Management & Operations

Thinking about Starting a Food Related Business? Read This.

So you want to start a food-related business? Congratulations and best of luck! But before you dive in, wallet first, let us share some advice.

Funding

Once you’ve figured out your idea, the next step is funding. One of the biggest mistakes, first time operators of restaurants or other hospitality retail businesses make is underestimating the financial capital required to both open your business and to keep it running for at least the first year.

Begin by developing a generous capital budget (money set aside to acquire and maintain fixed resources, like land and equipment) and a conservative cash-flow model (this model should map out how and where you’ll be spending your money during opening and throughout the first year). Better to overestimate costs now, rather than having to go back to your investors and sheepishly ask for more.

Be Prepared for the Worst

It’s almost guaranteed that when opening your business things won’t go according to plan. Another restaurant with a similar concept could open the same week as you or a water mainline could break. Even if something heinous doesn’t happen and your opening day goes well, that honeymoon period with your customers will almost certainly end sooner than you think it should. Be prepared for contingencies and catastrophes by having a backup plan and plenty of capital at your disposal.

The Day to Day

Understanding what drives the cost of business is one of the most important elements of maintaining a profitable venture. No matter what your concept is, you are still dealing with a retail operation, and are subject to the same metrics as other businesses. Understanding your daily customer count, average check, product costs, and ratio of dining-in to takeout make up the majority of your profit numbers. We cannot stress the importance of keeping a close eye on purchases and inventory compared to what you are selling. This will help you most accurately manage labor hours and dollars.

When to Open Your Business

Once you’ve got your idea, your capital, and your contingency plans, now it’s time to set an opening date. This can be trickier than you’d think. The holidays are a busy time, opening before they start can help get your business off the ground quickly. However, one month later it’s January and most of your customers are trying to retrench after too much wild spending. People are caught allotting their excess money to gym memberships and juice detoxes after New Years.

If you live in a rather touristy area, opening during peak season is not a great plan. A fledgling business might not be ready for the kind of business they’ll get. Based on these warnings and your business’s geography, plan to open somewhere in the middle. A few months before things get busy this gives your business time to work out the inevitable kinks involved. Patience allows you to be ready for when things pick up.

Know Your Weaknesses

It’s important to know the in’s-and-out’s of your business. It is equally important to be able to accurately asses yourself, your weaknesses and your strengths. The best-run restaurants and retail establishments tend to be the result of a partnership between someone creative, and someone business-oriented. Not everyone can do both successfully and they shouldn’t try. Incorporate someone into your business that has complementary strengths.

Finally, remember passion goes a long way. With all these tips and warnings in mind, a solid team of employees, and perhaps a partner to help you along the way. You’ll be able to safely and successfully open your own hospitality-based business and soon be rewarded with its profits.

Hannah Abaffy

Hannah Abaffy is a pastry chef and an active member of the culinary community. From working in kitchens to developing recipes, and creating menus for restaurants, she has been involved with food in one capacity or another for the past decade. After starting a food history blog, Hannah has been continuously writing and learning about the ever-changing realm of cuisine, its history, and its future. Since then her appetite to learn about and share all things that touch upon the world of food can only be described as voracious.

Share
Published by
Hannah Abaffy

Recent Posts

Offering Take-Out and Delivery in the Time of Coronavirus (COVID-19)

All over the United States, restaurants are closing their doors. It is a difficult decision…

April 29, 2021

COVID-19 Social Distancing Guide: How To Buy and Sanitize Your Groceries

2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) cases have climbed up over 600,000 in the United States. It…

April 16, 2020

Restaurants Open for Delivery or Takeout During COVID-19

COVID-19 is a scary time for all of us. With many cities and states issuing…

March 27, 2020

Offering Take-Out and Delivery in the Time of Coronavirus (COVID-19)

All over the United States, restaurants are closing their doors. It is a difficult decision…

March 24, 2020

Everything You Need to Know About the 2019 Novel Coronavirus.

To start 2020, one of the biggest stories in the world is the new strain…

February 24, 2020

The Art of Beer Tasting.

There’re over 900 flavors that have been identified in the sweeping array of beers that…

February 13, 2020