Table Spacing and Proximity Impact Restaurant Spending

Table spacing is important for determining cash flow, occupancy, and customer satisfaction and is especially important in fast casual and fine dining restaurants.

Ever wonder how restaurant table proximity or spacing impacts customer satisfaction and spending?

Read Stephani Robson and Sheryl Kimes report titled Don’t Sit So Close to Me: Restaurant Table Characteristics and Guest Satisfaction.

The findings of their report suggest that not only should customers be seated at right-sized tables for the restaurant, but that when the distance between tables is less than three feet, both satisfaction and spending are decreased.

The full report is available from Cornell’s Center for Hospitality Research web site.

TimeForge labor management software is used by restaurant owners and operators around the world to increase profits, reduce turnover, and improve retention. TimeForge provides powerful and easy-to-use employee scheduling, attendance, online timecards, and labor management software for restaurant, retail, and other service industries.

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Human Resources, Hiring Success, and Twitter

Secrets for Hiring Success

Employee scheduling is an important function of human resources and operations at your business.  Good employee schedules will reduce turnover and increase retention, improving cash flow and profits.  Tracking time and attendance is also an important human resource task.  Other HR tasks include processing payroll, hiring, exit interviews, and employee onboarding, among many others.

Hiring is often one of the most complicated and difficult tasks for operations and human resources to perform.  This 7 Secrets for Hiring Success article from Success Performance Solutions is a great reference for hiring managers everywhere in all industries.

Twitter in Human Resources, According to Workforce.com

Twitter is a popular micro-blogging tool that is receiving a lot of press, and has grown significantly over the past 3 years.  A number of industries, including Hollywood, television, music, and others are using Twitter to help grow and keep fans “in the know”.  However, Twitter is also finding a number of uses in the Human Resources (HR) world, as reported by Workforce.com

Make sure to follow TimeForge on Twitter!

TimeForge provides powerful and easy-to-use employee scheduling and online labor management software for restaurant, retail, and other service industries. TimeForge software is used by restaurant owners and operators around the world to increase profits, reduce turnover, and improve retention.

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Managing Employee Schedules is Important for Restaurants

Managing employees in the foodservice or hospitality industry is a process that can quickly become a nightmare for both staff and managers.

Staff expectations and requirements will not mix well with business requirements leading to lower employee retention, higher employee turnover, and a reduction in profits for your restaurant.

Most businesses in the restaurant, foodservice and hospitality industries such as table service restaurants, bars, clubs, country clubs, and quick service / fast food restaurants have very little control over the monthly budget. After a lease is signed the building and utility costs will remain relatively fixed, licensing fees and insurance rates will not change drastically month over month, and credit card processing fees usually scale with the business growth.

Managers, however, can directly influence three of the largest budget line items:

  • Advertising expenses are normally purchased in 3 – 12 month quantities, and are not likely to change on a monthly basis.
  • Inventory including food and beverage expenses can change based on a number of factors, and switching suppliers is difficult and time consuming.
  • Labor costs will vary on a monthly basis based on the prevailing wage, employees leaving (or being fired), staff communication, management practices, and a number of other factors that can be directly controlled by managers.

Of these three line items, managers have the most control over labor costs, which can be manipulated to improve business profits. Inversely, improper management of labor costs will reduce the business’s ability to satisfy customers and expose the business to the risk of liability lawsuits and labor violation fines – instantly slashing the restaurant’s profitability!

Improving employee labor scheduling and time / attendance management should be an ongoing effort in your business that results in happier staff members, better customer satisfaction, and higher profits for your company.

TimeForge is a leading provide of powerful and simple-to-use employee scheduling and online labor management software for the restaurant and retail industries. TimeForge software is used by restaurant owners and operators around the globe to increase profits, reduce turnover, and improve retention.

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Get the Most out of your POS

Owners and operators in the retail and restaurant industries face a common problem with Point of Sale (POS) systems …. sophisticated POS systems can take some time to learn – and operators are too busy with day-to-day operations to learn the systems completely.

As David Scott Peters points out in a quick blog post over at FOHBOH (Front of House, Back of House), a deep understanding of your Point of Sale system is an absolute must.  David points out that in addition to being a cash register, POS systems can perform a number of additional tasks, such as locating ideal food costs, managing inventory, controlling labor costs, and much more.

However, one aspect that David did not touch upon is that there are often major capability differences between the various Point of Sale manufacturers.  Some systems do have built-in inventory, food costing, and labor management modules, but many others do not have these modules.

In many cases, it is preferable to identify and use a best-of-breed solution designed specifically for the task at hand.  For example, CostGuard continues to develop and maintain the best inventory managament system available for restaurants, bars, and clubs.  TimeForge labor management software is designed from the ground-up to make labor management and employee scheduling easy for restaurant and retail operators.

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TimeForge Labor Management, a quick background ….

The TimeForge product began life about 6 years ago, with the vision of a simple, easy to use, online employee scheduling product for the restaurant and retail industries.

We quickly realized that every business owner and manager has their own idea of what a “simple” employee scheduling system must do to help their business – labor scheduling requirements greatly vary by industry and location.  However, saving time and money is important to all business owners …

  • Businesses in California, New York, and other areas need to schedule employee breaks (not very important in Texas, New Mexico, and other locales),
  • Large organizations need to schedule multiple departments and supervisors (smaller groups only have one department),
  • Labor costs need to be accurate, and account for overtime, multiple locations, positions, and job codes (many businesses fly by the seat of their pants, and don’t see the value in this information),
  • Employee schedules need to be enforced, making sure employees do not arrive too early or leave too late (locations with full-time employees don’t worry about this requirement),
  • And on, and on ….

Over the past several years, TimeForge has evolved to solve all of these problems – in an approachable manner for new and existing customers.

Multiple versions of the TimeForge service are now available, including:

  • TimeForge Scheduling, the simple-to-use employee scheduling software, reduces labor scheduling from hours to seconds, improves employee communication (reducing frustration and turnover), and enables staff to check and receive schedules remotely.
  • TimeForge Attendance, a full-featured time and attendance program, tracks when employees clock in / out, displays employee timecards, enforces the TimeForge Scheduling work schedule, and exports attendance for payroll calculations.
  • TimeForge Daily Log, a powerful communications tool, records daily activities in an organized and searchable manner – removing the need for expensive physical log books.

Each TimeForge product can be used separately, or the products can be combined together to create a powerful labor management tool.  Managing labor with any of the TimeForge products will result in an immediate Return On Investment, but combining the products together will increase your profits in both good and bad economic climates.

The latest release of TimeForge continues to improve on our simple concepts, and continues to make life easy for managers and employees alike.  Read more about our latest release here…

Are complicated employee scheduling practices taking up precious time at your restaurant?  Are you making the best possible restaurant schedule?  How much turnover is created because of bad (or late) schedules? Did you know that TimeForge can improve retention, reduce turnover, and increase profits at your restaurant? Sign up today for a free trial!

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Ignoring Labor Regulations Will Result in Heavy Fines

In many locales, labor laws for the service industry severely limit the number of hours that a non-exempt employee can work.  Hours worked can be limited by the industry, age, job description (position worked), hourly rate, holiday, length of shift, or even the day of the week.  If your business works with service unions, these rules can become even more complicated, requiring that managers spend time tracking breaks and meal periods and indicating whether or not employees wanted to take their break.  Some states and insurance companies perform regular Labor & Industries audits, imposing heavy fines or insurance premium increases for non-compliant businesses.

Example: A sandwich restaurant in California employs three sandwich specialists, all of which are scheduled to work less than 8 hours a day, six days of the upcoming work week.  On the first day of the schedule one of the employees fails to show up for work and is terminated by management.  The remaining two employees must work work the additional 28 hours at the business to cover the terminated employee.  Neither employee receives a day off during the work week.  Under California law, each of the employees must be paid 1.5x overtime for more than 8 hours of work in a given day, and 1.5x overtime for more than 40 hours per work week.  Additionally, the two sandwich specialists will receive 1.5x – 2.0x overtime on the 7th day of their work week, as neither employee will receive a break this week.  Failing to pay these increased wages is grounds for a lawsuit and an investigation by the state.  Insufficient staffing may cost this California business several thousand dollars – in a single week!

Careful managers schedule around these frequently changing and complicated rules, ensuring that their business is compliant with all applicable labor regulations.  However, businesses can inadvertently land themselves in hot-water when employees fail to show up, quit, or are terminated for otherwise legitimate reasons.  Inexperienced managers, overburdened by other areas of schedule creation can forget about these rules, which are not core to the “making money” aspect of their business.  Stiff fines and lawsuits are the result of failing to be in compliance.

In uncertain economic times managers must be able to schedule labor correctly in a consistent manner, keep employees happy, and reduce fines imposed by legislative authorities, such as the Department of Labor.  Businesses should seek to use cost-effective computer systems, such as TimeForge, to ensure that proper scheduling techniques are utilized.  Effective scheduling software will be able to schedule meal and break periods, accurately calculate overtime costs, and archive previous schedules for managerial review.

Example: The general manager at a car wash business needs to ensure that one manager is always on duty, as well as a number of attendants to apply soap to the vehicles before vehicles enter the automated car wash machinery.  Each attendant is required to receive a number of breaks during their shift, and this particular business prefers to hire employees who are minors to fill “holes” in the schedule.  During a normal work day, between five and seven employees are working.  By not carefully scheduling the break and meal periods and minor rules, the manager may end up with a shortage of staff as multiple employees take breaks (or leave for the day) at the same time and minor employees leave for home.  During the labor shortage, customers will not be serviced appropriately.  Alternatively, the manager may choose not to send employees homes or allow breaks to proceed – grounds for heavy fines, a lawsuit, and/or increased insurance premiums.

Labor & Industries (L&I) audits are common in some US states (California, Washington, Oregon, and New York are especially common) in restaurant, food-service, retail, construction, and hospitality-related industries.  These audits are performed by the state or by insurance companies to verify that the business has complied with all applicable regulations.  Audits focus on unpaid overtime, minors working too late or too early, break and meal periods that are not properly documented, and other violations.  Rule infractions can be punished with stiff fines and/or insurance premium increases.

Make sure that all employees are aware of the applicable rules for the city, county, and state / province.  Follow federal / national rules (where applicable), corporate rules, and insurance regulations (if applicable).  Where possible, automated scheduling systems should be utilized to enforce these rules reducing the administrative burden placed on managers – allowing management to work on other pressing issues such as training, customer service, and management tasks which cannot be automated by cost-effective technology solutions.

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Follow Up On Starbucks Labor Scheduling

We previously discussed the Wall Stree Journal article about Starbucks recent change in labor scheduling at most of their stores.  The change has been initiated by management to address issues of slower sales in the economy, save on labor costs, and to reduce turnover by providing more hours to (fewer) employees.

It seems that Starbucks baristas and others have written about the changes to the program on the Starbucks Gossip blog.  The first blog post / thread discusses the original WSJ article and its implications on the coffee shops and retail experience.  The second blog post / thread, discusses that a side effect of the new labor system is that baristas are allowed to make bad drinks – in order to save 5 seconds per drink.  That probably isn’t the desired side effect of an improved scheduling system.

Are complicated employee scheduling practices taking up precious time at your business? Are you making the best possible labor schedule? How much turnover is created because of bad, or late, schedules? Did you know that TimeForge can reduce turnover, improve retention and increase profits at your business? Sign up today for a free trial!

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Employees are Assets, Not Liabilities

In many businesses, employees are perceived as a required evil – payroll is a liability that is necessary to be in business.  Unfortunately, in many service oriented industries (such as retail, food-service, and hospitality industries), this attitude harms the business by increasing turnover, deflating morale, complicating legitimate hiring practices, and increasing employee training costs.  These problems are systemic in many organizations, creating dissension between salaried managers and non-salaried employees and increasing turnover.  Another, better, way to view employees is as assets to the business.

Training Costs Money Too

All new employees, even experienced hires, must be trained appropriately.  Employees should be trained in the corporate vision, customer service, and the details of their specific job.  Duties that each employee is responsible for performing will need to be demonstrated by a competent manager or trainer, and then must be repeated by the newly hired staff member.  Training entry-level workers can often take more than a week of management time, and properly training salaried managers may occupy several months.  In addition to the management time utilized training employees, new hires must be paid during their training.  Make sure that training is streamlined and hiring practices are refined to reduce the cost associated with hiring.  Consider Internet based tools to assist staff training, where appropriate.

Example: Assume that a new bank teller is hired on the first of the month, at an hourly rate of $10 per hour.  A senior bank teller, earning $12 per hour, trains the new hire for two weeks before the teller is allowed to work with customers independently.  The bank manager, a salaried manager earning $50,000 per year, interviewed twenty job applicants before hiring the new teller.  At the beginning of the third week, more than $2,240 as been invested in the newly hired teller!

Employees Become Lucrative Assets Over Time

Employees are expected to learn new skills while working, often referred to as “on-the-job training”.  Most work-related skills can be learned on-the-job, including new equipment skills, customer service skills, and business skills.  These new skills are passed to employees through interaction with managers and other employees at the business, and is the foundation of many promotions.  Hourly wage workers can grow into Assistant Managers.  Assistant Managers can climb the ladder to become General Managers.  General Managers become District Managers, or Vice Presidents.  Each employee becomes a trusted asset, and finding a replacement for an employee that leaves the business will always cost more than the direct salary of that employee.  In addition to training costs, there is an obvious and direct cost when employees are absent and customers are not adequately served.

Example: An assistant manager at a 5-unit hotel chain submits her two-week notice – her resignation.  She has been with the company for over 3 years, and started as a front desk associate.  Her initial training occupied more than 60 hours of manager time, and every year the business has wisely reinvested in food-safety training, vendor management training, customer service training and labor management training.  An additional 40 hours each year has been devoted to training this assistant manager.  Assuming that she makes $40,000 per year, more than $2,500 has been invested in direct training costs.  Additional costs will be incurred after she leaves, another manager will need to cover her shifts until a replacement manager is located and trained as her replacement.

Keep Assets (Employees) in Mind While Scheduling Work

When scheduling employees, managers should remember that employees are assets necessary to help the business grow and profit.  Employees that excel at certain job duties should be scheduled where their talents can improve business profitability.  Employee requests for time off, changes to the work schedule, and holidays should be honored where possible – and the business should establish rules and regulations to facilitate constant communication between employees and managers.

Example: Two managers are directly responsible for the schedule at a nightclub, a bar manager (assistant manager) and a general manager.  Employees are easily confused regarding which manager needs to approve time off.  Joe, a bartender, is given time off for July 4th to attend an expensive concert with his girlfriend.  However, the general manager also approved time off for another bartender, leaving the bar short staffed for the July 4th shift.  Joe’s dedication to the business and frustration level over this management snafu will determine whether or not Joe shows up for work on July 4th.  This situation was entirely preventable with better communication among staff members and management.

Turnover Is Expensive — Really, Really Expensive

Turnover is not cheap.  Indeed most managers under-estimate its cost and the learning curve of working in a new restaurant.  Approximately 70% of the cost of turnover is the loss of productivity before an employee leaves, as the employee’s attitude toward the business becomes detached and fewer customers are served.  Turnover in most hospitality-related industries (restaurants, bars, clubs, hotels) averages around 100% annually – meaning that a store with 30 employees has hired 30 employees in the last twelve months!  Using a cost of $2,000 per staff member, that is an annual turnover expense of more than $60,000!  Reducing turnover should b e a primary concern for any business.

Example: To recoup the loss of one crew member, a quick service restaurant (fast food) must sell 7.613 childrens combo meals at $2.50 each.  A clothing store must sell 3,000 pairs of khakis at $35 to recoup the loss of a single sales clerk.  The loss of a more skilled employee can cost much more.  If the business employees 30 employees, and maintains an annual turnover of 100%, the business would need to sell more than 228,000 childrens combo meals, or 90,000 khakis to pay for the turnover costs. Some more information about turnover can be found here.

Internet-based scheduling tools, such as TimeForge, can assist managers when building and maintaining labor schedules.  These tools can allocate labor appropriately for your business, track employee availability and time off, meal and break periods, and alert employees when their scheduling needs are, or are not, met.  Your business will not always be able to cater to your employee’s needs, but constant communication between salaried managers and hourly-wage employees will reduce turnover at your business and preserve the value of your employee assets.  Payroll may be a liability, but employees are business assets.

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Starbucks Employee Scheduling

According to the Wall Street Journal, the largest coffee retailer, Starbucks, is changing its scheduling system to have fewer employees work longer hours at its various locations.  The goal of the new scheduling program is to reduce labor costs for the chain, while improving sales through customer familiarization with the on duty staff members.

Will the plan work?  It’s very possible.  With smart and accurate labor scheduling, Starbucks should be able to reduce turnover and keep employees happy while lowering their labor costs.  However, if Starbucks begins over scheduling employees, the plan may actually backfire on them — creating higher levels of turnover, decreased profits, and lowering sales.

Are complicated employee scheduling practices taking up precious time at your business? Are you making the best possible labor schedule? How much turnover is created because of bad, or late, schedules? Did you know that TimeForge can reduce turnover, improve retention and increase profits at your business? Sign up today for a free trial!

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Management Time is Money, Schedule it Wisely

Managers are More Expensive than Non-Salaried Staff

In many industries including retail, hospitality, food-service, hotels, and manufacturing, salaried management staff are usually several times more expensive than non-salaried staff at the same business. In many cases, one member of the salaried staff can be more expensive than five or six non-salaried staff members. In addition to their hourly-wage, managers are eligible for benefits such as life insurance, health insurance, expensive overtime, or additional perks like free food or discounted merchandise rates.

Example: Restaurant servers (waiters) in the state of Texas commonly receive less than three dollars per hour in compensation from the business (the rest of the minimum wage must be received in tips from customers during the shift). However, a manager at the same store may receive more than twenty or thirty dollars per hour, implying that the manager is “worth” between 400% and 1000% more than a single server.

Schedule Managers to do Management Tasks

Businesses should ensure salaried managers perform managerial tasks while on duty, and leverage non-salaried employees for work-related duties that do not require a manager. Some tasks that managers may be charged with during a regular work day could include performing quality control, placing vendor orders, building employee schedules, training employees, processing payroll, and working with customers. Whatever management does while at work, make sure that it is something that is representative of their cost to the business.

Managers should be able to jump in and work when other non-management staff members do not show up for work or unanticipated spikes in demand require more line workers. This ability implies that the business does a good job of cross training employees, and the business is not overly reliant on any one staff member. However, if it is common practice for managers to mop the floors or clean bathrooms because other staff members do not show up, than a re-evaluation of hiring and staffing practices is recommended.

Managers are routinely asked to create efficient schedules for their business on a weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly basis. Accurately scheduling the work force several weeks in advance provides employees with a defined work schedule and allows managers to estimate upcoming expenses (payroll is often the largest expense in retail, restaurant, hospitality, and similar industries). During the process of preparing an accurate schedule, managers will check employee availability, review request logs, consider federal/state/local and corporate regulations, update employee work preferences, revise employee capabilities and training, make overtime considerations, ensure minimum work hours all while maintaining budgets and other business requirements. The entire schedule process commonly occupies a manager for 10% of every week, costing the business at least several hundred dollars each week!

Example: A restaurant that employs forty non-management staff may have two assistant managers (a front-of-house manager and a back-of-house or kitchen manager), and a general manager. Non-management staff may make between $3 and $12 per hour, while managers may be salaried between $40,000 and $60,000. One manager spending 3 hours per week on the schedule will cost the business more than $4,000 per year! Now imagine that same store is a concept with one-hundred locations – that’s almost half-a-million dollars in wasted manager time building theoretical labor schedules annually!

Changing the Employee Schedule Uses Manager Time, Which is Expensive

In addition to creating the schedule, managers often change the schedule on a daily basis. Employees may become available (and want more shifts), suddenly be unavailable (illness or termination) and not able to work, or forget when they need to be at work. Shift swapping is also common in many industries and requires a manager to spend time on each trade – employees give up shifts that were assigned to them originally, or pick up shifts that others cannot work. A shift or request log may be used for employee initiated shift trades. Managers cannot monitor theft, interact with customers, train employees, or perform quality control at the business if they are in the back-office working on a labor schedule.

Example: A car dealership has three managers, each making an average of $70,000 per year. Additionally, the car dealership has more than one-hundred (100) non-management staff, including sales personnel and mechanics. On average six employees (6% of the non-management staff) call in to check their schedule or swap shifts on a daily basis, using a total of 30 minutes per day (5 minutes per call). The dealership is open 300 days per year, costing the dealership more than $3,000 per year in schedule change costs. It may take another 6 hours per week to schedule the staff – more than $10,500 per year in direct scheduling costs!

To ensure that management staff time is spent appropriately, use technology tools to perform tasks that can be done by computers. Software tools such as TimeForge improve staff retention, and decrease the amount of time that scheduling labor consumes. TimeForge includes a number of additional tools that will assist managers in time management, including a daily manager log book, payroll processing, and other similar tools.

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