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Hospitality Today Introduction to Restaurant and Hotel Industry

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Categorized in terms of price, menu or atmosphere ... What are the current competitors menus, prices, and hours of operation? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hospitality Today Introduction to Restaurant and Hotel Industry


1
Hospitality TodayIntroduction to Restaurant
and Hotel Industry
  • RHM 175

2
Part IIHospitalityOrganizations
3
Chapter 4 Understanding the Restaurant Industry
  • Competencies
  • 1. Describe in general terms the size of the
    restaurant industry, list restaurant industry
    segments, and describe eating and drinking
    places.
  • 2. Describe food service outlets in lodging
    operations the transportation, recreational,
    business and industry, educational, health care,
    and retail food service markets corrections and
    military food service and contract food
    management companies.
  • 3. Summarize some of the pitfalls of starting a
    new restaurant, cite reasons restaurants may
    fail, and outline some of the issues involved in
    starting a new restaurant, such as developing a
    concept, selecting a site, and having a
    feasibility study done.

4
Todays Restaurant Industry
  • Equal opportunity employer
  • 511 billion dollar sales in 2006
  • Employs 12.5 million people in 925,000
    establishments
  • Restaurant sales equal more than 4 of U.S. gross
    domestic product
  • Statistics say, that for every 1.00 spent, 47.5
    is to the FS industry
  • 2/3 of employees in FS occupations are women
  • 14 are African American
  • 16 are Hispanic

Page 82
5
Restaurant Industry Segments
  • Many different types of facilities.
  • Eating and drinking places
  • Lodging operations
  • Transportation market
  • Recreational market
  • Business and industry market
  • Educational market
  • Health Care market
  • Retail market
  • Corrections food service
  • Military food service
  • Contractors

Page 82 - 83
6
Eating and Drinking Places
  • 74 of the total industry sales comes from eating
    and drinking places
  • This segment is comprised of full-service
    restaurants, quick-service restaurants,
    commercial cafeterias, social caterers, ice cream
    and frozen custard stands, and bars and taverns.
  • Over 87 of this segments sales are made by
    full-service and quick-service restaurants.

Which offers the most opportunities for
hospitality students!
7
Eating and Drinking Places
  • Full-service restaurants
  • Feature a dozen or more main-course
  • Cook to order
  • Categorized in terms of price, menu or atmosphere
  • Price (luxury, high-priced, mid-priced,
    low-priced
  • Fusion Cuisine (food from all over the globe)
  • Menu (stick with a theme steaks, shrimp, etc.)
  • Atmosphere
  • Other categories Dinner Houses like Ruby
    Tuesday, Olive Garden, (all décor is alike)

Page 83 - 84
Review Page 87 - 88
8
Eating and Drinking Places
  • Quick-service restaurants
  • Narrow selection of food, limited services, focus
    on speed of preparation and delivery
  • McDonalds is a leader in innovative marketing
    approaches.

View Exhibit 4
Page 89
9
Restaurant Segments -Lodging Operations
  • Range from gourmet to coffee shops and even
    quick-service outlets.
  • In 2002, Marriott Hotels and Resorts alone had
    food sales of 1.695 billion.
  • Food sales for the top seven hotel chains totaled
    5.234 billion.

Page 89 -89
10
Restaurant Segments -Transportation Market
  • Highway stops, airplanes, ships, trains.
  • This market enjoys about 3.6 billion in sales
    each year.
  • Example of a Cruise line employees
  • 3,114 passengers
  • 1,181 crew
  • 30 or 354 crew members work in the kitchen

Page 89 -89
11
Restaurant Segments -Recreational Market
  • FS facilities located at sports arenas, stadiums,
    race tracks, movie theaters, bowling alleys,
    amusement parks, municipal convention centers,
    and other attractions.

Page 90
12
Restaurant Segments -Business and Industry Market
  • Located in non-food service businesses that offer
    on-site food service to their employees.
  • Usually provided by Contract Food Company -
    ARAMARK, Sodexho, Compass Group

Page 90 - 91
13
Restaurant Segments -Educational Market
  • College food service programs
  • Offering a la carte items
  • Healthier choices
  • High schools now have variety

Page 91
14
Restaurant Segments -Health Care Market
  • Comprised of three areas Hospitals, Nursing
    homes, and Retirement communities
  • Vending services, cafeterias, coffee shops,
    employee cafeterias, special dining facilities
    for doctors, day-care food programs, regular and
    special patient food programs, gourmet meals

Page 92 - 93
15
Restaurant Segments -Retail Market
  • Americans are cooking less
  • Increase in take-out sales
  • Food courts

Page 93
16
Restaurant Segments -Corrections Food Service
  • State, federal, local jails
  • Provides cyclical menus
  • No bones in meats
  • Plastic spoons are the only utensils
  • Hard to attract employees
  • Not much growth

Page 93 - 94
17
Restaurant Segments -Military Food Service
  • Includes Space Shuttle food preparation, aircraft
    carriers, nuclear submarine mess operations, to
    Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine and Coast Guard all
    over the world.
  • Both military and civilian personnel are employed
    by many of these facilities.

Page 94
18
Restaurant Segments - Contractors
  • Major operators of noncommercial food service.
  • Are hired to operate restaurants and other food
    service outlets in convention centers, sports
    arenas, tourist attractions, colleges and
    schools, office buildings, manufacturing plants,
    and health care facilities.
  • In addition, some contract food management
    companies provide housekeeping, grounds
    maintenance, laundry, and other services for
    their clients.

Page 95
19
Starting a NEW Restaurant
  • Theme Restaurant
  • One of the easiest businesses to enter
  • Staying in business is the real challenge.
  • 57 of all new restaurants fail within the first
    3 years
  • 70 closed their doors after ten years
  • Most individuals never move past their initial
    restaurant

Page 96 - 97
20
Why Do Restaurants Fail?
  • Lack of business knowledge
  • Marketing, accounting, finance, law, engineering,
    and human resources
  • Lack of technical knowledge
  • Planning and operating a professional restaurant
    (site selection, menu planning, recipe
    development, purchasing, production techniques,
    and service procedures
  • Lack of sufficient working capital
  • Underestimate the amount of capital they will
    need to pay for food, labor and fixed operating
    expenses

Page 97 - 98
21
Building a Successful Restaurant
  • Come up with a Concept
  • Who do you want to attract?
  • Where do these people live and work?
  • How do they buy?
  • How much competition is there now?
  • What are the current competitors menus, prices,
    and hours of operation?
  • Will be concept be ethnic, eclectic, traditional,
    regional American?
  • Decide on a menu, décor, number of seats, type of
    service, hours of operation, pricing structure,
    the investment required

22
Building a Successful Restaurant
  • Select a Site
  • One, Two, Three mile radius
  • Number of households within the radius
  • Socioeconomic conditions of the households
  • Areas of Dominant Influence (ADIs) are areas
    covered by major television station signals
  • Central-city business and shopping districts,
    Shopping centers, Planned communities, Highway
    intersections
  • Accessibility to customers
  • Parking
  • Site availability
  • Affordability

23
Building a Successful Restaurant
  • Conduct a Feasibility Study
  • Financial Analysis Portion
  • Land and construction
  • Equipment
  • Furniture and Fixtures
  • Working Capital
  • Pre-opening expenses for inventory
  • Pre-opening staff salaries and training expenses
  • Pre-opening advertising and promotion
  • Operating budget for the first three years
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