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Jonny Cortizo

In my opinion.

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Systems: Worth it in the long run.

jonnycortizo's avatar jonnycortizo July 14, 2019

Where would you be if you didn’t have systems? And how good are the ones you’ve got? You know the ones I mean. Health and safety. Stock control. Disciplinary control. Garbage disposal. Customers loyalty. Staff training. Cash up and banking. Online purchasing or booking. Customer complaints. Staff incentives. Security. Marketing. Social media. Equipment maintenance. The list seems endless.

It doesn’t matter whether you are the All Blacks on defence, Scott Morrison dealing with a media frenzy, or Jose down at the local trattoria tackling stock control – without systems you’re going to be in trouble. It continues to amaze me how much money and time is spent on creating a beautiful drinking environment, or a catalog of superb wine, yet operational methods are often thought of last, or if at all.

I had the opportunity once to work in a multi-million dollar retreat and restaurant operation some years ago. No compromise on fit out, magical outlooks, a turbo till system, mind-boggling wine list, $60 plates. You could have eaten comfortably in the toilets. All the ingredients of a world-class operation. Yet there was no stock control on beverage or food, no waste control, no P+L, no budget, no marketing plan, no forward planning, almost no staff on contracts, no accounting system of any merit, and no plan for how to offer food and beverage services to the accommodation where some guests were paying up to $3,600 a night for the privilege.

How could it have been missed? Pretty easily, if you talk to realtors dealing in the sale of hospitality and liquor businesses. The ones that have systems sell for good prices; the others go for scrap. The cliche about the McDonald’s burger not being the best but having the best system of production holds true.

When we made the change from La Chinesca to Harley House Bar and Grill, we had to do it over one weekend spent creating spreadsheets, steps of service, reporting systems, weekly meeting agendas, a budget for the year, new logos, and methods of social media production. It was exhausting, but essential to put into place the protocols we needed to plan and run the business on a day-to-day nature. Four and a half years later, we know exactly where we are financially on a daily basis, what our costs are on a weekly basis, where the holes in the road and the speed bumps are in the year ahead, and have KPIs and reporting systems to deal with all unforeseen situations.

Ask yourself these questions:

  • Where is your first aid kit? Is it just a box with a couple of bandages and aspirin, or is it something you can offer to a customer who has fallen and injured themselves severely?
  • Does your company have a policy to deal with sexual harassment? The hospitality is well overdue for being brought into line with other industries and the days of sexual innuendo and inappropriate touching are long gone.
  • Does your stock control system tell you what you should have made as well as what you did make? Are you using this facility? It’s all very well sitting on 30% cost of sale, but should you be on 27%?
  • Could your staff really deal with a fire emergency? Or do you continue to use the back passage to store excess stock or excess rubbish?
  • Have your staff been trained to deal with how to handle a hold-up?
  • Do you have a backup if your internet system goes down?

I have to be honest, sometimes I can’t give the right answer to some of these. If you haven’t addressed these questions it’s time to wise-up. It only takes one unforeseen problem that isn’t dealt with properly to damage reputation and trading results. This could be anything from a bad online review or red wine spilt on a white dress.

Often it is difficult to step outside the business and be objective about how good an organisation you really have. This is either through lack of time or interest, and therein lies the problem. Systems aren’t terribly glamorous, they are not half as much fun as doing the cooking or pouring the drinkies. I personally love dissecting a P+L spreadsheet, but ask me to create one and you’re not going to like my answer. I use one Excel document that I’ve taken with me from venue to venue that gives me everything I need to know about the previous seven days of trading. It also took me a whole week to create, but is probably the most valuable tool I have in the whole venue.

Chefs hate doing stock control and are often allowed to get away without doing it. I call those guys cooks, not chefs. Anyone can get a great reputation with the public and critics if they put food out at 50% cost, then leave before the restaurant goes bust. Systems take time to create, implement, and maintain. No wonder that first aid kit remains empty. It’s such a chore to keep it full.

“Systems help staff by setting boundaries that can’t be crossed,” my old boss, Luke Dallow, owner of Salsa in Auckland. “They make life easier and force you to adhere to them. They also save you money by setting par levels, you can monitor your stock and purchasing and over-ordering becomes a thing of the past. Managers have to be able to wear many hats, and often staff are promoted to management without proper training or backup. A great rugby player will not necessarily make a good coach, so why should an excellent waiter make a suitable GM? Whether it’s filling in an order docket, handling a phone enquiry, or clearing a table, it should always been done the same way so that they rest of the staff can rely on the fact it’s being done properly.” Systems create a support network for even the greenest of managers or owners.

Tale a look at Chin Chin, Lucy Lui, Rice Paper Scissors, Congress, the Hanoi Hannahs. All well established, respected businesses that give a consistently excellent delivery of service. How do they do this? At Hawker Hall for example, the bar tenders do 3 food running shifts before they’re even allowed to make a drink. This helps them to understand the food menu and how table services operates. I was fascinated by the service I received in London during a recent trip at the Ledbury, one of the top 50 restaurants in the world. Not only was the service in this Michelin-starred dining room immaculate, it was also friendly and disarming and covered every base. I was asked about my dietary requirements, but also if I’d been to the restaurant before, where I was from, and how long I was staying in the city. When I asked if they could charge my phone, they bought out a beautiful battery pack rather than take it away.

When I asked the manager, Darren McHugh, if they were just being nice to me, he explained that it was part of their service to ask these questions to make the customers feel as welcome as possible, and that they kept track that each of these interactions had taken place for each table. So, not only did I have an amazing meal, I felt valued and not just another bum on seat which made the occasion so special. I go there every time I visit the city.

At a recent trip to Hanoi Hannah, even though it was crazy busy and I was in a massive hurry, the staff were still able to take the time to follow the steps of service, explain the menu to me, take note of my time restraint, offer me appropriate suggestions of fast items, and get me in and out in half an hour. No drama. No fuss. It’s just what they do. As a seasoned hospitality operator, I can tell on walking into a venue whether the shift is under control in about 15 seconds. Even the busiest places like Mr Miyagi or Rice Paper Scissors are set up to handle even the biggest tsunami of customers with grace and aplomb.

At the Hard Rock Cafe, we talked about “processing the customer like a sausage” so that each person that comes through the place gets an identical experience, the same reference points, is lead in the same direction, and has the same exposure to the memorabilia and merchandise stand. When I worked for HMC during the time when they were operating pubs in Victoria in the early 2000’s, the calendar of events for the year was created 12 months in advance at all times to give the maximum amount of time to create, prepare and implement promotional opportunities. No last minute Valentine’s Day menus or surprises. Everything had a build-up time, sales target, and a cost structure.

My recurring message is to treat your business as a business, rather than as a vocation or something you fell into because it seemed like a good idea. Just because it can be remarkably cheap to get into the market by picking up someone else’s failure for a song, it doesn’t mean you shouldn’t think with a corporate mentality. I will deal with the dangers of being over-passionate and over-bottom line focused in another article. And also the fact that just because you built it, doesn’t mean they’ll come. How many years did it take Chris Lucas to find the Sydney location for the new Chin Chin? A loooooong time.

I remember when the Horse and Trap in Mount Eden in Auckland was taken over by a guy called John Lincoln. He had a corporate background and turned a failing, grungy pub into a slick, mature drinking establishment with good food, serious coffee and a mission statement. He identified key stakeholders, created business plans, identified new markets, held weekly management meetings, and created a new attitude to service and food, and hey presto – a very professional and successful operation was created. No prior hospitality experience, just well used systems to get the best results possible.

So where do you start? For the front of house or retail area, create a staff manual. Something everyone can understand and relate to. Then walk staff through it. Personally. Give them tests to make sure they know what the address of the venue is, where the best parking is to be found, what the phone number of the venue is. The manual doesn’t have to be a book, but it does need to present a professional image to the new staff member. Look at Sand Hill Road Group. They haven’t built one of the most successful pub groups in Victoria by not focusing aggressively on the importance of hiring, training, and keeping staff engaged. I have yet to meet a staff member who doesn’t love working for the company. You have to believe in your message.

A new employee pack complete with all the relevant forms and contracts included should be standard. When completed, this goes into the staff member’s file where all relevant documents are kept regarding this employee. (One big tip here – take notes of every meeting, no matter how short, you’ve had each staff member. You won’t regret it). The manual explains the company mission statement, policies on misconduct, security, health and safety, sexual harassment, misuse of company property, etc, etc. It only when things go wrong that you realise you have left many i’s un-dotted. (Don’t leave anything to chance, and do not rush staff hiring or firing. You will regret it).

Appraisals are things I avoid, but find so interesting to take part in. Sometimes the truth hurts, especially if it is coming out of your own mouth. I realise I need to do these more often with my team, no matter how painful it may be. Or pleasurable!

Have purchasing sheets for ordering, accounting systems for waste, broken stock items and promotional activity. Information from tills and computers is worthless if its integrity cannot be trusted. Check each delivery invoice for price differences and mistakes. Human error does happen, and if not picked up on, can cost you a fortune. On a recent audit of my beverage stock, I realised I was selling a top end tequila almost at cost. Oops.

Health and safety requirements are there for a reason, and that 30-year old fire extinguisher won’t cut it with putting out a flame, or saving your insurance claim. It may mean that you have to take time out of the day-to-day operations of the business, but it will have to be done. Too many of us are working in the business, and not working on it, and each week that goes by without systems in place could be the one that kills your business.

Recently, I re-organised my weekly schedule to spend 2 days purely on operational and strategic matters. I may not even go the the venue to avoid distractions and interruptions.  Once you get the work done, it will so much easier to run your business better. I now have more time to spend on the front line serving customers. Like a perfect recipe, once a procedure is created it just has to be replicated again and again, which isn’t always easy, but the hardest part is putting the system jigsaw together in the first place. Once this is completed though, the peace of mind it will give you will be well worth it in the long run.

  • Work

Spirit Lifter or Killjoy?

jonnycortizo's avatar jonnycortizo February 14, 2018

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Every workplace has them. The Spiritlifters and the Killjoys. The Cheeryleaders and the Fun police. The Piglets and the Eeyores. The Ernies and the Berts. The fellow employees that make you smile when they walk in, the ones you want to ask you how you are doing, find out what they have been up to, share a moment with, feel a connection with. The Spiritlifters. Then there are the Killjoys. The ones whose mood you won’t know until you ask them, who create dread when they walk in, the ones who wait ten seconds before answering your cheery hello, often with a sigh and a sorry voice. The ones who prick that joy balloon of yours with a point sharp enough to pierce any armour. Irresistible, unavoidable, bringing you down to their level with a descent so fast you can even feel yourself deflating. And coming down to their level.

I like to think of myself as a Spiritlifter. I start each day anew, with the angry words with the bartender from the previous night a distant memory, optimistic and looking forward to the day ahead and the surprises it may bring. One staff member down? No problem- more tips for us! Fully booked of old ladies for the discounted ballet matinee? Fine, let me bring some happiness to their day, have a laugh with them, make them feel noticed for a change, not reviled. Head Chef in a crappy mood? I’ll just sell that special of his that no one can pronounce. Manager worried about sales? That’s why he’s paid the big bucks. Not my section.

I’m not afraid of doing a silly dance, skip through the restaurant or let myself be ridiculed by the other staff if it raises the morale. I bring some decent music for set up for a change, tell the supervisor that her new hairdo is great (even though she hates it), throw donuts at the kitchen brigade, make them coffee. Lend CD’s to the bartender, compliment the junior waitress on doing a good job, ask the sommelier a question about the Barolo he has sourced so carefully, get deliberately caught doing my hair in the front door reflection, calm down the new waiter after he stuffed up his first big order, clean up the mess from the children on table 12. I do this for a reason.

It was not always this way. I used to be a Killjoy. Buzzkiller, First Class. A senior employee or manager with perfectionist tendencies so stringent that even I couldn’t reach them. Someone who would stew on the previous night’s cross words during my way to work the next day. Get myself into such a frenzy that upon entering the restaurant, I would ignore all salutations, go upstairs, get changed and then scowl my way through the shift, picking on every micro detail, missing the big picture completely. I would make waitresses cry, drive bartenders to resignation, shatter confidences, all in the drive to achieve my perception of standard, or to make my presence felt. The visible financial success of the businesses was testament to my proven ability to run them. Forget about the morale of the staff. I was a great manager, right? Let’s not about what I was like as an owner. That is a different confession…..

Did you want to play your new mix CD? No chance. New cocktail idea? That’s not necessary, I’ve got it covered. A Latin American Week? Are you kidding? I’m in charge of marketing! You are late/your sales are low. No, you can’t have the night off for that concert. An advance on your wages? Those are not regulation jeans- tip deduction! Get the picture. After a while, I noticed that no-one was asking for extra shifts, or hanging around for a knock-off drink, or going out of the way to do anything more than their job. I thought it was their problem, not mine.

As a manager and an owner, there comes a point in your career that you realise that your staff do not work at your place for you, or your wages. They do the work because of the other employees they get to do it with. You may have their respect, they may even kind of like you, but otherwise you are an irrelevance. The little contact, the better, let’s just stay out of each others’ way. The real enjoyment comes from the fun they can have from the rest of the gang. Don’t get me wrong, there are great managers out there, I have worked for some. But they know the importance of the team.

This gang doesn’t include the Killjoys who are not managers. The men and women who have problems they don’t leave at home. Those that look at their phones after work when everyone else is laughing at Jonny and his short-sightedness. The sick cat, the unfaithful boyfriend, the cold sore, the loss at the soccer game, the sold out concert they couldn’t get tickets to, the weather, the visiting mother, the workload of school, the hangover, the drug comedown. Everyone’s got something. And they let you know.

The ones who do the least to set up yet are the first to ask to leave early. The ones who are jealous of your ability to be a tip magnet, even though you have the worst section. They do not use your name when talking to you, nor assist you when you ask for help, even though you have been carrying them all day, covering their behinds. Questions are answered by one minute manager responses, along the lines of “It’s on the run sheet.”, “Weren’t you at the briefing?” or my favourite-“How long have you worked here?” The martyrs, who tut when you sit down for your deserved meal break, look at their watch when you walk in on time, or redo the sweeping you just did, rather than let you know you missed a spot. With a grin, or a nudge as they give you the broom back.

I used to be one of them. Jack ass. Sometimes I still am, despite my best intentions. But two things happened to me, some years ago. My workmate Rex once gave me a pair of tweezers when I arrived in a particularly dramatic mood and told me to get the bug out of my arse, and that stopped me dead in my tracks. Then strangely I got very, very sick soon after. I was hospitalised. And no one from work came to see me. Not even my boss. That was when I realised what a prick I had become. And it hurt. A lot. When I eventually returned to work, humbled and humiliated, I asked for a lesser role. I didn’t want to be a manager anymore. I wanted to be part of the team that got led by someone else. I could then explain the reasons for hard management decisions to the other staff, and give feedback to the powers that be about the reaction to those decisions. I could be a team member. I made it my job to support the new staff, share my knowledge, praise, praise, praise and only then give constructive criticism. Soon I was getting invited to social events, patted on the back, and I became a mate. If I had to be, I was a nice prick.

Now you may think that this is the reason why I try to be a Spiritlifter. Not so. It is because I cannot do it all the time. Maybe my heart is broken, or my cat has died, or I someone told me the ending of the TV show I’ve been following for years. Whatever the reason, sometimes I need others to be Spiritlifters for me. I can’t do it every day. So if we all try to make others smile, there will always be enough of us to carry the sad ones amongst us. Then hopefully, the Buzzkillers will either realise that they are having no effect and will try to change, or will realise that they have to leave the job to find a more appreciative audience.

Here are some tips for Spiritlifters and Buzzkillers alike

  • Before you speak, think about what you want to say and how it will be heard. Is the message clear, positive and non-confrontational? If not, make it so it is
  • Give criticism at the end of a shift, not during. After some genuine praise.
  • Leave your troubles behind, and if you can’t, let your manager know. They can help by taking pressure off you, and explain on your behalf to others
  • Perfectionists are robbed of happiness by their own high standards. As long as the customer expectation is exceeded, everything else can be worked on if necessary
  • Celebrate the wins. If staff do a great job, TELL THEM. This includes other staff members. Isn’t praise from a peer the highest accolade? When was the last time you were told you did a great job, or told someone else?
  • Recognise that everyone makes a contribution. ALWAYS say goodnight to the pot wash, the cleaners and the bussies
  • Always say hello to everyone when you turn up at work. Everyone. Even the ones who hate you. THEY HATE THAT!
  • Have compassion for the Killjoy. Maybe you can show them that their way is not the best, by just been an annoyingly happy bugger
  • Let the Killjoy realise they are having no effect. Anyone got any tweezers?
  • Start your shift at least ten minutes early. The arrival of the cavalry can raise the spirits of any flogged FOH team, especially when it is unexpected
  • Be genuinely interested in others. Conversely, try to be interesting yourself. We work with some of the most talented people alive. Be one of them
  • Try to see things through the others. Managers have a crappy job, often unrecognised. Tell them when they are doing a great job. Watch them beam with an amazed smile
  • Realise the pressure you create when you screw up an order, both in the kitchen or bar. Be caring enough about your job that further punishment is unnecessary as you are going to beat yourself to a pulp anyway when you get home
  • No one wants to be a Killjoy. Not really. But like all abusive relationships, if they are not aware of their behaviour or called on it, don’t expect change. And even if they are made aware, they may not know how to change. I have personal experience of this
  • Not everyone cares as much as you do. Accept it. That doesn’t mean they are not as good as you. All teams need defenders and star attackers. Recognise the contribution of the less glamorous members of the team. Without a pot wash or bussy doing their job well, no food or drinks can go anywhere
  • Managing is hard, unrecognised and hard to quantify. Ask for impartial advice or criticism from staff you trust. See how well/ badly you are coming across. You may be surprised!
  • Crack bad jokes, buy pastries for everyone, remember birthdays, celebrate wins, dance badly, sing out of tune, and go to the opening of the Maitr’d’s photography exhibition with the rest of the crew. Above all BE HAPPY. Most of the time. Your fellow Spiritlifters will get you smiling again, if you let them

Jonny Cortizo

 

 

 

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