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home | Tip of the Week | 204 - 15 Ways to Measures Staff Cost . . .
 




#204 - 15 Ways to Measures Staff Costs and Productivity

Labour cost and performance is everyone's big issue.

You need figures that are easy to find, easy to interpret, and make sense to the people they affect. Managers need them to benchmark rostering and hiring decisions. Staff need to understand the productivity that's expected, and how they contribute to the business.

These figures are a small selection from the new resource:
KPI's to Measure Staff Costs, Productivity and Workforce Quality.

Key Figures on your Weekly Sales & Costs Dashboard

  • Total cost of labour - wages plus all on-costs. Some are not paid at the same time as wages, but are still a part of the weekly cost eg workers compensation premiums. Generally, your payroll package will not produce all these figures.

  • Labour cost per hour: how much is it costing for each hour you are open?

  • Fixed and variable wage costs: the staff you must have, and those you can call in as needed. For a large business, a flexible and permanent workforce gives the greatest productivity, but it needs work to create the structure. The old days of turning on and off the supply of workers, like a tap, are almost over.

  • Number of hours worked: total hours, and measured by department.

  • Number of staff: full-time, part-time and casual/hourly staff. Generally, we want fewer people working more hours -- what's your ideal?

  • Value of accrued annual leave: the cost that's 'waiting in the wings'.

  • Value of accrued tax deductions: important for your cash-flow planning.

  • Roster Coster is an excellent way to work out in advance the cost of the weekly wage bill - it should be completed before the schedule is placed on display.

Measuring Productivity

  • Staff output per hour: what do you achieve? eg 2 sandwich staff should be able to handle 100 customers over 2 hours. Bar staff should be able to do $1000 of sales per hour in the peak period, or 5 waiters look after 100 customers in a restaurant shift [examples].

  • Speed of staff in completing tasks: how long should it take a barista to make 4 lattes and 2 espressos? How long does it take an efficient housekeeper to make up a room, or a function waiter to set up a banquet of 100 people? Time to set some measurable standards.

  • Labour costs as % of total sales, and labour cost per customer or guest: two ways of looking at the same figures. Generally, the second looks more frightening -- labour at 32% or costing $9.20 for each customer.

  • Labour cost as % of each department's sales: kitchen, bar, restaurant, functions etc. It's essential to give each department feedback on their performance and roster effectiveness.

  • Labour cost compared to budget or forecasts for each department: the variation shown as a gross figure and as a %.

  • What is the ROI for labour-saving equipment? Now's the time to have another look at the Return on Investment calculator.

  • Number and source of complaints: if work is rushed and errors increase, output falls and costs rise.

These figures are a small selection from the new resource:
KPI's to Measure Staff Costs, Productivity and Workforce Quality.


A Recession-Proof Business needs careful management of staff costs and productivity. Profitable Hospitality 1st Class Members have access to the best Staff Management Resources. Backed up by a world-class Download Center with more than 750 templates, forms and profit calculators.

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JOIN NOW for access anytime 24/7. If you prefer us to invoice you, just fax back this Form.


2008 Training Calendar

See the 2008 Training Calendar with new action workshops:

Online Marketing Workshop - June 11, June 17 (one evening)
Profitable Functions Workshop - Sydney 7 May, Caloundra 5 August
Function Supervisors 2 Day Bootcamp - Sydney 24-25 June, Melbourne 8-9 July

New: Catering Profit Booster - Sydney 8 May, Caloundra 6 August

New: Staff Recruitment & Retention Summit for Clubs - Sydney 18 June, Brisbane 15 July

Starting a Cafe or Restaurant Workshop - Sydney 3 and 31 May, June 14

With warm regards -

  

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·  #203 - Marketing to Beat the Recession: Start Here
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·  #200 - How to Compete With Aggressive Discounts
·  #199 - Rules for Staff: When is Swearing OK or Not?
·  #198 - Maintaining Sales When Customer Numbers Fall
·  #197 - Reducing the Drama of Staff Resignations
·  #196 - Two fast ways to boost Menu revenue
·  #195 - How to Manage the Kitchen If You're Not a Chef
·  #194 - VIDEO: A Better Way to Look at Profit Improvement
·  #193 - Teaching Managers How to Give Critical Feedback to Staff
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