When it comes to finding and keeping great kitchen staff 鈥 a challenge that鈥檚 reached near 鈥 the restaurant industry faces a hard and simple truth: wages are too low, the hours are too long, and yet, costs for restaurants continue to increase alongside inflation.
To get more insight into what restaurants are doing to combat this issue and what鈥檚 ahead for an industry driven by so much competition, we spoke with Michael Cipollo, chef and founder at Local Restaurants Inc., and Scott Sinclair, a seasoned restaurant consultant and recruiter with Gecko Hospitality.
Good staff are hard to find.
When the time came to hire a few more staff members for the back of house 鈥撀 and that time always seems to come sooner than later 鈥 Cipollo and his partners would track down the same advertisement from the last time they were hiring. This is what would typically happen:聽聽
鈥淲e鈥檇 get a lot of applicants, but we couldn鈥檛 get a hold of them. Or, we鈥檇 schedule a time to meet but they wouldn鈥檛 show up for the interview,鈥 says Cipollo.
The alternative? There would be an impressive amount of applicants for a position (e.g. line cook) but few, if any, were actually qualified.
This got us thinking: is it because of the money?
As someone who works in the kitchen at a restaurant, you鈥檙e likely toiling over hot stoves with sharp objects at high speeds for long hours (say鈥10, 11 or more hours at a time), and leave with about $100 toward your paycheque.
鈥淒epending on where you鈥檙e working, servers can make two times more than back of house staff. And yet, back of house jobs require more skill and sweat equity. There鈥檚 also more risks 鈥 cuts, sprains and strains,鈥 says Cipollo. 鈥淧eople don鈥檛 want to do this anymore. The money鈥檚 just not there.鈥
And yet, in many cases, it hasn鈥檛 been there for a while: 鈥淐ooks are paid the same today as they were 15 years ago,鈥 says Cipollo, an industry veteran who worked for a chain for nearly 15 years before breaking out on his own.
Depending on the position and the location, generally, kitchen staff make a jump above minimum wage, somewhere between and /hour on average in Canada.
Sinclair, who worked for one of Canada鈥檚 largest restaurant chains for decades before becoming a consultant, says what you have to wonder is, 鈥溾hy is your staff leaving a job that鈥檚 $15.50 an hour to go make $16 across the street? Is it really about that 50 cents difference?鈥澛
Or is it about something else?
The pay is the easiest thing to point to. We鈥檝e all heard it before: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 get paid enough to do what I鈥檓 doing.鈥
The nine days of working in a row.聽
The long 13 hour days.
鈥The 鈥渘o weekends off.鈥
鈥The kitchen manager who doesn鈥檛 acknowledge good, hard work.
鈥淚f they took those things out, gave them better leadership, better work-life balance, pay probably wouldn鈥檛 be an issue, but it鈥檚 hard for people to articulate or they don鈥檛 want to point fingers at the boss. So they just say, 鈥業 don鈥檛 get paid enough,鈥欌 says Sinclair.
So how can you combat poor pay or culture challenges?
When Cipollo鈥檚 team decided there鈥檚 got to be a better way, that they had to try something different, they decided to include the wage amount in their job ads. And it was a wage noticeably, but not significantly, higher than other kitchens.
鈥淪uddenly we saw a swing in the type of applicants we were getting. They were people who were already working in other places.鈥
The other draw for The Local Restaurants was its 鈥榓nti-assembly line鈥 kitchen culture. In addition to paying above the local average, Cipollo and his team knew some cooks really want the chance to grow and learn.聽聽
鈥淭hey鈥檙e looking for places where there鈥檚 something more than money that鈥檚 in it for them. Wages are great, in fact they鈥檙e a necessity, but what else is there in terms of growth and learning? Will this lead to better things for me?鈥 - Michael Cipollo - Chef/Owner - Local Restaurants Inc.聽
Sinclair agrees: 鈥淎 lot of culinary people are looking to grow.鈥澛犅
But he says different restaurant models appeal to different types of people.
鈥淭here are two different types of people you find on resumes: The type who don鈥檛 want to be at chains because they want that creativity, and the people who don鈥檛 want to be at independents because they鈥檙e not comfortable with that lack of structure.鈥
For Sinclair, it comes back to the leadership, engagement, and recognition.
鈥淲hen you鈥檙e in a culture where it鈥檚 us against them, that resentment happens more. You want your culture to be more of a team.鈥
As a manager, recognize your kitchen staff for their hard work! And, encourage the rest of your team to do it too (getting a 鈥渘icely done!鈥 from servers can go a long way).聽
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what they want to hear, and they don鈥檛 necessarily want to hear it from managers. They want to hear it from servers.鈥
Cipollo believes there are some other non-monetary ways to boost morale at the back.
鈥淵ou have to take care of your people. Give them a Friday night off to go do whatever it is that helps them recharge. We also don鈥檛 charge for meals or uniforms. They get tipped out.鈥
What can you do beyond wages and recognition?
Raising wages is one way to go. Creating some sort of recognition program and simply being more mindful of recognizing great work is another that can go a long way. But, you can also combat this crisis from another angle 鈥 controlling labour costs. Get an online scheduling software like 鈥 a platform that automatically builds perfect schedules and helps you reach labour targets. with us and see how we can help.