200 likes | 361 Vues
Cambridge Brewing Company. Lindsey Childers Saipriya Sen Kohli Juliana Salgueiro Meredith Sciarrio. Agenda. Restaurant Background Overview of Current Scenario Objectives and Recommendations Reduce TAT during peak hours Define and track KPIs and best practices related to food cost.
E N D
Cambridge Brewing Company Lindsey Childers SaipriyaSenKohli Juliana Salgueiro Meredith Sciarrio
Agenda • Restaurant Background • Overview of Current Scenario • Objectives and Recommendations • Reduce TAT during peak hours • Define and track KPIs and best practices related to food cost
Background on Restaurant • Opened in 1989 and located in Cambridge, MA • Open for lunch weekdays, dinner nightly, and brunch on Saturdays and Sundays • Peak shifts: Thursday-Saturday evenings • Capacity: 120 seats in restaurant with 80 seasonal patio seats open only May-August • Brewmaster, General Manager, and Executive Chef manage day-to-day operations • In 2010: $2,869,634 in sales and $498,857 in net income
Overview of Current Scenario • TAT is currently high during peak hours • Difficulty handling high volume • Long waits during peak hours • Currently don’t track food-related KPIs • No measure of how they are performing or impacting profits • Food cost increasing at a higher rate than revenue growth
Objectives • Reduce TAT at peak time by 8 minutes through changes in staffing and work flow process • Define and track KPIs and best practices related to food costs
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours CBC peak hours: Peak time: Thursday, Friday and Saturday Night Peak hours: 6-9pm (3 hours) Peak time revenue (total)= $17,411 Peak hours revenue 80% x Total peak time revenue (80% is approximate amount) = $ 13,929 Peak hours revenue as percentage of weekly revenue = 26%
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours Actual scenario: TAT from the time a customer orders to the time the food arrives is: Non peak times: 720 seconds 180 seconds 120 seconds 120 seconds 60 seconds Total time: 1,200 sec. – 20 minutes Peak times: 120 seconds 720 seconds 290 seconds 290 seconds 370 seconds Bottleneck with staff Bottleneck with staff Bottleneck in kitchen Total time: 1,790 sec. – 30 minutes
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours • Recommendation: Increase the capacity of the grill • Burgers represent 28% of food sales • Current capacity: 12 burgers at the same time • Current cycle time: 1 minute • Increase by half the size of grill will allow CBC to produce double the amount of burgers • Gain: reduce start of cooking process by 30 seconds 720 seconds 370 seconds 290 seconds 290 seconds 120 seconds 260 seconds
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours • Recommendation: Rearrange the kitchen layout Gain: reduce the time to start cooking from counter time by 15 seconds 120 seconds 720 seconds 370 seconds 290 seconds 290 seconds 245 seconds 260 seconds
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours • Recommendation: Include one more employee in the kitchen staff • The grill is used for burgers and also for 6 more dishes • Only one person is responsible for the grill production and burger assembly, creates bottleneck and increases prep time • By having one employee to control the grill and another employee to assemble, they could reduce the production time • Cost: $210/week • Gain: Reduce the assembly process time by 90 seconds 720 seconds 370 seconds 290 seconds 290 seconds 120 seconds 30 seconds 260 seconds 245 seconds
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours • Recommendation: Reallocate the front of house staff • When we analyzed the ratio of server per customers, we identified an discrepancy between non-peak and peak hours • We defined an optimal ratio (total customers/total shifts) and found that the optimal number of customers per server would be 49. Then, we suggested a new schedule:
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours • Recommendation: Reallocate the front of house staff • Gain: reduce time to enter the order in the system to the non-peak time • reduce time of taking the dish in the kitchen and serving to the customers to the non-peak time Peak times: 720 seconds 370 seconds 290 seconds 120 seconds 290 seconds 120 seconds Proposal process: 245 seconds 180 seconds 720 seconds 180 seconds 245 seconds 120 seconds 30 seconds 30 seconds 260 seconds FROM: 1,790 seconds to 1,295 seconds => Reduction of 495 seconds
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours • Total gain projection FROM: 1,790 seconds to 1,295 seconds => Reduction of 495 seconds or 8 minutes
Objective 1: Reduce TAT During Peak Hours • Total gain projection: Per peak hour • Total gain projection: 1 month • Total cost projection: 1 month • Additional Gains • Higher customer satisfaction = lifetime value • Shorter lines to be seated during peak hours • Increase in server efficiency and attentiveness • Higher employee satisfaction
What is Food Cost? Objective 2: Define Food Cost KPIs and Best Practices • Industry standard metric that tracks inventory carry costs and profitability • Industry standards for successful operations range from 28% to 35% = % Total food and non-alcoholic beverage sales Total food and non-alcoholic beverage cost
Objective 2: Define Food Cost KPIs and Best Practices Current Food Cost Control Practices at CBC • Quarterly Inventory – performed by chef, not reviewed by owner, and not used as a food cost tracker • Menu Changes – 4 to 6 times a year, mostly for seasonality • Receiving – all vendors are required to take product to storage area where quality and accuracy checks are performed • Chef performs all food prep with the exception of weekends – prep cook is employed to deal with peak times
Suggested KPIs for Tracking Food Cost Objective 2: Define Food Cost KPIs and Best Practices
Suggested Best Practices Objective 2: Define Food Cost KPIs and Best Practices
Objective 2: Define Food Cost KPIs and Best Practices Possible Schedule for Implementation Responsibility of Head Chef:
Questions? Thank you!