Hire Right or Hire Twice!

“Although restaurant job growth shows no signs of slowing – 2015 will mark the fourth straight year with employment gains of at least 3.5 percent – there are indications that job vacancies are becoming more difficult to fill,” says the National Restaurant Association. Not just in New York, but the US as a whole, foodservice enterprises are struggling to attract and keep their team members. From the National Restaurant Association to the Washington Post, everyone is talking about the labor shortage. Thus, it’s more important than ever to ensure that you’re using the right strategies to attract the right talent. In this month’s Enterprise Insight, we will review three strategies that need to be in your toolbox and put to good use:

Define the Job

The purpose of detailing the job description is two fold: it helps target candidates and ensures a good fit. By really defining what the job is and communicating that, you can get attention from the right applicants. Obviously, you don’t want to hire just any “baker” if you specifically need someone for an artisanal, sourdough-driven bread program. Likewise, if the General Manager position for a café is really to be the assistant to the owner, but the job description doesn’t read as such, the candidate you interview won’t take the position.

Before posting any ads or interviewing any candidates, the best use of your time is to clearly and very specifically define the responsibilities and abilities required for the position. The more descriptive you can get here, the better for both you and the candidate.

Post Strategically

Once you’ve clearly defined the responsibilities and abilities the position requires, you can move on to advertising the opening through the proper channels. Just the way your description is targeted at a particular audience, you need to advertise in the appropriate channel to reach the right audience. Here are the strategies we use with our clients:

  1. Review your options for outlets from both a price and audience perspective, and post accordingly. For example, Good Food Jobs is a great place to advertise a Manager or Director position, but maybe not for cashiers.
  2. Post wide and far. You want to ensure that your opening gets as much awareness as possible if you want the best probability of get the best hire. Here are some outlets we use: Good Food Jobs, Culinary Agents, Harri, Culintro, Chef’s Connection, EasyPairings, Shiftgig, Poached, and Craigslist. Also, be sure to post to the career services of culinary schools across the country. Students in California may very well be looking for jobs in New York!
  3. There are two more outlets that are great, often over-looked options: your social media and existing team.
    1. People that admire, like, and/or respect your brand are definitely following you on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram. Use that to your advantage and post there.
    2. Secondly, everyone on your team knows people outside of your enterprise that work in the industry, and most people like working with their friends. Consider offering a referral bonus to your team members for bringing in candidates that get, accept, and stay in a position.

Ask the Right Questions

Getting the right people interested in your post and in your enterprise for the interview is only half the battle. Interviews can mislead both employee and employer despite all previous efforts, so it’s the most important step in the process to get right.

When it comes to interviewing, we advise our clients to take great care in executing the following items properly:

  1. Doing Multiple Interviews: it’s important that as many people on your team get to interact with the applicant as possible. At the first stage, this means having at least two people sit down and do a traditional interview with the candidate.
  2. Interview for Technical and Cultural Fit: An applicant might be technically proficient at everything the job requires—but is a total pain to work with! That will inevitably end in disaster. Likewise, someone that’s a great fit for the company but unfit for the position will cause just as much trouble. Thus, it’s important to screen candidates for what they can do and how they behave.
  3. Schedule a Trail: For both front and back of house positions, it’s important to invite the candidates into the enterprise for a trail or stage once they’ve passed the interview phase. This way, you can get a true-to-form example of how they work and how they interact—reinforcing or correcting your impressions from the interview.

The labor shortage is definitely real, and it’s definitely putting real pressure on employers. That’s why it’s more important than ever to keep your hiring practices focused and polished. Remember: define the job, post strategically, and ask the right questions.

Bringing Concepts to New York City

It’s not news that the New York City hospitality industry is unlike any other in the world. With over 40,000 restaurants, New York is a mecca for foodservice. While this presents a great opportunity for operators from elsewhere, it is also not to be taken lightly—the NYC market is competitive and volatile. As advisors, it is our responsibility to ensure your success. The following is a brief overview of the work we do to achieve that:

Fully Understand the Concept
This means going to the source. As advisors, it’s of utmost importance that we really comprehend the entire experience—from product, to packaging, to interior design, to the location, to the culture. We need to understand what makes your business work where it is in order to properly plan out how it will succeed in New York City. Whether you operate in San Francisco or Sao Paulo, we will come to you to do our due diligence. Last month we were in Mexico City! (Stay tuned for more details!)

Refine the Concept
Next, we identify where your concept fits in the current landscape—is it entirely new, or is there already direct competition? Based on this, we begin to refine the concept accordingly. Any adjustments we suggest are driven by what will generate revenue. We want to maintain the authenticity and soul of the enterprise but ensure that it resonates with the NYC market.

In the same vein, we want the concept to appeal to a similar demographic. New York City is not one large homogeneous pot; it is a stew of different neighborhoods with different characteristics. As such, a high-volume, fine-dining concept from Japan that is frequented by businesspeople with high disposable incomes won’t fare well in Red Hook. We’re going to make sure you open in the right place.

Plan Accordingly
Once we’ve defined the concept for New York, we can honestly develop a business plan. Now, we can put the vision on paper and tie it to financials and a timeline.

Capital and operating budgets come from cold, hard data. We analyze your menu, equipment needs, labor scheduling, sales mix, floor plan, goals and vision, like concepts, menu pricing, average check, traffic counts, and market rents to flesh out a realistic budget. A steakhouse requires drastically different equipment and seating types than a coffee shop.

New York City is known for moving quickly—but that’s not actually case with restaurant development. Finding the right space, getting Department of Buildings approval, getting ConsolidatedEdison to turn on your gas, getting a certificate of occupancy, sourcing the right ingredients and finding the right team, and getting a cooperative’s board to approve plans are just a few of the items that can dramatically slow down the pace of a project. We’re going to make sure you open on time and on budget.

No matter where you’re from or what your model, we’re ready to bring it to life in New York City. Our town is booming with opportunity for those properly prepared—we’re here to shepherd you to success.