As the year ends, it’s time to analyze your restaurant’s profits and losses to make the best business decisions possible in 2020. While reviewing past sales data and historic patterns can help you foreshadow future revenue, they don’t paint the whole picture. It’s also important to consider how external factors can influence sales forecasts.
In this guide to restaurant forecasting, we’re explaining what restaurant forecasting is, why it’s an important exercise to do, how to analyze your restaurant profitability in 2019, and which external factors you should incorporate into your forecast for 2020. We foresee sunny days in your restaurant’s future!
Restaurant forecasting is analogous to weather forecasting. Just like meteorologists use data from the past and insight about the future to predict the weather, restaurateurs use historical sales data trends, upcoming events, and even the weather to predict their future revenue.
Fortunately, you don’t need an MBA to forecast your restaurant’s future revenue. 7shifts’ POS system integration uses past sales data to forecast restaurant sales with 95% accuracy. By seeing into the future of your sales, restaurateurs can also make more cost-effective scheduling decisions to save on labor.
Unlike corporate employees, restaurateurs have no guarantee that they’ll make a certain amount of money every two weeks. Forecasting helps restaurateurs like you create a sense of control within the uncertainty of entrepreneurship.
When restaurant owners have a sense of how much revenue their business will bring in over a certain period of time, they can plan budgets for things like payroll, inventory, marketing, or utilities. Forecasts also help restaurateurs predict when they’ll have revenue gaps to fill so that they can start planning events and other promotions to boost sales.
In the long term, forecasting helps restaurateurs plan for the future of their business - whether that’s expanding to new locations or evaluating a renovation. When you know what revenue to expect, you can plan how to grow your business.
Before you look into the future, however, you’ll need to review historical data to inform your forecast.
Gathering and analyzing data is an important part of running an efficient restaurant. Consider these historical data when creating your 2020 revenue outlook:
Data is the key to a more efficient restaurant in 2020.
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While you can’t control external forces that affect restaurant sales, you can factor them into your forecast for a more accurate prediction. Some external factors boost business, while others detract from it. When you can prepare for the detractors, you can counteract their effects through new business models or marketing efforts. When you factor in business boosters, you can capitalize on their revenue potentials.
Here are three external factors to account for in your business forecast for the new year.
Good weather tends to boost business for restaurants, while bad weather - cold, extreme heat, rain, snow, etc. - can impact the number of dine-in customers you receive. If you’re in an area that experiences all four seasons, you should account for the weather forecast in your financial forecast.
While inclement weather can decrease dine-in business, it increases demand for delivery orders. Chicago deep-dish pizza restaurant Lou Malnati’s sees up to a 20% increase in delivery orders during the city’s notoriously brutal winters. Nationwide, GrubHub has found that delivery orders containing soup increase by 13% between December and March. Focus on your delivery offerings and hire seasonal delivery personnel in the winter to maximize your financial forecast.
Can you think of any event that doesn’t involve food in some way? We can’t either! Events will affect your business in 2020, so take these gatherings and celebrations into account when creating your forecast for next year:
Press and social media coverage affect restaurant sales. While you can’t exactly plan for viral press coverage, you can work with a public relations firm that can help generate media attention for your restaurant.
Make sure that the firm you partner with spans both traditional and digital media, like influencers, to spread the word to all kinds of audiences. Create a budget for engaging a PR firm by forecasting the ROI that the press will give your business.
Forecasting sales for your restaurant unlocks powerful insight that can help you plan your budget for the following year, and capitalize on upcoming events. While “forecasting” sounds like Wall Street jargon, you don’t need an MBA to master it.
Restaurant Forecast = Historical Sales Data + External Factors
When you integrate your POS with 7shifts, the software will analyze past revenue, historical patterns, labor needs, upcoming events, and weather patterns to forecast future sales with 95% accuracy. After all, knowledge is power. Combine your restaurant tech with a hospitality training course in restaurant profitability, and you’ll be able to make better business decisions in the year to come.
7shifts are a proud partner of Typsy. Become a Typsy partner today and start reaping the benefits of being part of an expanding online hospitality community.
Ana Cvetkovic is a freelancer and content producer for 7shifts. She is also the CEO of BLOOM Digital Marketing, a New York City-based creative marketing agency that helps the hospitality and tourism industries reach new audiences online. |