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3 Tips for Choosing Great Restaurant Furniture for a Small Venue

Designing a small restaurant or pub can require creative thinking to make the most of a limited space; knowing how to select the right furniture and layout is essential.

Small restaurants can have very big advantages for entrepreneurs, but can also present them with very difficult design challenges. A smaller venue brings with it lower costs and less overhead. The price of rent, as well as utilities such as heating and cooling, can be significantly lower. A much smaller wait staff and kitchen staff is also an advantage of a small restaurant or pub, and initial design costs will often be significantly lower in a smaller space.

Choosing the right layout and restaurant furniture for a small venue is essential to a customer’s impression of the establishment. A small venue done right can come across as cozy, intimate and comfortable, whereas a badly designed small venue will seem cluttered, crowded and unpleasant. The following are three tips on how to choose the right furniture and layout to make a restaurant or pub a big hit in a small package.

1) Utilize bar and counter seating

Bar and counter seating is a great way to get a lot of people seated at your establishment, while still offering wait staff and customers ample space to move around. A bar placed on one side of the room adjacent to the kitchen with seating on high bar stools is great not only for spacing – it also can establish a venue as a place to congregate in the neighborhood. Customers who might normally just be ordering food and soft drinks are much more likely to order alcohol while eating at the bar, which will definitely boost profits.

Counter seating along the restaurant’s front windows is also a great way to save some space, and offer diners who value their privacy an appropriate seating option. Seating with a street view is pleasant for diners in your restaurant and can serve to pull foot traffic in from outside. (more…)

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Why do Restaurants fail? Unnoticed money pits

money pits to aviodFor restaurant owners looking to avoid falling victim to money pits, here are 5 things to look out for.

Not every restaurant can be on the 50th floor of the Hilton Hotel, or on the beach in Malibu, or employ a world-renowned, five-star French chef. The majority of restaurants are fighting for their survival in decent, but not great locations, on a limited budget, without a large margin for error.

So, while the old adage “location, location, location” sounds nice and simple, good and efficient management of your restaurant will probably be more likely in determining its success or failure – just like in any business.

Good management means taking advantage of the resources you have, and above all, not being wasteful. In this way, better managing your restaurant, and being kinder to the environment, can often go hand-in-hand. A badly managed restaurant will fall victim to unnoticed and unnecessary money pits that take resources away from investing in and growing the business. What money pits, you ask? The following are five of the major ones:

1) An inefficient menu

Finding the right portion size for menu items can be a tricky proposition. Customers expect to get their money’s worth out of a meal and cannot be made to feel that you are skimping on portion size. On the other hand, if portions are too big, you will end up throwing away a lot of food, which is obviously very wasteful. Much of what determines a customer’s satisfaction with his meal is psychological, and not a matter of him being physically “full.” Monitor your customers, and have your staff take note of what dishes are resulting in a lot of food being thrown away. In addition, smaller plates can make portions appear bigger, as can plates whose color contrasts sharply with the food being served on it. These psychological factors can actually affect the level of a patron’s satisfaction with portion size. If you can reduce portion size without disappointing customers, you can reduce waste, and thusly reduce costs.

2) A wasteful kitchen

Ordering the right amount of produce and meat, and using it in a timely fashion before it spoils and has to be thrown away is essential. This may entail offering spontaneous daily specials at low prices featuring dishes that can be made from items that you have to use before they spoil. You should also strive to use every part of your produce and meat products in cooking menu items. This often involves a new level of creativity. Vegetable peelings, bones and fish heads are examples of often unused kitchen products that can be employed to make stocks or sauces. You can also freeze certain items, such as vegetable parts and herbs that you would normally throw away. Being efficient in cooking means using everything possible and throwing away as little as possible.

3) Cheap furniture and dinnerware that does not last

Restaurant owners are so concerned with food and staff that they often forget the importance of design. Restaurant furniture and dinnerware are both parts of the visual landscape that you create for your customers. Matters of taste aside, cheaply made furniture and dinnerware will end up being a money pit, costing you more in the long-term than a good investment in quality furniture will. Furniture that serves you well for home use will not stand up to the beating it will take in a restaurant. Make sure to buy furniture that is made by a vendor who specializes in making furniture for commercial use. The same goes for dinnerware. These items may cost you more initially, but they will last 10 times longer than shoddily-made products that will have to be replaced every year, continually sucking money out of your business. (more…)

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3 Tips for Maximizing the Space of a Small Venue

Designing a small restaurant or pub can require creative thinking to make the most of a limited space; knowing how to select the right furniture and layout is essential.

Small restaurants can have very big advantages for entrepreneurs, but can also present them with very difficult design challenges. A smaller venue brings with it lower costs and less overhead. The price of rent, as well as utilities such as heating and cooling, can be significantly lower. A much smaller wait staff and kitchen staff is also an advantage of a small restaurant or pub, and initial design costs will often be significantly lower in a smaller space.

Choosing the right layout and restaurant furniture for a small venue is essential to a customer’s impression of the establishment. A small venue done right can come across as cozy, intimate and comfortable, whereas a badly designed small venue will seem cluttered, crowded and unpleasant. The following are three tips on how to choose the right furniture and layout to make a restaurant or pub a big hit in a small package.

1) Utilize bar and counter seating

Bar and counter seating is a great way to get a lot of people seated at your establishment, while still offering wait staff and customers ample space to move around. A bar placed on one side of the room adjacent to the kitchen with high bar stools is great not only for spacing – it also can establish a venue as a place to congregate in the neighborhood. Customers who might normally just be ordering food and soft drinks are much more likely to order alcohol while eating at the bar, which will definitely boost profits.

Counter seating along the restaurant’s front windows is also a great way to save some space, and offer diners who value their privacy an appropriate seating option. Seating with a street view is pleasant for diners in your restaurant and can serve to pull foot traffic in from outside.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2) Install banquet seating

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Restaurant Furniture Safety Tips

Many restaurant owners overlook the topic of restaurant safety when it comes to providing a safe customer experience to all those who choose to eat or drink at their establishment. As a business owner you will want to avoid any possible liabilities involving your customers or employees. When it comes to the safety of your restaurant, it should be taken just as seriously as sanitary food practices.

 

Imagine a bar stool that has an uneven leg which will make it unstable. When a customer sits down on the stool they will likely not be expecting it and may possibly fall and injure themselves within the first couple minutes of being in your bar or restaurant. A loose seat on a bar stool can have the same effect. A customer will certainly not enjoy falling off one of your stools and will be even less thrilled with you if they manage to get injured in the process. Tall tables with a pedestal leg can also suffer from a similar problem if one of their legs is missing the tip that it rests on. A person putting a little bit of weight on the table by doing something as simple as leaning on it can result in the whole table flipping and spilling the food and drinks all over the customers and the floor.

 

Another restaurant furniture that you want to keep an eye on are the chairs. The legs of every chair should be checked on a regular basis to make sure that they are not loose or tip when sat in. Failure to check your chairs’ legs and backs can result in a customer falling off the chair and potentially suffering a back injury. Be sure to tighten any screws that connect the base of the seat to the seat backs to try to avoid this as much as possible.

 

Not only do you have to worry about restaurant furniture having legs that are uneven and loose screws, you also need to be sure that the material the chair is made out of doesn’t start to splinter. Wood chairs will of course be the most common material of chair to have this problem, however plastic chairs can degrade and get splinters as well, which will tend to just pinch your customers when they sit in them. Remember that a customer running into problems with your restaurant furniture will just be a reason that may cause them to go somewhere else next time.

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Restaurant Management And Design Tips

Managing a restaurant is a daunting task, especially if you do not have a strong background in the restaurant business. While the task may look daunting, you can still successfully manage a restaurant. There are several major aspects of managing a restaurant that should never be neglected; these include handling traffic generation, marketing, promotions, revenues and cost.

Traffic Generation, Marketing and Promotions

It is important to understand how you are going to get the attention of the surrounding masses. In today’s technology driven world, it makes sense that you would harness the power of a website and social media. If you have taken enough time to build a nice venue, you should take a little bit of time to build up a web presence to match. A website should work in tandem with your physical location.
Secondly, your social presence is another part of your marketing that you should not leave out. You need aat least a Facebook page and if you have time and know how then also spend some time creating a  Twitter page and a Google+ page or  any other major social media page you can find. You want to be available on the web anytime someone searches for your restaurant or for a place to go out to.
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Restaurant Design 101

Did you know that 60% of restaurants fail within their first three years of opening? This number is much smaller than the common 1-in-10 myth, but new restaurants still have only a 40% chance of making it in today’s market. The percentage can be daunting, but it doesn’t have to discourage you. Opening a restaurant, like any other business venture, is all about using your skills and your intelligence to give the best product and service that you possibly can. If you use all the advantages you have in your arsenal, you will increase the odds of your restaurant not becoming just another statistic.

When diners come to a restaurant they want to feel as if they are not only being fed, but entertained as well. They want a dining experience that will entertain and stay fresh and memorable in their mind for a long time to come. Smart and knowledgeable restaurant owners know that restaurant design plays a big part in entertaining their customers.

Besides the quality of food and service, restaurant design can be a major factor in the success or failure of your restaurant. A well planned restaurant layout and design begin with market research, understanding trends, and ends in a well executed design based on those factors. Diners want to have an experience like no other and as the restaurant owner; it is your job to provide that experience.

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