Fixed Costs
A fixed cost does not vary in relation to sales. A typical fixed cost is
rent. In most cases, the cost of rent does not vary from month to month in
response to how many meals you serve. Rent tends to be a constant cost for the
length of the lease agreement signed by the restaurant and the landlord of the
building. Property taxes, insurance premiums, and equipment depreciation are
all fixed costs.
Some labour costs are often considered to be fixed. Those staff who are
paid regardless of the amount of business being generated have a predictable
cost that remains constant during the life of the contract or understanding you
have with the employees. Such staff often includes full-time cashiers,
managers, the head chef, and bookkeeper. Janitorial services are considered a
fixed cost. The cost of staff who are hired as a result of an increase in
business, technically, should not be considered a fixed cost.
To a certain extent, basic energy costs such as heat and light are fixed
in that it is possible to determine a minimum level of need for energy
regardless of the number of sales. Costs above the minimum level should reflect
an increase in business and so often are not considered fixed, but in these
examples, energy costs will be considered fixed costs.
Fixed costs themselves can be categorized as controllable and
non-controllable.
A controllable cost is one that can be changed in the short term. For
example, even though janitorial cost has been budgeted as a constant cost, it
may be possible (if there is no ironclad contract with a janitorial service) to
reduce the service and the cost on short notice. Advertising and promotion are
also controllable fixed costs as a decision to change the amount of money spent
can be made very quickly.
Non-controllable fixed costs are those costs that cannot be changed
quickly by management. The most common non-controllable fixed cost is rent or
lease payments and depreciation.
In most basic calculations, the only truly fixed costs are overhead costs, those ongoing expenses required to
operate the business that are not direct costs of producing the food or
presenting the service.
Variable Costs
Variable costs are directly related to sales. For example, the use of
napkins or linen often varies due to an increase or decrease in sales. Other
variable costs include food, beverages, and some labour costs. Usually, the
major variable cost is food and most of the labour.
Variable costs are controllable. Less expensive ingredients can be purchased,
portion sizes can be changed, and some workers can have their hours reduced
usually on short notice.
In most basic calculations, the only variable cost used is food cost.
Semi-variable Costs
Labour costs are sometimes categorized as semi-variable because some are
fixed but many are variable. In most situations labour cost is fully
controllable. That is, you are in control of how many people work how many
hours per day through proper scheduling. For basic calculations, labour is often
given a category all on its own. In this context, labour costs will be
considered semi-variable.
Breakeven Point
The only way costs can be recovered is through sales. When the sales
income equals the cost for labour, overhead, and food, the breakeven point has been reached. That is, the
breakeven point occurs when
sales = labour + overhead + food costs
Example
Labour for a week is $3000, overhead is $2000, and food cost is $4000.
Therefore, the breakeven point for sales occurs at $9000, which means in order
to stay in business, this operation must have sales of at least $9000 each
week. Any amount above $9000 is profit,
The profit is determined by subtracting the total costs from the sales.
That is,
profit = sales – (labour + overhead + food costs)
Cost Percentages
The breakeven point determined above is in raw dollar figures. Of more
importance in the industry are cost percentages in general and food cost
percentage in particular. In a well-run operation, cost percentages will remain
relatively constant even though the dollar figures can vary widely week to week
or month to month. However, if volume increases, so will efficiency which will,
in turn, lower the production costs and increase the profits.
A cost percentage is derived by dividing a cost by the sales and expressing
the answer as a percentage. That is, in general,
cost percentage = cost/total sales
and, in particular,
food cost percentage = cost of food/total sales
labour cost percentage = cost of labour/total sales
overhead cost percentage = cost of overhead/total sales
To illustrate the use of these formulas, consider the example below.
Example
A restaurant has total sales of RM2500. The food cost was RM1000, labour
cost was RM850, and overhead was RM650.
Determine the cost percentages. Remember that percentages are always
expressed as a portion of 100, and therefore the decimal figure resulting from
the cost divided by total sales should be multiplied by 100.
food cost percentage = cost of food/total sales
= RM1000/RM2500
= 0.4
= 40% (0.4×100)
= RM1000/RM2500
= 0.4
= 40% (0.4×100)
labour cost percentage = cost of labour/total sales
= RM850/RM2500
= 0.34
= 34% (0.34 x 100)
= RM850/RM2500
= 0.34
= 34% (0.34 x 100)
overhead cost percentage = cost of overhead/total sales
= RM650/RM2500
= 0.26
= 26% (0.26 x 100)
= RM650/RM2500
= 0.26
= 26% (0.26 x 100)
In this example, the sales figure used is actually the breakeven point.
In most instances, the total sales will be more than the breakeven point and
the excess represents the before-tax profits of the business.
A restaurant has sales of RM3500, food costs of RM1250, labour costs of RM800,
and overhead costs of RM700. Determine the cost and profit percentages.
food cost percentage = RM1250/RM3500
= 0.357
= 35.7%
= 0.357
= 35.7%
labour cost percentage = RM800/RM3500
= 0.2285
= 22.9%
= 0.2285
= 22.9%
overhead cost percentage = RM700/RM3500
= 0.2
= 20%
= 0.2
= 20%
profit in dollars = total sales – (food cost + labour cost + overhead
cost)
= RM3500 – (RM1250 + RM800 + RM700)
= RM3500 – (RM2750)
= RM750
= RM3500 – (RM1250 + RM800 + RM700)
= RM3500 – (RM2750)
= RM750
profit percentage based on total sales = RM750/RM3500
= 0.214
= 21.4%
= 0.214
= 21.4%
The before-tax profit percentage is over 20% in this example. Most
restaurant operations probably do not reach this high a profit figure.
Another way to determine the percentage profit is to add the cost
percentages and subtract the answer from 100%. Using the example above,
profit percentage = 100% – cost percentages
= 100% – (35.7% + 22.9% + 20%)
= 100% – 78.6%
= 21.4%
= 100% – 78.6%
= 21.4%
Note: All of
the prices/costs used are examples and not intended to reflect the current
costs of ingredients, labour, or menu items.
Interpreting Cost
Percentages
Cost percentages are useful because they allow you to compare the
performance of an operation at separate times during the year or to compare two
similar restaurants. They also allow you to make generalizations about types of
restaurant operations. For example, fast-food restaurants often rely on
convenience foods that are expensive to purchase. In these restaurants, food
percentage costs can be slightly higher, but the labour cost tends to be lower
than in full-service restaurants. The profit is derived by having a high
turnover of products and keeping labour costs low.
Fine-dining, high-margin restaurants tend to rely less on convenience
foods and more on quality ingredients and a high level of service. Although
food costs in raw dollars are high for such restaurants, the food cost
percentage may be lower than in fast-food restaurants because menu prices are
much higher. Labour cost percentages also tend to be higher because higher
trained personnel is needed. The profit in these operations often is derived
from serving relatively few customers but collecting more dollars per sale compared
to more casual places that operate based on high volume.
Using Cost Percentages
The basic equation for cost percentages can be written several ways:
Cost % = cost/total sales
Sales = cost/cost %
Cost = total sales x cost %
These formulas are useful when restaurant management decides on a cost
percentage value and then has to see what that percentage means in terms of
menu prices.
Example
Management has decided that a minimum food percentage of 30% must apply
to all menu items. You wish to introduce an item that costs RM4.50 in actual
food costs. To find the menu price (selling price) you would do the following:
selling price = cost/cost %
= RM4.50/30%
= RM4.50/0.3
= RM15.00Example
= RM4.50/30%
= RM4.50/0.3
= RM15.00Example
A group of people wish to have a Christmas banquet meal at a cost to them
of no more than RM18.50 per person excluding tax and gratuity. If the food
percentage is 30%, you can determine the actual food cost by doing the
following:
cost = selling price x cost %
= RM18.50 x 30%
= RM18.50 x 0.30
= RM5.55
= RM18.50 x 30%
= RM18.50 x 0.30
= RM5.55
The cost figure is used to determine the banquet items that could be
produced by the restaurant using no more than RM5.55 in raw materials per
serving.
For additional information on cost percentages and establishing menu
prices, refer to the chapter on food costing.
Sales Ratios and Other
Statistics
Very often, restaurant managers generate statistics to determine the
efficiency of their operation. Some of these statistics are based on dollar
sales while others are based on non-monetary items such as the number of
customers in the restaurant during a busy or slow time period. These statistics
are used to determine trends in sales, identify menu items that are not moving,
calculate staffing requirements, and so forth.
The statistical data tends to be quite straightforward. For example,
total dollar sales is simply the amount of money that has gone through the cash
register over a designated period of time (a day, a week, a month, or a year).
Sometimes the total dollar sales figure is divided by the number of customers
served to produce an average dollar sale (average cover). The
average dollar sale is useful if the impact of a new menu or a special sales
promotion has to be evaluated.
Sales per server and average sales per server are often used to
determine the effectiveness of individual waiters and waitresses. The
statistics are compiled by either just noting the total number of sales of each
server over a period of time (sales per server) or by dividing the total number
of sales by the number of servers (producing the average sales per server). In
many restaurant operations, these statistics are automatically produced by a
point-of-sales terminal.
Some chain restaurant managers compute a sales-per-seat statistic by dividing
the total sales by the number of seats in their restaurant. The statistic is
useful in comparing the activity among members of a chain of restaurants.
Rational menu changes can be made only after data has been collected
that can be used to analyze the popularity of the dishes offered. In older
operations, current statistics are often compared to historical statistics so
trends can be predicted. The most common menu statistic is simply the number of
times each item on the menu is ordered over a given period.
Closely related to the number of times a menu item is ordered is the
sales mix of the restaurant. Sales mix is determined by comparing the relative
popularity of, for example, all entrées by expressing the number sold of each
entrée as a percentage of all the entrées sold.
Example
Over a one-month period a total of 1200 entrées are sold of which 450
are steak sandwiches, 300 are fish and chips, 350 are hot roast beef
sandwiches, and 100 are grilled cheese sandwiches. The sales mix percentages
are:
sale percentage = entrée types sold/total entrées sold
steak sandwich percentage = 450/1200
= 0.375
= 38%
steak sandwich percentage = 450/1200
= 0.375
= 38%
fish and chips percentage = 300/1200
= 0.25
= 25%
= 0.25
= 25%
roast beef sandwich percentage = 350/1200
= 0.29
= 29%
= 0.29
= 29%
grilled cheese sandwiches = 100/1200
= 0.083
= 8%
= 0.083
= 8%
The sales mix is about 38% steak sandwiches, 25% fish and chips, 29% hot
roast beef sandwiches, and 8% grilled cheese sandwiches.
Seat turnover might be used to determine staffing. This statistic is
simply the number of customers in a restaurant over a period of time (usually a
busy period or a slow period) divided by the number of seats in the restaurant.
For example, if a 50-seat restaurant serves 165 meals at lunch time, the seat
turnover is 3.3, which means that the average seat was used over three times
during that period. This can be valuable information for staffing arrangements.
Almost all of the statistics in the restaurant trade are now
automatically collected by computers built into electronic cash registers or
ordering equipment. Small operations may have to collect this data by
observation.
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