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7 Mistakes That Are Killing Your Restaurant's Profitability

7 Mistakes That Are Killing Your Restaurant's Profitability
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Your restaurant is packed at weekends. Your customers are happy. Your Google reviews are solid. And yet, at the end of the month, there's barely anything left in the account. You're working 70 hours a week for what amounts to little more than minimum wage. Something doesn't add up.

The problem isn't a lack of customers. It's your profitability. And in 80% of cases, it's killed by 5 classic mistakes that nearly every restaurateur makes without even realising it.

The good news: these mistakes are easy to spot and fix. Here's how.

Mistake 1: You don't know your real food cost

The symptom

You set your prices "by feel" or by looking at what the competition charges. You know your steak costs roughly £3–4, but you don't know exactly how much the complete dish costs (sides, sauce, garnishes, etc.).

Why it matters

If you don't know your real costs, you don't know:

  • Which dishes are profitable and which ones are losing you money
  • Whether your selling prices actually make sense
  • Where to negotiate with your suppliers

Real-world example: A restaurateur thought his burger was highly profitable (sold at £12, "costs about £4–5 in ingredients"). When he calculated properly, the real cost was £5.80. Ratio: 48.5% (instead of the target 30–35%). That dish, despite being a bestseller, was destroying his margins.

The fix

Calculate the exact food cost of your 10 best-selling dishes.

Method: 1. List every ingredient (including oil, salt, herbs) 2. Note the purchase price and pack size 3. Calculate the unit price (price / weight or volume) 4. Multiply by the quantity used in the dish 5. Add it all up

Food cost ratio formula: > Ratio = (Food cost of the dish / Selling price excl. tax) × 100

Target: 25–35% maximum.

Take action now:

  • Food cost > 40% → Raise the price OR reduce the portion OR swap an ingredient
  • Food cost < 25% → You can increase portions (better customer experience) or lower the price slightly (competitive advantage)

Tip: Do this in a simple Excel spreadsheet. 2 hours of work for a massive impact on your margins.

Mistake 2: You're not managing waste

The symptom

You're throwing out expired products every week. You serve "generous" portions without measuring. You see plates coming back half full.

Why it matters

Waste is money going straight in the bin.

Key figures:

  • On average, a restaurant throws away 10–15% of the food it buys
  • That's 3–5% of your turnover going in the bin
  • For a restaurant doing £25,000/month in revenue, that's £750 to £1,250 in losses every month

The fix

1. Measure your portions

Use a scale to weigh your portions for 1 week:

  • How many grams of chips are you serving per plate? (should be 200–250g, often it's 350g)
  • How much sauce? (should be 30–40ml, often it's 60ml)
  • How much meat? (you're selling 150g, you might be serving 180g)

Every gram counts: 30g of extra chips × 100 dishes/week = 3kg of wasted chips = £5–6 lost. Over the year: £250–300. And that's just for chips.

2. Standardise your recipes

Create spec sheets for every dish:

  • Exact ingredients with quantities
  • Preparation instructions
  • Plating reference (photo)

Result: same portion, same quality, same cost, regardless of who's on the pass.

3. Manage your stock using FIFO (First In, First Out)

The oldest products must be used first. Reorganise your walk-in and shelves so that new stock always goes to the back.

4. Track what you throw away

Create a "Waste log" where you record every day what gets binned and why:

  • Expired product: which item, how much, why (over-ordering?)
  • Failed prep: which dish, why (cooking error, cancelled order?)
  • Customer return: which dish, why (portion too large, unhappy customer?)

After 2 weeks, you'll spot patterns:

  • You're ordering too much of product X
  • Dish Y has a high return rate (quality or portion issue)
  • You're losing a lot on Sunday evenings (adjust your orders)

5. Repurpose your surplus

Slightly tired vegetables → soup of the day, purée, sauce Yesterday's bread → croutons, French toast, breadcrumbs Cheese nearing its use-by date → cheese board at a reduced price during happy hour

Expected result: Cutting waste from 15% to 5% = a gain of 2–3% of your turnover. For £25,000/month in revenue, that's £500–750 saved per month, or £6,000–9,000 per year.

Mistake 3: You're not making the most of your quiet periods

The symptom

Your restaurant is packed on Friday and Saturday evenings, empty on Tuesday and Wednesday lunchtimes. You're paying rent, electricity, staff… even when the dining room is at 20% capacity.

Why it matters

Your fixed costs don't change whether you serve 20 or 80 customers.

Rent, electricity, base staff wages: these costs run even when the dining room is empty. Every extra customer during quiet periods is almost pure profit (you only have the food cost + a little variable labour).

Example:

  • Daily fixed costs: £700 (rent, staff, energy, etc.)
  • Variable cost per customer: £13 (food + variable labour)
  • Average spend per customer: £22
  • Margin per customer: £9

If you get 30 customers on a Tuesday lunchtime instead of 15, you earn £135 more for the same fixed costs.

The fix

1. Create a specific off-peak offer

Bad idea: Slash prices across your entire menu ✅ Good idea: Create a special "lunch" or "Tuesday–Thursday" menu

Examples:

  • Lunch deal: Starter + main OR Main + dessert for £10–13
  • "Happy hour food": Tapas at 30% off between 6pm and 7:30pm
  • Set menu of the day: 1 starter, 1 main, 1 dessert for £12 (Tuesday–Thursday only)

Important: This offer must be profitable (food cost 30–35% max), even if the margin is smaller than during peak hours. The goal is to fill seats and cover your fixed costs.

2. Target the right customers

Quiet periods = different clientele:

  • Weekday lunch: office workers in a rush, retirees, students → fast, good value for money
  • Tuesday–Wednesday evening: locals who want a night out without breaking the bank → relaxed atmosphere, affordable prices

Adapt your marketing:

  • Post your lunch menu on Google Business Profile and social media
  • Drop flyers at nearby offices and businesses
  • Partner with local schools, universities, and workplaces

3. Use digital tools to fill the gaps

Create a "last-minute booking" system:

  • Email or text your mailing list: "Free tonight? We've still got 10 tables and your first drink is on us"
  • Instagram Story: "A few spots left for lunch today — set menu at £11"

This works particularly well if you have a solid base of regular customers.

Expected result: Increasing your off-peak occupancy from 20% to 50% = a gain of several thousand pounds per month with no additional fixed costs.

Mistake 4: You have too much staff turnover

The symptom

You're training a new waiter or chef every 2–3 months. Your employees leave after 6 months. You spend your time recruiting and training.

Why it matters

Staff turnover is extremely expensive, even if you don't see it directly.

Cost of losing one employee:

  • Recruitment time: 10–15 hours (adverts, interviews, selection)
  • Training time: 20–40 hours (depending on the role)
  • Lost productivity: 2–4 weeks (the new hire is less efficient)
  • Mistakes and waste: hard to quantify, but very real

Total estimate: Replacing one employee costs £1,200 to £2,500 (time + lost productivity + mistakes).

If you replace 4 employees a year, that's £5,000 to £10,000 in hidden costs.

The fix

1. Pay fairly

You can't pay minimum wage and expect to keep your best people. If a good waiter or chef is worth £50–100 more per month, pay it. You'll save far more by avoiding turnover.

2. Create a good working environment

  • Treat your team with respect (it sounds obvious, but many restaurateurs shout at their staff)
  • Quality staff meals (not just leftovers)
  • Predictable schedules (share the rota at least 2 weeks in advance)
  • Consecutive days off whenever possible

3. Offer career progression

An employee who sees no future will leave. Even in a small restaurant:

  • Commis → Chef de partie → Sous-chef
  • Waiter → Senior waiter → Floor manager

You don't need formal promotions. Just show that there's a path forward — more responsibility, more recognition.

4. Train properly

A well-trained employee is more efficient, makes fewer mistakes, and feels valued. Invest one full week in proper training rather than throwing them in at the deep end.

5. Bonuses and profit-sharing

Simple example:

  • If monthly revenue exceeds the target by X%, the team gets a shared bonus
  • If waste is reduced, a portion of the savings is redistributed

Your staff then become active drivers of profitability, not just order-takers.

Expected result: Cutting turnover by 50% = savings of £2,500 to £5,000 per year + better quality of service + less stress for you.

Mistake 5: You're not tracking your numbers

The symptom

You check your bank account at the end of the month and get a surprise (good or bad). You don't know exactly how much you're making per service. You only find out your real costs when your accountant sends the annual accounts.

Why it matters

You can't manage what you don't measure.

Without accurate figures, you're flying blind. You're making decisions based on gut feeling, not facts.

The fix

Create a simple dashboard with 5 key metrics:

1. Daily revenue

  • How much did you take today?
  • Compare with the same day last week / last month

2. Average spend per customer

  • Daily revenue / number of covers
  • Goal: increase it gradually (through upselling, set menus, etc.)

3. Food cost %

  • (Total food purchases for the month / Monthly revenue) × 100
  • Target: 28–35%

4. Labour cost %

  • (Total wages + employer contributions for the month / Monthly revenue) × 100
  • Target: 30–35%

5. Gross profit

  • Revenue - (food costs + labour costs + other variable costs)
  • This is what's left to cover rent, fixed costs, and your own pay

Tool: A simple Excel file with these 5 columns is all you need. 10 minutes a day to fill in.

Weekly review: Every Sunday evening or Monday morning, look at your numbers for the week and ask yourself:

  • Is revenue up or down? Why?
  • Has food cost increased? (If so, check supplier prices or waste levels)
  • Is labour cost in line with revenue? (If you've taken less but paid the same number of staff, you need to adjust)

Expected result: Understanding where your money goes = making informed decisions = a 5–10% improvement in your net profitability (potentially several thousand pounds per year).

Your action plan for this week

You can't fix everything at once. Here's a step-by-step plan:

This week:

  • [ ] Calculate the food cost of your 3 best-selling dishes
  • [ ] For 3 days, write down everything you throw away

This month:

  • [ ] Create a special offer for your quiet periods
  • [ ] Set up your dashboard with the 5 key metrics

This quarter:

  • [ ] Analyse your staff turnover and find out why people are leaving
  • [ ] Standardise your recipes (at least 10 main dishes)

Every mistake you fix = an immediate boost to your profitability. You don't need to increase your revenue to earn more. You just need to manage what you already have more effectively.

And that is entirely within your control.

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Sophie - Rédaction ALaCarte
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FoodTech & Innovation Restauration

L'équipe éditoriale d'ALaCarte.Direct, spécialiste de la digitalisation des restaurants et de l'innovation FoodTech.

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