryproduce.com.

Subscription Information
To Unsubscribe: Please click here to unsubscribe from the Foodservice.com Express eNewsletter.


If you've tried to unsubscribe but are still receiving this newsletter, please email our customer support department.



Welcome to the Foodservice.com Express newsletter, a weekly publication that provides a comprehensive review of the foodservice industry each and every friday. You are free to share this newsletter with friends and colleagues in any way you see fit. Better yet...have them to subscribe!

If you haven't done so already, be sure to check out another newsletter we recently launched called the Daily Buzz, our daily delivery of restaurant news (that's actually interesting to read!).

Best Regards,


David Smania
Founder, Foodservice.com

Foodservice.com Express is Published Weekly by Food Service Interactive LLC, a marketing and media development company for the foodservice industry. Click here for questions or comments.

Foodservice.com
7702 East Doubletree Ranch Rd.
Scottsdale, Arizona 85258
Ph: 623-433-9690



Copyright 1996-2009 Foodservice.com. All rights reserved.