Tag Archives: bartender

The New Tips For Improving Your Tips Index

I truly want Tips For Improving Your Tips to become the web’s premeir site for server knowledge and the skills that help server’s increase their income.  This site is filled with over 100 posts that help further that goal.  This also means that can be a bit daunting to read.  In order to make it easier to navigate, I have created this handy index to help you find the information you need quickly.  I will continue to update this index, but the best way to stay up to date on the information posted on this blog is to become a fan on facebook or follow the blog on Twitter ( @tips4tips ).

The Rules of Serving

The Rules: Rules 1-10

The Rules of Serving: Rules One and Two

The Rules of Serving: Rule Three

The Rules of Serving: Rule Four

The Rules of Serving: Rule Five

The Rules of Serving: Rule Six

The Rules of Serving: Rule Seven

The Rules of Serving: Rule Eight

The Rules of Serving: Rule Nine

The Rules of Serving: Rule Ten

Selling As A Server

The Most Important Phrase You Are Not Using

Using Words That Sell

Selling Away and Selling Up

I Make A Mean Cherry Limeade

Wine Descriptions That Sell

Three Ways to Describe Dishes

In Defense of Selling as a Server (Part One)

In Defense of Selling as a Server (Part Two)

In Defense of Selling as a Server (Part Three)

How To Sell More Desserts

How To Sell The Bottle

Selling, Upselling, and Integrity

The Lost Art Of Suggestive Selling

Bringing It All Together

How To Sell The “Add On”

Three Ways to Describe Dishes

Interacting with Guests

The Mistake and The Letter

Spotting The Complaint

How To Make Hostile Guests Love You (Part One)

How To Make Hostile Guests Love You (Part Two)

How To Make Hostile Guests Love You (Part Three)

Building and Maintaining Rapport

Creating Regulars

One Liners For Servers

Humorous Complaint Responses

Skills of a Server

Foil To-Go: The Swan

Foil To Go: The Shark

Five More Simple Tricks

Making Tips on To-Go Orders

Learning Restaurant Spanish (Nouns)

How To Serve A Bottle Of Wine

Coupons, Discounts, and How to Deal

Memorizing Orders

How To Memorize Orders

The Murphy Table

Life As A Server

Budgeting for Servers

Job Hunting: The Do’s and Don’ts

Love and Greed

Resumes For Servers

What I Use

Server Safety Tips

Job Hunting: Questions To Ask

Avoiding The Write-Up

Remembering Labor on Labor Day

The Disadvantages of Set Schedules

The Advantages of Set Schedules

Serving Sober

What Goes Around

Please Remain Calm

Have You Done Your Rollups?

Server Knowledge

Five Simple Tricks

Five More Simple Tricks

Learning Restaurant Spanish (Nouns)

The Crazy Waiter Does It Again

Another Five Simple Tricks

The Best of Tips For Improving Your Tips

Inspiration and Motivation

Making a Difference

What I Use

Reasons to be Optimistic

Kicking the Cat

The Meaning of Hospitality

About Serving

Is Running Hot Food Always The Priority?

Seeing Your Restaurant Again For The First Time

A Bit of Publicity and the Response

Fighting For The Server Wage

A Few More Thoughts On Emmer

Refuting Emmer’s Myths

10 Reasons Why Serving Is Not Like Your Job

Recommended Reading 11/1

Server Safety Tips

Recommended Reading 11/8

The Economics of Tipping

A World Without Tips

Critiquing The Server

We Cannot Be Trusted?

The Truth About Credit Card Theft In Restaurants

Creating A Server Community

Is The Career Server An Endangered Species?

Weekly Skills focus

Skills Focus: Making Recommendations

Skills Focus: Describing Dishes

Skills Focus: Words That Sell

Skills Focus: Spotting The Complaint

Skills Focus: Building And Maintaining Rapport

Skill Focus: Creating Regulars

Skill Focus: Don’t Be “The Server”

Skill Focus: Selling As A Server

About

About The Author

About The Hospitality Formula Network

About Hospitality Formula Consulting

About Tips²: Tips For Improving Your Tips

Tips2: Tips For Improving Your Tips is the new book from the author of The Hospitality Formula Network. It contains the 52 essential skills of the exceptional server. This book teaches the philosophy to turn average service into an exceptional guest experience that will rapidly increase your tips. This book shows how you can provide better customer service and dramatically improve your tips. Enter the coupon code “squared” to receive 20% off your copy today.

The Economics of Tipping

A reminder for all of us.

I still occasionally get the guest who will say, “I can buy this wine for half this price at the store.”  Which is true, but it doesn’t come with a staff to serve it and a crew of chefs ready to cook you an incredible meal from a fully stocked kitchen.  I wonder if the same people have ever priced grapes at the grocery store.  If they want to get really serious about cutting out the mark up, that would be an even cheaper place to start.  Better yet, if they buy seeded grapes they could plant the seeds and never have to pay for a bottle of wine again.

Most of you understand the absurdity of this logic.  Those who do not understand have already stopped reading to go buy grapes.  At each step along the process of making the bottle of wine the cost of goods and service, along with a healthy profit margin, are passed along to the next stage.  From grape to cellar, farmers, vintners, bottlers, distributors, and restaurants all add to the price of the bottle in advance.  There is one exception to this rule.  The person who opens the bottle and pours it actually makes that wine less expensive.  At the most basic level, the person who serves the wine pays for part of the bottle for you.

The reason for this is that the person who pours the wine is paid far less than minimum wage.  In 44 states the wage for servers is well below the federal minimum wage.  In some cases it is as low as $2.13 an hour, but generally it is between $3.00-$4.00/ hour.  State and federal law allow this because servers are expected by the government to receive tips.  Every other person involved in the production of the wine took his or her salary in advance.  The server allows you to determine it.  They reduce the cost even more by agreeing to pay the person who set up the table, the bartender who retrieved the wine, and the person who cleans up the table after you leave.  This occurs whether you tip them or not.

This is not just true of wine, but of the food you order.  If restaurant were required to make up the difference between what servers are now paid and the minimum wage, the cost would be passed directly to the consumer.  The server pays for the fries you eat with your burger.  Over the course of all the guests a waiter serves during the course of an evening it would not take much to get them up to minimum wage, but that is probably not in your best interest either.

The 14 year old girl with multiple facial piercings and a three month baby bump that hands you your meal at the drive thru is probably not who you want serving you for two hours during your grandparent’s 50th anniversary dinner.  Even she makes a couple dollars over minimum wage.  To attract the caliber of server you would want to have serving you on your special occasions would cost a considerable amount per hour.  If you paid that rate up front with the price of your meal, it would tack a great deal more onto your check.  It would also not provide motivation for a server to work quickly or smile as your child grinds saltines into the floor beneath them.

It is not just the service that you see which would have to be paid for either.  Your server showed up hours before you arrived to prepare.  A server who spent an hour cutting a case of lemons before you arrived so you could have the lemon in your water.  A server carried a heavy rack of glasses out of the dishroom to get that water to you faster and then got a five pound bucket of ice out of the machine to keep your water cold.  They also have been by more times than you have even noticed with a pitcher to keep it full.  A server cut the bread you eat before your meal.  They also scooped the butter you spread on it.  A server spent five minutes polishing the glasses your wine is poured in to make sure there were no watermarks.  When you complete your meal, there is no need to clean up after yourself.  The server who just picked up their uniform from the dry cleaners will be crawling under your booth to clean everything before the next table arrives.  No matter what percent you tip, none of this appears on your check.

While they are taking care of you they are serving other tables as well.  They are trying to keep calm the table to your left that doesn’t understand why their well done has taken eight minutes already and is still not ready.  They are answering the same question for each person at the table to your right.  They are trying to not think about the lovely people who sat at your table before you who did not feel tipping was required.  They are getting waved down by other server’s tables.  They have been there since 10:30 and will be there until the clock says 10:30 again.  They will be right back with your hot tea.

Your server does all of this in the hope that you will have a great experience.  They grin and bear it through all of the rotten guests hoping that someone will appreciate the service of a professional.  They hope that at the end of the meal you will show your appreciation in the form of a tip.  They hope that after they have paid the bartenders, bussers, and food runners out of their tips that there is enough left over after their bills for them to be able to sit down do a decent meal at whatever restaurant is still open.  Regardless of the quality of service they receive, they will tip well after that meal.  They understand.

Tips2: Tips For Improving Your Tips is the new book from the author of The Hospitality Formula Network.  It contains the 52 essential skills of the exceptional server.  This book teaches the philosophy to turn average service into an exceptional guest experience that will rapidly increase your tips.  This book shows how you can provide better customer service and dramatically improve your tips.  Enter the coupon code “squared” to receive 20% off your copy today.

Related Posts From This Blog:

10 Reasons Why Serving Is Not Like Your Job

Cost vs Profit

Fighting For The Server Wage

The Evolution of Free Bread

The Greatest Customer Complaint Response Ever

Awkward Moments

The Economics of Tipping

A reminder for all of us.

I still occasionally get the guest who will say, “I can buy this wine for half this price at the store.”  Which is true, but it doesn’t come with a staff to serve it and a crew of chefs ready to cook you an incredible meal from a fully stocked kitchen.  I wonder if the same people have ever priced grapes at the grocery store.  If they want to get really serious about cutting out the mark up, that would be an even cheaper place to start.  Better yet, if they buy seeded grapes they could plant the seeds and never have to pay for a bottle of wine again.

Most of you understand the absurdity of this logic.  Those who do not understand have already stopped reading to go buy grapes.  At each step along the process of making the bottle of wine the cost of goods and service, along with a healthy profit margin, are passed along to the next stage.  From grape to cellar, farmers, vintners, bottlers, distributors, and restaurants all add to the price of the bottle in advance.  There is one exception to this rule.  The person who opens the bottle and pours it actually makes that wine less expensive.  At the most basic level, the person who serves the wine pays for part of the bottle for you.

The reason for this is that the person who pours the wine is paid far less than minimum wage.  In 44 states the wage for servers is well below the federal minimum wage.  In some cases it is as low as $2.13 an hour, but generally it is between $3.00-$4.00/ hour.  State and federal law allow this because servers are expected by the government to receive tips.  Every other person involved in the production of the wine took his or her salary in advance.  The server allows you to determine it.  They reduce the cost even more by agreeing to pay the person who set up the table, the bartender who retrieved the wine, and the person who cleans up the table after you leave.  This occurs whether you tip them or not.

This is not just true of wine, but of the food you order.  If restaurant were required to make up the difference between what servers are now paid and the minimum wage, the cost would be passed directly to the consumer.  The server pays for the fries you eat with your burger.  Over the course of all the guests a waiter serves during the course of an evening it would not take much to get them up to minimum wage, but that is probably not in your best interest either.

The 14 year old girl with multiple facial piercings and a three month baby bump that hands you your meal at the drive thru is probably not who you want serving you for two hours during your grandparent’s 50th anniversary dinner.  Even she makes a couple dollars over minimum wage.  To attract the caliber of server you would want to have serving you on your special occasions would cost a considerable amount per hour.  If you paid that rate up front with the price of your meal, it would tack a great deal more onto your check.  It would also not provide motivation for a server to work quickly or smile as your child grinds saltines into the floor beneath them.

It is not just the service that you see which would have to be paid for either.  Your server showed up hours before you arrived to prepare.  A server who spent an hour cutting a case of lemons before you arrived so you could have the lemon in your water.  A server carried a heavy rack of glasses out of the dishroom to get that water to you faster and then got a five pound bucket of ice out of the machine to keep your water cold.  They also have been by more times than you have even noticed with a pitcher to keep it full.  A server cut the bread you eat before your meal.  They also scooped the butter you spread on it.  A server spent five minutes polishing the glasses your wine is poured in to make sure there were no watermarks.  When you complete your meal, there is no need to clean up after yourself.  The server who just picked up their uniform from the dry cleaners will be crawling under your booth to clean everything before the next table arrives.  No matter what percent you tip, none of this appears on your check.

While they are taking care of you they are serving other tables as well.  They are trying to keep calm the table to your left that doesn’t understand why their well done has taken eight minutes already and is still not ready.  They are answering the same question for each person at the table to your right.  They are trying to not think about the lovely people who sat at your table before you who did not feel tipping was required.  They are getting waved down by other server’s tables.  They have been there since 10:30 and will be there until the clock says 10:30 again.  They will be right back with your hot tea.

Your server does all of this in the hope that you will have a great experience.  They grin and bear it through all of the rotten guests hoping that someone will appreciate the service of a professional.  They hope that at the end of the meal you will show your appreciation in the form of a tip.  They hope that after they have paid the bartenders, bussers, and food runners out of their tips that there is enough left over after their bills for them to be able to sit down do a decent meal at whatever restaurant is still open.  Regardless of the quality of service they receive, they will tip well after that meal.  They understand.

Related Posts From This Blog:

10 Reasons Why Serving Is Not Like Your Job

Cost vs Profit

Fighting For The Server Wage

The Evolution of Free Bread

The Greatest Customer Complaint Response Ever

Awkward Moments

Fruit Flies

Welcome to what I hope is the least appetizing post that will ever appear on my blog.  While I typically try to discuss appetizing things, today I will talk about something less pleasant, fruit flies.  The season is coming up here in the Midwest.  I personally have had some epic battles with these pests over the years.  The best way to stop fruit flies is to prevent them before they get a foothold.  So in anticipation of fruit fly season, this post is designed to help you get a battle plan in place before they arrive.

Whether you call them fruit flies, bar flies, drain flies, or any of the other names they have, your guests find them an unappetizing annoyance.  The guests rarely take into account the fact that they are studied for tremendous breakthroughs in science and were responsible for the 1995 Nobel Prize.  They also fail to realize that the fresh salad and beer they are enjoying for lunch are the reason they are there in the first place.  Instead, they want them gone.  So after a little research and several personal experiments with different methods of fighting them, I want to share my best practices.

Read the full post at Foodie Knowledge

How To Serve A Bottle Of Wine

There was a great debate last night at work about whether you cut the foil above or below the lip on a bottle of red wine.  I did some research online which proved inconclusive.  Then I remembered that I at least five certified sommeliers in my phone.  Want to know the answer?  Read on.

I will not contend this is the definitive way to serve a bottle of wine.  This is how I do it. There are rules on what not to do, but beyond that you can add a little flair.  Instead of writing this all up from scratch I decided to raid the hard drive and pull a section from my hopefully soon to be published book.  Knowing how to present and serve a bottle of wine is imperative to make the jump to higher end restaurants.  Like anything else it requires knowledge and practice to build confidence.  Hopefully this knowledge will help you gain the opportunity to practice more.

Expert Wine Service

 

Perhaps not greater ritual exists in the dining experience than the presentation of a bottle of wine.  As consumer tastes have changed and dining has become more casual, many of the traditions of dining out have changed.  Men are no longer expected to wear ties.  Dancing is no longer common place in fine restaurants.  Meals are expected faster and with shorter delays between courses.  Yet through all of these other changes, the presentation of a bottle of wine remains virtually unchanged.

Regardless of the type of restaurant you work at, when you sell a bottle of wine a full presentation will be expected.  Whether you serve three bottles a night or three bottles a year, you need to be a master of this ritual.  When a guest does not receive the full presentation it confirms that they are not at the caliber of restaurant where they should have ordered a bottle of wine.   Selling a bottle of wine will considerably raise your table’s check.  They will pay for the bottle, but they will tip based on the presentation.

This process unnecessarily intimidates many servers, but following these steps will ensure every guest will be impressed by your presentation.

Glasses and Folds: If you do not already have wine glasses on the table, make sure the glasses you bring to the table are free of water spots.  A cloth napkin folded in thirds should be brought as well to collect any drips from the bottle.  Every guest (of legal age) should be offered a glass.  Place a glass in front of each guest that will be partaking.

The Presentation: The bottle should always be carried like a baby.  It should never be carried by the neck or below your waist.  Place your napkin along your forearm and the bottle on top of it with the label facing the guest.  Show the guest who ordered the wine the bottle and read the vineyard, varietal, and year (example: “This is our 2004 Burton Vineyards Chardonnay”). Wait for the guest to confirm that it is they ordered.

Open the Bottle: With the bottle upright and the label facing the guest at all times, remove the foil from the bottle below the lip.  This should be done below the lip to prevent contamination from the foil.  Hold the bottle underneath or at the lower part of the body.  Never hold the bottle by the neck.  Place the foil in your pocket and remove the cork.  Once the cork is out place it next to the guest who ordered the wine.  Never turn or tilt the bottle when opening.  This may require some practice, but failing to do this with precision will make you look unprofessional in the guest’s eyes.

Pour the Taste: A pour of approximately one ounce should be poured in the glass of the guest who ordered the bottle.  Return the bottle to the “presentation” position and wait for them to taste the wine and approve the bottle.

Pour for the Table: Pour the wine for the other guests at the table beginning with the women, then the men, and finally the person who ordered the bottle of wine.  Regardless of how many glasses are on the table, all guests should receive and equal pour.  Never pour more than 5 ounces (or slightly less than one fourth of the bottle) in any glass.  Between pouring wipe the mouth of the bottle against the cloth draped over your arm to prevent drips.  When completed, set the bottle approximately 4 -6 inches in from of the guest who ordered the bottle.

Being able to execute the presentation of a bottle of wine for a guest requires proficiency and a bit of showmanship.  Following these steps will not only impress your guests, but will also improve your tip.  People want to feel important when they come into your restaurant and very few things validate this feeling better than a great wine presentation.    The ritual is part of the experience.  Provide it with expertise and you will be rewarded far beyond your effort.

Tips2: Tips For Improving Your Tips is the new book from the author of The Hospitality Formula Network.  It contains the 52 essential skills of the exceptional server.  This book teaches the philosophy to turn average service into an exceptional guest experience that will rapidly increase your tips.  This book shows how you can provide better customer service and dramatically improve your tips.  Enter the coupon code “squared” to receive 20% off your copy today.

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Espresso Drinks (Foodie Knowledge)