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Untitled Document
Menu Engineering Part 2 of 2
By Joe Ritorto | MenuCorp
As suggested in my previous menu article, if
you calculate, cost and record the sales of
each dish, then you can design your menu
to be as profitable as possible. Use suggestions
(recommendations), positioning, positive descriptions
and perhaps illustrations to guide your customers to
certain selections. Allow your clients choose dishes
from the menu that are, in an ideal world, nourishing,
tasteful and value for money – as well as produce a
healthy and nourishing bottom line for you.
In this article I hope to show you some basic
design techniques that may assist to direct attention
to certain dishes that you have calculated to be
profitable ones. In the previous edition (April 2008) of
this series of articles on menus, we discussed how to
determine which dishes are profitable ones. We spoke
of obtaining an up to date food costing for each dish
based on a percentage of the selling price as well as
the actual dollar value. Armed with this information
we can begin to sell more of the profitable dishes
(Stars) and less of the unprofitable ones (Dogs). To do
this we need to become an Expert!
Today we live in a society of experts, in various
fields; consultants, specialists etc. who all affect
various facets of our lives. These people may range
from a personal trainer to a specialist teacher to a
specialist medical practitioner. The point here is that
we all have learned, or have been conditioned to
allow others, to make decisions for us. We accept
that there are people that know more than us in
certain facets or areas of our lives.
Why don't you become the expert in your
chosen field of expertise? Develop a reputation
to be, in the eyes of your customers, consciously
or subconsciously, the expert. If customers feel
confident that there in the right place then their
more likely to be receptive to your suggestions,
and, your advice. Evidence of this may be when a
regular comes in and says, "What's good on the menu
today?" This is a genuine recognition of your opinion
and the way you do things. The art, however, is to
make as many customers align themselves with the
same positive expressions of interest.
Being an expert is easy for me to say. Right!
Unless you have an enviable position that allows
you to replace one customer with another, we must
make the customer feel that their in good hands
and we must be able to instill confidence by making
our customers feel that their experience, in your
premise, is positive. Always!
To do this, as previously touched on in the first
article (Dec 2007), every facet of the operation
must be scrutinized so that service procedures
front of house and back of house work together in a
team environment where continual service systems
improve and flourish.
Position, ambiance, general service levels are hard
to quantify as to how they translate in the eyes of
your customers unless data is obtained through the
use of well conducted and analyzed internal surveys
containing specific questions relating to specific
criteria.
Your menu is the only real sales tool that
measures the success of you venue based on total
sales, average sales, no of sales and a further breakup
of each using manual or automated POS systems.
Every one of your customers has to read it, so why
don't we Advertise it on the menu.

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