Who Benefits From Reading
"Tips, The Server’s Guide To Bringing Home The
Bacon"?
If you are in the restaurant business, the answer is.
. .
YOU
Utilizing the information and recommendations found in this book
benefits everyone in the food service industry, and, as a bonus, it
ultimately benefits everyone who eats out.
The service practices are especially beneficial for the food server
who relies on tips as their primary source of income. This includes
virtually every food server in the country engaged in table or counter
service. All food servers have the desire to make more money. This book
pointedly, sometimes humorously, always emphatically, provides servers
with the tools necessary to make bigger tips.
Servers making bigger tips are more skilled, more efficient, and more
reliable employees. And employees exhibiting superior skill, efficiency,
and reliability, ultimately translate to a healthier bottom line for any
restaurant.
The following quote is from: "Foodservice Organizations, A
Managerial and Systems Approach" by Marian C. Spears, Ph.D., R.D.,
and, Allene G. Vaden, Ph.D., R.D. (Macmillan, New York /
Collier-Macmillan, London; pp. 67; 351; 585):
**** "The most important resources of an organization
are its human resources -- the people who provide the organizations
with their work, talent, drive, and commitment. Among the most
critical tasks of a manager is staffing: the recruitment, selection,
training, and development of people who will be most effective in
helping the organization meet its goals. Competent people at all
levels are required to ensure that appropriate goals are being
pursued and that activities proceed in such a way that these goals
are achieved.
Low productivity has long been considered characteristic of the
foodservice industry; the popularly accepted statistic is that its
productivity level is only 40 or 45 percent.
Utilizing the labor force more effectively is thus a major
challenge facing managers in all types of foodservice operations.
Because of the difficulty in some foodservice organizations in
scheduling formal training sessions, training is being integrated with
employee breaks or lunch periods. Videotapes, slide-tape programs, or
film strips may be made available for viewing by a single employee or
a group of employees in the lunch room or coffee break area. Another
alternative is to establish a small training center in an area of the
foodservice facility in which printed materials are provided to
encourage employees to devote idle times to reading and reviewing the
training materials." ****
"TIPS, THE SERVER'S GUIDE TO BRINGING HOME THE BACON"
celebrates the joy of learning and the satisfaction of success.
Public demand for improved treatment is the engine that drives the
service machine. Once that realization is acted upon, the result
becomes a simple equation: better service for the customer + better
money for the server = a better bottom line for the restaurant. It's a
bona fide win-win-win!
