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	<title>Best Restaurants Review &#187; Profits and Cost</title>
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		<title>Restaurant Profits and Food Cost &#8211; This Horse is Lame &#8211; Stop Beating Her, Brother</title>
		<link>http://www.BestRestaurantsReview.com/restaurant-profits-and-food-cost-this-horse-is-lame-stop-beating-her-brother/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Dec 2008 07:51:27 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Profits and Cost]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[As food prices keep rising, restaurant owners can&#8217;t help thinking about ways to deal with those eroding profit margins.
At times like this, it may seem like a good idea to shop around for better prices on your key ingredients. After all, what if you could:
* Negotiate better prices with your current supplier?
* Make several suppliers [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As food prices keep rising, restaurant owners can&#8217;t help thinking about ways to deal with those eroding profit margins.</p>
<p>At times like this, it may seem like a good idea to shop around for better prices on your key ingredients. After all, what if you could:</p>
<p>* Negotiate better prices with your current supplier?</p>
<p>* Make several suppliers bid for your business?</p>
<p>* Switch to new suppliers altogether?</p>
<p>This is a natural response. But you could be shooting yourself in the foot.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s how.</p>
<p>Trying to get a better price on chicken breasts can only get you so far. The benefit to your business may be short-lived and illusory: The only way food prices are going is up. And you could be trying to solve the problem from the wrong end.</p>
<p>Think about what you&#8217;d have to give away to get a better deal:</p>
<p>* Scenario #1: You sacrifice the food quality. If you are already a troubled restaurant, that could be the last nail in the coffin of your business.</p>
<p>* Scenario #2: You replace your old supplier with someone less reliable. Then one night you may leave more money on the table than you could have saved on the ingredients.</p>
<p>* Scenario #3: You throw yourself into heavy-duty negotiations that will suck up a lot of your time. You should know that your time has a high price tag attached to it and it may be better invested elsewhere.</p>
<p>Which brings us to the next point.</p>
<p>The fact that you can&#8217;t sustain the increase in food costs is a symptom of a bigger problem. If the menu is stale and unoptimized, if the concept is unexciting, and if you are doing a mediocre job of getting enough people to try your food, then don&#8217;t look for a bail-out from your supplier.</p>
<p>Sure, you shouldn&#8217;t be paying more than a fair market price for the ingredients. But you shouldn&#8217;t be paying much less either. If the basic economics of your business aren&#8217;t right, you&#8217;re fighting a losing battle against an enemy of your own creation.</p>
<p>That enemy&#8217;s name is &#8220;Poor Me&#8221; &#8211; and we&#8217;ve all met him at some point in our lives. He comes unannounced and turns a confident restaurant owner into a wimp who blames everything and everyone &#8211; government, weather, competition, economy, suppliers, even customers &#8211; for the lack of profits in his business. To have a fighting chance, you need to get out of the cost-saving penny-pinching nickel-and-diming mindset and start plugging chasmic holes in your marketing.</p>
<p>When you can get enough customers to come and gladly pay the prices your food is worth, then you&#8217;d better be ready to seize the night. And that&#8217;s the night when you need your supplier on your side.</p>
<p><a id="link_78" href="http://www.restaurantcommando.com/restaurant-business/" target="_new">Restaurant business is tricky</a> because of the thin profit margins. Even a small fluctuation in <a id="link_79" href="http://www.restaurantcommando.com/food-cost/" target="_new">food cost or labor cost</a> can make the difference between making money and losing it. Contact RestaurantCommando.com to create more profits in your business.</p>
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