Restaurant Take Out Containers: Leveraging Two Birds With One Take Out Container

Line drawing of a take out containerRecently there was an article on Eater. “Why not bring takeout containers to restaurants?” and I thought, wow this is such a great idea (not rocket science obviously) but I should start doing this. What a great way to save the environment and, by the way, save our favorite restaurants a few bucks in the bargain.

 

Which, of course, led to the inevitable 2 AM neurodivergent thought, OH!, how can a restaurant leverage this? There must be restaurants doing this already, and of course, there were and there are. Restaurants give discounts to diners who bring their own dishes (2019) and many more. One thing that I noticed though about the restaurants and other food service operations that offered this is there didn’t seem to be a ton of thought into “targeted” getting people back in the door. Some offered discounts off of a future meal, some off of a current meal, some free refills (for beverages) but not much real upselling.

 

From a customer funnel point of view, if you want to think about getting repeat customers back in the door, what’s the incentive to get them back in PLUS the incentive to spend more money? 

 

I’d love to see a restaurant out there (and maybe there is, let me know!) who would offer the incentive “BYOC (Bring Your Own Container)” and get a voucher/coupon for a free coffee or tea and our signature dessert.

 

Why that? Coffee or tea doesn’t cost most to provide and if you created the incentive wisely a signature dessert could cost a few dollars or less to make. Tiramisu is cheap to make, so is a scoop of homemade (or a good prepared) mousse with some flavored whipped cream to zip it up. Dessert has a much higher profit margin on it typically than an entrée or appetizer.

 

If you just give them a discount or small incentive, it doesn’t do much for repeats, it can help, but what’s the upsell part of it?

 

If you get them to come in and get drinks, maybe an appetizer and a couple of entrees (make the must order an entrée as part of the small print on the coupon), it’s an incentive to get people in the door and spent money first.

 

Even if it’s a couple who come in regularly and they bring two takeout containers, give them two vouchers. If you look at it from the perspective of how is any different from giving them a $10 off coupon their next meal, it is different because your incentive is to give them something for free but they have to spend money first. Even without a couple ordering appetizers, if a couple’s tab is a couple of entrees (mid-priced restaurant average) 17.99 X 2, plus a couple of soft drinks (up the take if it’s beer or wine) 2.50 X 2, and the regular check average is $50.00 and you just “gave away” $3.50 in product, when it boils down to it that’s pretty inexpensive marketing. If your price points for your menu items are higher, the ratios are even better.

 

You actually get three birds with this: promoting eco-friendly practices, saving money on your own to go containers and getting people in the door for repeat dining. Even if you encourage regulars to give them to others, that’s not a bad thing, it increases brand awareness and you get the same result; you get more people in the door and they order the big-ticket items like entrees (and if your waitstaff is good at the in-person upsell, high profitably drinks).

 

If you are going to try any incentives like this, make sure they contribute to your bottom line.

 

I’ve seen too many restaurant coupons that just give a discount with no stipulations on use or no incentive to get people to buy more.

 

So if you create an initiative to bring in customers, track through what you get out of it. Is it a onetime sale, something that will get people to come in many times or something that will make people spend more money because of the incentive itself?

 

There were a couple of good articles I came across in searching for restaurants that did have to go container incentives that I think would be worth a read.

How can restaurants take advantage of sustainable packaging?

What Are Reusable Food Container Programs?

Book Cover: Finding a Location for your restaurant

 

By the way, my first book just got released on Amazon this weekend in Paperback and on Kindle! Check it out! Finding a Location for your Restaurant: How to Scout the Perfect Location for your Dream of Opening a Restaurant or other Hospitality Business.

Do you really want to own a restaurant? Assessment quizzes

Line drawing of a table and chairs in a restaurantThere are three main types of people who want to open a restaurant.

 

Those who have been in the industry, usually chefs and cooks (but not always, sometimes it’s front of the house people), those who grew up in a restaurant environment, (i.e. parents or other family members owned or ran a restaurant), and the folks who have fallen in love with the “idea” of owning their own restaurant.

 

All of them have, and can run and own a successful restaurant, but I have found in 40 years of working in and with the hospitality restaurant that’s it the first two types that have better success and better success long term with running a restaurant.

 

I’ll be blunt and I am really not trying to talk people out of owning a restaurant, but to be realistic about what someone is getting into if they have never worked in a commercial food service establishment before.

 

For fans of, “The Bear” TV series while it has many realistic parts to it for at least the back of the house, apart from some glaring errors, (pretty much everyone in the industry knows what ServSafe is, whether or not your state requires it). IMO It’s still not a great representation of actually “owning” a restaurant and ALL that it entails. I think it hits the marks pretty high on the stress, the dynamics and many other things that happen in real life in a kitchen though and it’s worth a watch if you want to open a restaurant and not had ANY prior experience. But it still doesn’t cover many of the realities of the actual operations of a real restaurant, front of the house, back of the house, the day-to-day operations, the financials and the struggles with financials on a constant basis, checking in orders, employee theft, doing inventory on a frequent basis, dealing with difficult customers both online and off literally every day, dealing with vendors, scheduling staff, dealing with seasonal or economic slowdowns, the marketing online and offline, etc. etc. etc……………

 

While there have been some terrific food movies out there, mainly from the kitchen perspective, I have yet to see a restaurant movie that really truly reflects REAL life running a restaurant and I suspect it’s because no one “really” wants to see what’s behind the scenes on a real day-to-day basis.

 

It’s scary how much work, how much stress, and how much slog an owner has to get through daily, especially if they are a hands-on owner. Many chefs who become chef owners spend more time managing and dealing with day-to-day problems than cooking and I had several jobs before I got out of the business where I spent more time pushing paper than behind the line. Not fun, take my word for it. My passion is food and while I love excel spreadsheets, I got into the food business because I loved to cook, not because I wanted to become an accountant.

 

My first book is coming out shortly (Finding a Location for Your Restaurant) and with that I created a series of real life or lets call them, “lets get a reality check”, quizzes, so that people thinking about owning and operating a restaurant (regardless of whether they have experience in a restaurant industry or not) can get an idea of what they know, they need to know and what they WILL run into as an owner or lessee of a restaurant property.

 

I want to thank several hundred of my friends (both from the industry and from many other walks of life in other industries) for being guinea pigs to test these and get a baseline for the scoring.

 

Again, these quizzes are not meant to discourage people from wanting to run their own restaurant, but rather to provide some insight into the reality of it and many of the things that you, as an owner, WILL encounter.

 

I mention this in my book, but it bears mentioning here. Back in the mid 1990’s I considered buying and running a restaurant and in hindsight, I am so very, very, VERY glad I did not. It would have failed in under a year. With all that I know now, I look back at that person, who had a lot of cooking experience and some management experience and I can snark at myself honestly and say, “oh you foolish, foolish child”. because I had no clue at all about what running and owning a restaurant and doing it successfully really entailed.

 

Interested in trying the quizzes out?