Your kitchen team sees packed dining rooms but wonders why money's still tight. They're focused on revenue - what flows in - but miss the bigger picture of profit. Once they grasp how these numbers actually work together, they'll naturally start caring more about waste and costs.
Why your team needs to understand this
Your chef thinks: "We're slammed every night, so we must be killing it." But then month-end arrives and there's barely anything left over. This happens because your team only watches the revenue stream - what guests pay - without seeing profit, which is what remains after covering every expense.
Once your team connects these dots, their whole approach shifts. They'll grasp why premium ingredients aren't always feasible and why tossing spoiled food hurts more than they realize.
Explain the basics with concrete numbers
Start with a straightforward example from one busy evening:
💡 Example: Saturday evening
Your restaurant has a solid night:
- Revenue: €3,000 (100 covers × €30 average)
- Ingredients: €900 (30% food cost)
- Staff: €600 (2 chefs, 3 servers)
- Rent, gas, water: €200
- Other costs: €100
Profit: €3,000 - €1,800 = €1,200
Break it down: "We brought in €3,000 in revenue, but our actual profit is €1,200. That missing €1,800? It covered every single cost required to generate that revenue."
Why more revenue doesn't always mean more profit
Here's where most teams get confused. Busier doesn't automatically equal better profits. Show them these contrasting scenarios:
💡 Example: Two scenarios
Scenario A: 80 guests, €35 average per person
- Revenue: €2,800
- Costs: €1,400 (50%)
- Profit: €1,400
Scenario B: 120 guests, €25 average per person
- Revenue: €3,000
- Costs: €2,100 (70% due to stress, mistakes, waste)
- Profit: €900
"Scenario B generated higher revenue but delivered lower profit. Why? Pressure creates mistakes. We waste more, portions get inconsistent, and we need extra staff. Stress literally costs money."
How kitchen actions affect profit
This is a pattern we see repeatedly in restaurant financials - small daily choices create massive profit swings. Make it personal by connecting their actions to real numbers:
- Oversized portions: 50 grams extra meat per plate × 100 plates = €30 less profit per evening
- Waste: 1 kg vegetables thrown away = €8 less profit
- Wrong cooling temperature: Spoiled products = direct profit loss
- No FIFO: Using old stock = quality drops = fewer return guests = less revenue
⚠️ Important:
Don't dump full financial pressure on your team. They should understand the mechanics, but profit responsibility stays with you as owner.
Practical tools to make it visible
Transform abstract numbers into concrete reality for your team:
- Share weekly numbers: "Last week: €15,000 revenue, €3,000 profit"
- Show cost per dish: "This pasta costs €6.50 in ingredients, we sell it for €22"
- Track waste: "Yesterday we threw away €45 in vegetables"
- Set goals: "This month we're targeting 32% food cost"
Tools like KitchenNmbrs can automatically track these figures and share them with your team, so you're not constantly crunching numbers manually.
What your team should remember
End with these core concepts:
- Revenue = what guests pay
- Profit = what remains after all expenses
- Higher revenue ≠ automatically higher profit
- Small kitchen choices create big profit impacts
- Their daily work directly drives restaurant success
How do you explain revenue vs profit? (step by step)
Start with a concrete example
Take the numbers from yesterday or last week. Show: revenue €X, costs €Y, profit €Z. Use real numbers from your own restaurant, not theoretical amounts.
Explain the cost items
Tell them where the money goes: ingredients, wages, rent, energy. Make clear that these costs are always there, even when the restaurant is full. This helps them understand why not everything is profit.
Show the impact of their work
Give examples of how kitchen actions affect profit. For instance: 'If we waste 10% less, we keep €200 more per month.' This makes it personal and relevant.
✨ Pro tip
Post three key numbers on your kitchen whiteboard every Monday: last week's revenue, food cost percentage, and total waste in euros. Update these same three spots weekly for 8 weeks running.
Calculate this yourself?
In the KitchenNmbrs app you can do this in just a few clicks. 7 days free, no credit card.
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Frequently asked questions
Should I share all financial details with my team?
No, stick to what affects their daily work. Revenue, food cost percentages, and waste numbers are helpful. Skip discussing rent, loans, or personal salary details.
What if my team starts stressing about profit margins?
Remind them that profit naturally fluctuates month to month. Focus their attention on controllable factors like quality, waste reduction, and efficiency rather than external costs like utilities or rent.
How often should I discuss these numbers with staff?
Start with one thorough explanation, then share key weekly updates briefly. Daily discussions become overwhelming, but monthly gaps let them forget how their actions impact results.
What if my food cost is embarrassingly high?
Stay honest but solution-focused. Try: 'Our food cost hit 38% last month, but we're targeting 32%. Let's work together to identify improvement areas.' Frame it as a team challenge, not individual blame.
Do part-time kitchen staff need this knowledge too?
Absolutely, since they also make daily choices affecting profit. Keep their training simple: more waste equals less restaurant profit. They don't need to memorize ingredient costs.
How do I explain profit margins on low-priced menu items?
Use specific examples: 'This €12 burger costs €4.50 in ingredients, but after labor, rent, and utilities, we keep maybe €2.' Show them how thin margins really are on popular items.
Should I involve kitchen staff in menu pricing decisions?
Include senior kitchen staff who understand costs, but keep final pricing authority with management. Their input on preparation time and ingredient costs is valuable for accurate pricing.
📚 Sources consulted
- EU Verordening 852/2004 — Levensmiddelenhygiëne (2004) — Official source
- EU Verordening 853/2004 — Hygiënevoorschriften voor levensmiddelen van dierlijke oorsprong (2004) — Official source
- EU Verordening 1169/2011 — Voedselinformatie aan consumenten (2011) — Official source
- NVWA — Hygiënecode voor de horeca (2024) — Official source
- NVWA — Allergenen in voedsel (2024) — Official source
- Codex Alimentarius — International Food Standards (2024) — Official source
- FSA — Safer food, better business (HACCP) (2024) — Official source
- BVL — Lebensmittelhygiene (HACCP) (2024) — Official source
- Warenwetbesluit Bereiding en behandeling van levensmiddelen (2024) — Official source
- WHO — Foodborne diseases estimates (2024) — Official source
Food Standards Agency (FSA) — https://www.food.gov.uk
The HACCP standards shown in this application are for informational purposes only. KitchenNmbrs does not guarantee that displayed values are current or complete. Always consult the FSA or your local authority for the latest regulations.
Written by
Jeffrey Smit
Founder & CEO of KitchenNmbrs
Jeffrey Smit built KitchenNmbrs from 8 years of hands-on experience as kitchen manager at 1NUL8 Group in Rotterdam. His mission: give every restaurant owner control over food cost.
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