Title: Hospitality Finance
1Hospitality Finance
- Managing the Cost
- of Labor
2Welcome
- Class Review
- Past, Present, and Future
- Exam
- Annual Reports
- Notes- Labor
3Class Review
- Where have we been?
- Basic Accounting Knowledge
- Basic Interpretation Skills
- Basic Understanding of Controls
- Where are we now?
- Controls, Controls, Controls
- Where are we going? Put into Practice
- Labor
- Cost Volume Profit
- Operations and Budgets
- Capital Feasibility
4Class Review
5Main Ideas of Labor Control
- Labor Expense in the Hospitality Industry
- Assessing Labor Productivity
- Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- Managing Payroll Costs
- Reducing Labor-Related Costs
6Labor Expense in the Hospitality Industry
- Labor cost is critical since it comprises
approximately one third of revenues and since
foodservice, essentially a service business, is
dependent on the motivation, training and skills
of its workforce - In today's market, labor is so expensive. Methods
must be used to accomplish necessary tasks and
stay within the allotted labor budget. - In some foodservice establishments, the cost of
labor actually exceeds the cost of food and
beverage products.
7Labor Expense in the Hospitality Industry
- Labor Expense includes salaries and wages, but it
consists of other labor-related costs as well. - FICA taxes, unemployment taxes, worker's
compensation, group life insurance, health
insurance, pension plan payments, employee meals,
employee training, employee transportation,
employee uniforms, employee housing,
vacation/sick leave, tuition reimbursement
programs, and employee incentives and bonuses.
8Labor Expense in the Hospitality Industry
- Payroll refers to the gross pay received by an
employee in exchange for his or her work. - A salaried employee receives the same income per
week or month regardless of the number of hours
worked. - Payroll is one part of labor expense.
9Labor Expense in the Hospitality Industry
- Minimum staff is used to designate the least
number of employees, or payroll dollars, needed
to operate a facility or department within the
facility. - Fixed Payroll refers to the amount an operation
pays in salaries. - Variable Payroll consists of those dollars paid
to hourly employees. - Do not confuse minimum staff with fixed and
variable payroll.
10Labor Expense in the Hospitality Industry
- Management has little control over fixed labor
expense, but nearly 100 control over variable
labor expense. - Labor expense refers to the total of all costs
associated with maintaining a foodservice
workforce. - Total labor expense will always exceed that of
payroll.
11Labor Expense in the Hospitality Industry
- Payroll is considered a "controllable" labor
expense, unlike FICA taxes and insurance
premiums. - But, in reality, managers may even be able to
influence some of the noncontrollable labor
expenses, such as providing a training program to
reduce injuries and insurance premiums.
12Labor Cost Problems
- The Hospitality industry has four unique labor
cost problems - The industry tends to pay lower compensation,
which attracts a less competent sector of
employees. - The industry employs a large number of teenagers,
who tend to be less reliable than older workers. - Based on current demographic trends, the
percentage of teenagers available in the
population will be decreasing. It has been
predicted that there will be a shortfall of
teenage workforce for the food industry of up to
1 million workers in the near future. The number
of teenage workers shrunk by 11 between 1986 and
1990. This means that the foodservice industry
will have to rely more on elderly and handicapped
employees. - Foodservice businesses experienced fluctuating
levels of activity throughout the week and the
day which complicates the scheduling of employees
and their productivity.
13What Determines Payroll Cost?
- Payroll costs are determined by three factors
(1) the hourly rate of pay, (2) the level of
fringe benefits and (3) employee productivity. - Fringe benefits can be a significant portion of
payroll costs. These benefits can include
vacation time, holiday pay, sick leave, employee
meals, social security (the employer's share is
7.65 of employee's salary), unemployment
compensation insurance, and medical insurance.
14Fringe benefits
- The foodservice has been rather stingy in
providing extensive fringe benefits to its
workers. However this is changing. With the labor
force getting tighter and the need to reduce high
turnover the industry is improving the benefits
offered to employees. Some of the major offerings
are - Compulsory benefits. These include socials
security (which both the employer and employee
must contribute an equal amount), workmen's
compensation and unemployment insurance. - Medical insurance. A very expensive benefit but
one that highly valued by workers. This benefit
has been shown to reduce absenteeism. It can also
be a tool to reduce the industry's high turn over
problem. - Retirement programs. These programs are generally
restricted to management but larger foodservice
companies are extending these benefits to its
non-management workforce. The most popular type
plans are defined contribution in which both the
employer and employee contribute to a fund such
as a mutual fund. These benefits also offer tax
advantage to the worker. - Profit sharing. These are generally restricted to
management employees. They designed to motivate
employees to maximize the operation's income.
They are designed to create a "win, win"
situation where both the employee and stockholder
benefit.
15Assessing Labor Productivity
- Productivity is important because it defines how
much an employee is able to get done each hour.
Restaurant operations find it difficult to
achieve full productivity due to the peaks and
valleys in the daily volume of business.
Management needs to be concerned with the labor
cost per productive hour. - Productivity is the amount of work performed by
an employee in a fixed period of time. - There are many ways to assess labor productivity.
In general, productivity is measured in terms of
the productivity ratio as follows
Output Input Productivity Ratio
16Example
- If management was considering two potential
employees (1) an employee who is to be paid 6
an hour plus 1.50 fringe benefit, and who takes
an hour and a half to perform a particular task
versus - (2) another employee who is to earn 7 hour plus
2 in fringe benefits, but performs the same task
in one hour. The first candidate performs the
task at a cost of 11.25 (which would be 6
1.50 x 1.5 hours). - The second employee, although the higher paid
individual, is more productive since he performs
the given task at a lower cost 9 (7 2).
Management's objective should be to keep payroll
cost as low as possible, not necessarily to hire
lower paid, but unproductive, employees.
17If we just regard cost, Hounddog looks like the
best bet at 6.60 per hour. However considering
productivity, this employee has the highest cost
at .55 per customer. Jones occupies an opposite
position with the highest cost per hour of 10.00
but the lowest cost per customer .40. The moral
of the example is to consider productivity as
well as raw cost per hour.
18Productivity Issues
- The three basics elements that determine
restaurant productivity are - The employees hired.
- The equipment available to employees in the
performance of their duties. - The employees' work methods. If employees are
highly motivated, if equipment is provided to
reduce as much labor intensive work as possible
and if management uses well thought out,
efficient work methods, productivity should be
high.
19- Factors that tend to cause lower productivity in
the foodservice industry are - The peaks and valleys in work volume.
- The existence of many small single restaurant
enterprises. - Menus with numerous items that require the
restaurant's staff to produce many different
types of meals. - Frequent changes in menus
- An inexperienced workforce hindered by low pay
and high turnover
20- Productivity is a critical in controlling
restaurant costs. Fast food operations have
achieved high productivity through simplified
menus, automated equipment, self-service,
pre-prepared foods and simplified work processes.
For example, a typical fast-food operation is
able to serve 100 patrons with 10.5 hours of
labor input, whereas it takes over 70 hours for a
full-service operation to handle the same number
of patrons. Management needs to be alert to any
mismatch between work to be done and number of
workers available. Parkinson's Law states that
workers tend to adjust the pace of their effort
in proportion to the work that needs to be done
if there is less work to do, they would work at a
slower pace. This is often the case in the food
industry, with uneven flows of work, peaks and
valleys of activities and where employees often
set their own work standards.
21Strategies to Reduce Labor Cost.
- The use of pre-prepared convenience foods.
Pre-prepared and convenience foods are more
expensive, but they save labor and reduce food
waste. Some large chain operations have
commissary kitchens that serve many of their
restaurants. Commissary kitchens prepare meals
for inventory thereby realizing the benefits of
factory type production. - Limit the number of items offered on their menus.
Restaurants with specialized menus attract those
customers who want the types of meals offered.
With a limited number of menu items, restaurants
are able to operate more efficiently. Restaurants
with many items on their menus incur high labor
and food costs they also have great difficulty
in maintaining meal quality. - Self-service salad bars, buffets and self-bussing
of dishes. - Cross utilization of employees. For example, bus
persons can assist servers by carrying meals
orders to the diners' tables. - Designing the restaurant with the layout,
equipment and working conditions that facilitate
high productivity. Too often restaurant
facilities are designed without any consideration
to worker efficiency. Chain restaurants have
achieved efficiency and productivity by
standardizing their restaurant layouts and
equipment. - Greater use of labor saving equipment. For
example point-of-sales systems and terminals
improve the productivity of cashiers, kitchen and
serving area personnel, accountants and
management. Hand held computer terminal are
coming into use. Kitchen equipment can increase
productivity through improved microwave ranges
and automated ranges and ovens.
22Getting Effective Control of Labor Cost
- A seven-step program that management can use to
gain effective control of their employees and to
maintain and improve productivity is as follows
23The Job
- Personnel policies. Effective supervision needs
to be backed up by sound administrative policies.
Policies should cover recruiting, hiring,
orientation and training, supervisory policies,
evaluations methods, compensation and job
termination. - A job analysis which consists of two parts the
job specification and the job analysis. The
job specification outlines the qualifications
that a potential employee needs to fill the job.
This covers education and work history, plus
physical, mental and age requirements. The
job description lists the tasks and duties to be
performed. Job descriptions are useful in hiring,
training and orienting new employees. When
preparing a job analysis., management needs to
review the entire restaurant workload and
determine how it is to be divided between
employees. - A good job analysis eliminates questions of who
does what, prevents work overlap and prevents
individual employees from being overworked or
under worked.
24- Job Evaluation
- In the process of job evaluation management
attempts to specify how workers fit into the
organization. This can be done in three ways - Job analysis is a complete description of each of
the jobs in the organization. This is usually
done through a job description that sets forth
the position name, code, salary grade,
responsible duties, qualifications, and reporting
and supervisory responsibilities. - How each job fits into the organization. This is
done through an organization chart which shows
the reporting structure of the organization. - A critical factor in job evaluation is to assure
that each employee receives the right wage.
Factors such as labor supply, relation to other
companies, skills required, consistency within
the organization and supervisory
responsibilities. This is accomplished through
wage and salary policies, which are administered
by personnel department.
25Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- 10 Key Factors Affecting Employee Productivity
- Employee Selection
- Training
- Supervision
- Scheduling
- Breaks
- Morale
- Menu
- Convenience vs. Scratch Preparation
- Equipment
- Service Level Desired
26Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Employee Selection
- A job description is a listing of the tasks that
must be accomplished by the employee hired to
fill a particular position. - A job specification is a listing of the personal
characteristics needed to perform the tasks
contained in a particular job description.
27Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- The employment application is a document
completed by the candidate for employment. - Job interviews, if improperly performed, can
subject an employer to legal liability. - Preemployment testing is a common way to help
improve employee productivity. - Skills tests can include activities such as
typing tests, and computer application tests. - Psychological testing can include personality
tests, tests designed to predict performance, or
tests of mental ability. - Preemployment drug testing is used to determine
if an applicant uses drugs.
28Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Increasingly, hospitality employers are utilizing
background checks prior to hiring employees in
selected positions. - Not conducting background checks on some
positions can subject the employer to potential
litigation under the doctrine of negligent
hiring, that is, a failure on the part of an
employer to exercise reasonable care in the
selection of employees.
29Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Training
- Effective training will improve job satisfaction
and instill in employees a sense of well-being
and accomplishment. It will also reduce
confusion, product waste, and loss of guests. - Effective training begins with a good orientation
program. - Task training is the training undertaken to
ensure an employee has the skills to meet
productivity goals.
30Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Steps for Training
- Plan the training session.
- Present the training session.
- Evaluate the sessions effectiveness.
- Retrain at the proper interval.
31Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Supervision
- Proper supervision means assisting employees in
improving productivity. - This is why it is so important for managers to be
on the floor, in other words, in the dining area,
during meal periods.
32Supervision issues
- Management needs to deal with certain issues that
can arise in supervising workers. Some the
critical ones are - Absenteeism. Absenteeism to needs to kept to a
minimum. Excessive absenteeism will increase
labor cost due to the need for replacements. Also
service quality will suffer. Download here to see
a spreadsheet demonstrating the three absenteeism
ratios discussed in the textbook. - Turnover. The foodservice is plagued with high
turnover. Some estimate it at 10 per month or a
complete turnover in personnel in ten months. The
consequences of this situation are inexperienced
workers, high training and hiring cost and
diversion of management time to the hiring
process. - Overtime. Overtime can result in excess pay hours
and premium pay. There may be times when overtime
is justified but it needs to be tightly
controlled by management. - Employee well-being issues.
- Employees with health problems will not be
effective workers. Some of the issues that
management needs to deal with in these areas are
- Safety and accident prevention. Management needs
to effective prevention programs to reduce
accident exposure in order to protect workers,
reduce exposure liability claims and comply with
government laws and regulations. - Wellness programs. Management can encourage
employee health through formal or informal
policies. If medical insurance is a fringe
benefit, a formal wellness program could be cost
justified by reducing medical insurance premiums.
- Substance abuse. Management needs to be alert to
employees with drinking or drug problems.
Problems in this area can have devastating
effects on productivity and worker morale.
Employee Assistance Programs has been an
effective tool in dealing with these kinds of
problems.
33The Job-Standards, Forecasts
- Work simplification is the study and analysis of
each job to determine the easiest and most
productive way of performing its duties. This
includes changes in procedures, work layout, the
use of labor saving equipment, and the use of
pre-processed foods. Work simplification
increases productivity and reduces labor cost. - Work production standards are developed from
information in work production records. The
standards are measurements used to judge a
worker's productivity. These measurements,
expressed in sales dollars per day, meals
produced per day, or in other quantitative
factors, measure employee productivity. - Workload forecasts are derived from the daily
meal forecast. Management, using work standards,
calculates the number of employees needed to
handle the expected workload. Management's goal
should be the achievement the proper level of
staffing commensurate with the work to be done.
34The Job-Scheduling
- Scheduling of workers. After determining the
number of workers needed, management must
schedule the individual workers in the proper
time slots. The process is complicated by
fluctuations in the number of customers served
throughout the day. Scheduling should ensure that
the proper number of employees are on hand to
handle the volume of work required throughout the
day.
35Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Scheduling
- Even with highly productive employees, poor
employee scheduling by management can result in
low productivity ratios. - Proper scheduling ensures that the correct number
of employees is available to do the necessary
amount of work. - Split-shift, a technique used to match individual
employee work shifts with peaks and valleys of
customer demand.
36Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Breaks
- Employees have both a physical and a mental need
for breaks from their work. - Employees need to know that management cares
enough to establish a break schedule and stick to
it. - Management should view breaks as a necessary part
of maintaining a highly productive workforce, not
as lost or wasted time.
37- Block Scheduling-Scheduling patterns are
important. Foodservice operations could schedule
their workers on a block basis. Workers would
work as a group in a regular shift (no overlap) - Staggered Scheduling-Because most restaurants
experience varying levels of activities during
the day, they a use a staggered work schedule.
Employees arrive at different times building up
to a full staff level at meal times (overlap)
38Job number control list
- A number of restaurants use a procedure called a
job number control list to facilitate the
staffing of the restaurant. Each job listed on
the control list needs to be analyzed, described
and formalized. Quite often a work production
standard is used to determine the number of
positions required for each job type . - Under this system new employees must be hired for
a specifically numbered and classified job that
is documented with a job description and a job
specification. People are not hired just because
"the help is needed." - Restaurants using the job number control list
system must plan in advance for the duties and
responsibilities of each job in their operations.
Under this system overlapping jobs are avoided.
No one is added to the payroll on a permanent
basis unless it is for a numbered job. - Too often employees are hired for temporary
needs, but they remain staff on after the need is
over. Having specific jobs listed on the job
control form doesn't mean that every job listed
needs to be hired. - The list should provide the number of employees
needed in a given position to handle the highest
possible volume. If the list provides for 10
cooks, but only 5 are justified by current
business volume then only 5 cooks should be
hired.
39Staff Equivalents
- This question here involves the issue of full
time staff equivalents. To cover one full time,
365 day a year, position requires 1.55 employees - Days in the year to be covered 365
- Weekend days off (104)
- Sick days (7)
- Holidays (8)
- Vacation (10)
- Days worked by one employee 236
- Full time equivalents to cover one position
365/236 - If a restaurant requires 40 employees on hand
each day of the year, then they would need to
hire 62 full-time employees (40 x 1.55).
40Part-time workers
- Part time workers are used extensively in the
foodservice industry. Part-time workers offer
advantages and disadvantages. The advantages are
- Because of the uneven activity in the daily
operation of a foodservice operation, part-time
workers are used to fill in for short periods of
time when activity is high - Part-time employees are not as costly as full
time employees. They receive lower salaries and
little or no fringe benefits. - Part-time workers can be utilized to fill in on
the weekends and provide coverage when regular
employees have time off.
41However, there are problems
- In a large city, it can be expensive for
part-time workers to commute to work. The cost of
transportation quite often cannot be justified by
income earned in a short work shift. - Using part-time employees increases the number of
individuals on the payroll. - There is more accounting work, such as the
writing of checks and the filling out of tax
forms - Part-time helps creates more scheduling
42Labor scheduling problems
- Management can encounter a number of the problems
when scheduling workers - If a restaurant serves three meals a day, it is
often impossible for one shift to handle all
three meals. On the other hand, the time period
between breakfast and dinner does not lend itself
to two full shifts. - Foodservice operators experience peaks and
valleys of activity during normal work shifts,
not the steady production encountered in a
factory setting. - The proper scheduling of workers requires
accurate forecasts of daily activity. The best
forecast can be upset by weather or other factors
beyond management's control resulting in too few
or too many workers. - The foodservice industry cannot use idle workers
to produce meals for inventory which can be
released at another time when needed. The time of
idle workers cannot be stored and used at another
busier time. - An intangible factor of scheduling relates to
service quality. While management may be able to
determine the number of people needed to handle a
given number of customers, the issue of quality
can be an important variable in staffing.
43The scheduling process
- Foodservice labor scheduling proceeds in the
following steps - Develop work production standards for each
position in the restaurant. - Examine the daily activities of an operation's
various units to determine their busy and slow
periods. - Determine how customer counts affects the
different organizational units within the
restaurant. - Determine the number of workers or work hours
needed to handle forecasted customers in
accordance with the operation's work production
standards. - Prepare the schedule based on the capabilities of
each of the organization's employees. The
assignment should be based on a number of factors
such employee experience, rotation
considerations, wage rates and any legal
restrictions such minors work hours.
44- After completion of the above steps schedule the
employee for each workday. - After the schedule is finished it should be
reviewed by the next level of management (the
restaurant managers.). The review should cover
issues such as (1) projected sales relationship
to work hours, (2) projected labor cost percent,
(3) the number of customers per labor hour, (4)
labor cost per hour and (5) any other criteria
utilized by management. - After the schedule is approved, notify the
individual employees of their work schedule. - Review the schedule on an after fact basis to
determine how actual performance compares to
schedule. Determine if there is a need for
change.
45Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Morale
- Management must create a fun, motivating
environment for employees to work in. - Motivated groups usually work for a management
team that has created a vision, communicated the
vision to employees, and ensured that employees
share the vision.
46Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Creating a vision is nothing more than finding a
"purpose" for the workforce. - A shared purpose between management and employees
is important for the development and maintenance
of high morale. - Recognize all employees for what they do best
even the dishwasher.
47Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Employee turnover is high in some sections of the
hospitality industry. By some estimates, it
exceeds 200 per year. You can measure your
turnover by using the following formula
Employee Turnover Rate Number of Employees
Separated Number of Employees in Workforce
48Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Separated is the term used to describe employees
who have either quit, been terminated, or in some
other manner have "separated" themselves from the
operation. - Some foodservice operators prefer to distinguish
between voluntary and involuntary separation. - A voluntary separation is one in which the
employee made the decision to leave the
organization. - An involuntary separation is one in which
management has caused the employee to separate
from the organization.
49Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- The turnover formula can be modified to create
these two ratios
Involuntary Employee Turnover Rate Number of
Employees Involuntarily Separated Number of
Employees in Workforce
Voluntary Employee Turnover Rate Number of
Employees Voluntarily Separated Number of
Employees in Workforce
50Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Turnover is expensive. This expense is comprised
of actual and hidden costs. Actual costs include
interviewing and training time, while hidden
costs refer to the number of dishes broken by a
new dishwasher, etc.
51Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Menu
- In general, the more variety of items a kitchen
is asked to produce, the less efficient that
kitchen will be. - Menu items must also be selected to complement
the skill level of the employees and the
equipment available to produce the menu item. - Since most operations change their menus
infrequently, it is critical that the menu items
selected can be prepared efficiently and well.
52Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Convenience vs. Scratch Preparation
- The decision of whether to "make" or "buy"
involves two major factors, the product quality
and the product cost. - It is important to remember that make or buy
decisions affect both food and labor costs. - Management, often in consultation with kitchen
production staff, must resolve make or buy
decisions.
53Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Equipment
- Equipment should be properly maintained and
updated if employees are to be held accountable
for productivity standards or gains. - Service Levels
- When management varies service levels, it varies
employee productivity ratios.
54Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- Ways to measure productivity
- labor cost percentage
- sales per labor hour
- labor dollars per guest served
- guests served per labor dollar
- guests served per labor hour
55Work Production Standards
- Work production standards are quantitative
expressions of the amount of production expected
from various types of jobs in a specific period
of time. These standards can stated in terms of
sales dollars or meals served per worker. - A server may be rated on the dollar volume of
business handled or on the number of covers
handled. A coffee shop server might be expected
to handle forty-five to sixty covers in a
two-meal period, whereas a server in a more
formal dining room could only be expected to
handle from 25 to 30 covers. - The standards will vary by job description. Unit
production standards can be expressed, for
example, in covers by servers, dishes washed by
dishwashers, meals prepared by cooks and patrons
served by the cashier. - Food service operations usually use an employee
workday as the unit in which to express work
standard performance. To determine the number of
employee workdays, divide work hours by 8. - For example, if 100 hours of server time were
used during a day, then the number of workdays
would be 12.5.
56How are work standards developed?
- Work standards can be developed in a number of
ways. Larger operations may employ sophisticated
techniques such as time and motion studies to set
their standards. Staff industrial engineers or
outside consultants would perform this service.
The work standards would be determined for one
restaurant and then applied to the other
restaurants of the chain. - If there are no industrial engineers or outside
consultants available, records of employee
productivity can be used. By analyzing the work
performance history of the better employees over
a period of time, management can observe the
range or distribution of work units produced per
day the standard can then be based on the
average or a point within the center of
observations. - Obviously it would not make sense to take the
highest or the lowest point as these might
represent unusual circumstances. Once management
has established work standards for all employees,
they can then monitor daily performance against
these standards. - Typically, new employees might be below standard
but their performance should improve over time.
Work standards for the entire workforce can be
revised upward as the work force becomes more
experienced.
57- How do work standards compare with percent
controls? - Work standards provide a definite baseline or
goal to achieve, and it is relatively
straightforward to observe how well each worker
performs against predetermined standards. It is a
simple matter for management to see if a
particular job is over or below standard. The
performance against standard can also give
information relating to the quality of service
and whether the particular job is overworked.
Labor cost percents provide less specific
information. They merely show the relationship
between labor cost and sales and this
relationship can vary if there is a change in
either of these categories
58Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- The labor cost percentage is computed as follows
Cost of Labor Total Sales Labor Cost
- It is important to realize that there are
several ways to define cost of labor just
hourly, hourly and management, all costs
including payroll.
59Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- The most perishable commodity any foodservice
operator buys is the labor hour. When not
productively used, it disappears forever. - This is why many operators prefer to measure
labor productivity in terms of the amount of
sales generated for each labor hour used.
Total Sales Labor Hours Used Sales per
Labor Hour
60Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- However, sales per labor hour neglects to
consider the amount paid to employees per hour to
generate the sales. - Labor Dollars per Guest Served
Cost of Labor Guests Served Labor Dollars per
Guest Served
61Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- Guest Served per Labor Dollar
- As a measure of productivity, guests served per
labor dollar expended has advantages. It can be
used by foodservice units that do not routinely
record dollar sales figures.
Guests Served Cost of Labor Guests Served per
Labor Dollar
62Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- Guests Served per Labor Hour is a true measure of
productivity, not a measure of either cost and
productivity or sales and productivity. - It is extremely useful in comparing similar units
in areas with widely differing wage rates or
selling prices.
Guests Served Labor Hours Used Guests
Served per Labor Hour
63Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- Many operators prefer to compute their
productivity measures on a daily, rather than on
a weekly or monthly basis. This can easily be
done by using a six-column form with cost of
labor, sales, and labor cost . - An operator may establish labor subcategories
such as production, service, sanitation, and
management.
64Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- Labor costs for each subcategory can be
estimated. By following the rules of algebra and
adding the word estimated, the guests served
per labor dollar formula can be restated as
follows
Number of Estimated Guests Served Guests Served
Per Labor Dollar Estimated Cost of Labor
65Managing Payroll Costs
- Essentially, the management of payroll costs is a
four-step process, which includes the following
factors - Determine productivity standards.
- Forecast sales volume.
- Schedule employees using productivity standards
and forecasted sales volume. - Analyze results.
66Managing Payroll Costs
- Determine productivity standards.
- A productivity standard is defined as
management's view of what constitutes an
appropriate productivity ratio in a given
foodservice unit or units. - Productivity standards represent what you should
reasonably expect in the way of output per unit
of labor input. - Productivity standards are typically based on the
following types of information unit history,
company average, industry average, management
experience, or a combination of some or all of
the above.
67Managing Payroll Costs
- Forecast sales volume.
- Sales volume forecasting, when combined with
established productivity standards, allows a
foodservice operator to determine the number of
employees needed to effectively service those
guests who will visit the facility.
68Managing Payroll Costs
- Schedule employees using productivity standards
and forecasted sales volume. - You can establish a labor budget using your
productivity standards, your sales forecast, and
the labor cost percentage formula you have
already learned.
69Managing Payroll Costs
- Remember that the labor cost percentage
formula is defined as
Cost of Labor Total Sales Labor Cost
- If you include the words forecasted,
standard, and budget, and follow the rules of
algebra, the labor cost percentage formula can be
restated as follows
Forecasted Total Sales Labor Cost Standard
Cost of Labor Budget
70Managing Payroll Costs
- You can establish a budget for total number of
labor hours needed to service your establishment.
Guests Served Labor Hours Used Guests
Served per Labor Hour
- If you include the words forecasted,
standard, and budget, and follow the rules of
algebra, the guests served per labor hour formula
can be restated as follows
Forecasted Number of Guests Served Guests Served
per Labor Hour Standard Labor Hours Budget
71Managing Payroll Costs
- Because employee schedules can only be done in
terms of either hours scheduled or dollars spent,
an employee schedule recap form can be an
effective tool in any daily analysis of labor
productivity. - Since labor is purchased on a daily basis, labor
costs should be monitored on a daily basis.
72Managing Payroll Costs
- Some foodservice managers practice an on-call
system whereby employees who are off duty are
assigned to on-call status. - Other managers practice a call-in system. In
this arrangement, employees who are off duty are
required to check in with management on a daily
basis to see if the volume is such that they may
be needed. - Schedule modifications should be done hourly, if
necessary. - It is critical to match labor usage with
projected volume.
73Managing Payroll Costs
- 4. Analyze results.
- To complete the job of managing labor-related
expense, you must now analyze your results by
comparing actual labor cost to budgeted labor
cost.
Actual Amount Budgeted Amount of Budget
74- Elements of the analysis The two functions of
labor cost analysis are - To determine whether labor costs are over or
below management established standards. - To determine where in the operation the
deviations from standard are taking place.
75Managing Payroll Costs
- Standard cost, that is the labor cost needed to
meet established productivity standards, rather
than "budgeted cost. - In the case of labor, we may still be within
reasonable budget, though we may vary greatly
from the standard. - For this reason, the authors prefer the term
budgeted labor rather than standard labor. Labor
standards will always vary a bit unless guest
counts can be predicted perfectly which, of
course, is rarely the case.
76- Difficulties in analyzing labor cost. There are
basically three difficulties in analyzing labor
cost problems - Once it has been determined that labor costs are
excessive management needs to determine why.
There can be a number of factors poor
scheduling, poorly trained or inefficient
employees, excessive overtime, high employee
turnover or high absenteeism. - Another difficulty in analyzing labor cost is
that the discrepancies can occur in different
parts of an operation and balance each other out.
For example, high labor cost in the kitchen could
be offset by low cost in the service area low.
Each of the labor components must be analyzed
separately. Discrepancies can balance out over
time so labor cost needs to be analyzed on a
weekly, daily or even hourly basis. Sometimes
labor costs can be too low and result in poor
service and potential loss of customers.
77- Quality needs to be considered as well as
quantity. A particular server may not serve as
many patrons as other servers but may have better
rapport with the customers and results in return
business. - How important is labor cost?
- By looking the following income statement we can
see labor's significance, - Income Statement Sales
78- However labor cost percents costs can sometimes
be misleading - Percentages, calculated on a weekly or monthly
basis, will not disclose daily discrepancies,
which can often balance each other out. - Menu price and employee wage rate changes in will
affect the relationship of sales to labor cost.
If management uses labor cost percents, they need
to recognize when these changes take place and
adjust the percent standard accordingly. - Labor cost percents can be distorted by a number
of underlying causes, such as sick or vacation
relief. - Comparing labor cost percents between restaurant
operations, which on the surface look similar,
can be misleading. Labor cost percents depends on
a number of factors menu pricing, the amount of
convenience foods used, buffet service, layout of
the restaurant, equipment utilized, local labor
market and services provided. Seemingly similar
operations can have vastly different cost
percents because of these circumstances.
79 80Reducing Labor-Related Costs
- If management finds that labor costs are too
high, problem areas must be identified and
corrective action must be taken. - Ways to reduce fixed labor costs include improve
productivity, increase sales volume, combine jobs
to eliminate fixed positions, and reduce wages
paid to the fixed payroll employees.
81Reducing Labor-Related Costs
- One way to increase productivity and reduce
labor-related expense is through employee
empowerment, involving employees in the
decision-making process. - Today, employees have come to realize there is
more to life than work. Management, unable to
always offer more money, has been forced to come
up with new incentives. - Employees are seeking job satisfaction in
addition to salaries or wages.
82Summary
- Labor Expense in the Hospitality Industry
- Assessing Labor Productivity
- Maintaining a Productive Workforce
- Measuring Current Labor Productivity
- Managing Payroll Costs
- Reducing Labor-Related Costs
- Next Week
- Cost-Volume-Profit
- Budget Exercise Review