Want to Use Discounts in Your Restaurant?

Popular discounting methods such as offering coupons, putting your bar on Groupon or Living Social, or taking part in an annual coupon book can seem like a great way to get more customers in the door and increase sales, but frequently lowered prices just serve to lower the value of your restaurant in your community. Here’s the main reason why you might want to think twice about discounting your drinks or food–as well as an idea that’ll help you think of something else you can do.

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Image of Vodka Pouring in Rocks Glass for Industry Benchmarks for Liquor Costs in Restaurants

Do You Need a Wireless Liquor Control System?

If you’re considering implementing a wireless liquor control system, you’ve probably run up against a terrible problem such as bartender theft, devastating revenue loss, or such a lack of time and sleep that manual inventory maintenance has become impossible. All these events can lead you to a sense of desperation, and you may feel that you have no option but to buy a liquor maintenance system to regain control of your bar. But do you? This article addresses the pros and cons of wireless liquor control systems so that you can overcome your bar stressors. Read more

Attract More Patrons with Absinthe

Absinthe. Just breathe the name of this notorious, strong-tasting liquor, and many connotations come immediately to mind: It’s bright green. It’s illegal. It’s hallucinogenic. It can make you insane.

While all of these statements are actually false, the long-running rumors about absinthe certainly make it intriguing. Why not capitalize on that intrigue?

Here are some “do”s and “don’t”s when it comes to bringing absinthe to your bar: Read more

Marketing Wine to Millennials

How to Use Wine Marketing That Speaks to Millennials

In her recent article “How Millennials Are Changing the Wine Industry,” Kathryn Buschman Vasel stated that Millennials are drinking more wine than other generations did at the age of 21, and that this is rocking the wine industry as we know it.  Specifically, Millennials are rocking the wine marketing industry as we know it. This younger age group, born between 1980 and 2000 is pressing wineries to make a change in the way they present their wines, and restaurateurs and bar owners should ensure that they also understand what wine marketing is all about today. Here’s your cheat sheet for wine marketing that speaks to Millennials and more. Read more

The Secret to Customer Loyalty Programs

How many times did you hear these cringe-worthy words over the weekend: “Hey, it’s my birthday. l should get a free drink!” (What did you say in response?) This article talks about the best answer you can give to that question. Read on. Read more

How to Give Your Bar that “Speakeasy” Vibe

Secrets are exciting. Whether customers are getting a special bargain that few are privy to or just the sense of excitement that comes with finding a hidden gem on a remote corner of town, patrons like to think they’re members of a small, elite club.

Prohibition was a relatively short period of time that ended decades ago, and yet many Americans cling to the thrilling idea of the so-called “speakeasy.” It seems that creating the illusion that a bar is difficult to find or get into means that patrons are willing to fight their way in and pay a premium for cocktails with old fashioned names and ingredients.

So what exactly makes a bar a speakeasy in an age when alcohol is perfectly legal? Technically speaking, nothing. What creates a convincing impression that an establishment is this particular type of forbidden fruit? Well, the answer to that is a bit more complicated. Read more

infused alcohol Uncorkd

How to Make Your Own Infused Alcohols

With the slow food revolution and the ever-increasing trend toward artisan / small batch / made-from-scratch consumables, craft alcohols such as infused vodkas are only continuing to rise in status. In fact, unique mixology that capitalizes on the craft alcohol trend is the hottest customer draw out there right now, so why isn’t your bar cashing in? Perhaps it’s because you don’t know where or how to start introducing more artisan items into your menu. Since I always want to help bars make more money, I’m here to get you on the right path. This is your quick and easy guide to making infused alcohols. Read more

How Can Bars and Restaurants Respond to the 2014 Lime Shortage?

 2014 is being called the year of the Great Lime Shortage, and bars and restaurants are scrambling to figure out what to do about the rising costs that have resulted. The fruit is used in popular bar foods like fish tacos, guacamole, ceviche, and Thai food, and while such items can always come off the menu for now, what’s more important to many is how the shortage threatens the fate of the margarita and the famously lime-garnished Corona.

We as a country typically consume 500,000 tons of limes every year, so there’s no way around the fact that this is going to sting. So far, bars are coping with the lime shortage in many ways, from simply breaking the news to patrons to actually offering customers deep discounts for bringing in their own bags of the fruit. Read more

25 Things to Do to Make Your Bar a Failure

Sure, you had a lot of great ideas when you started your bar–but it can be tough to balance your need for a profitable bar with your need to be original and true to your startup ideas. Perhaps over the years your “great ideas” have become “silly ideas,” and you’ve started falling into a lot of the traps that slowly kill bars. Take a good look at this list, and then take a good, hard look at your bar at both peak operating hours, and during your lulls. Are you doing any of the 25 things that are sure to make your bar a failure? Read more

What are You and Your “Non-Drinking” Patrons Doing for Each Other?

Only about half of Americans are “regular” drinkers today, and another eleven percent drink but only infrequently. In this case, “regular” is defined as twelve drinks per year or more, and “infrequent” means less than twelve.

Twelve drinks is only one drink per month on average. What this means is that even among the half of the population that drinks what can be defined as “regularly,” some of those folks are actually ordering very little alcohol.

Nonetheless, bars are great places to socialize and are central gathering spots where people get together to celebrate birthdays or simply catch up with friends. With so many other things vying for people’s time, however, once a group of friends has had a chance to talk a little, those among them who don’t do much drinking may be ready to call it a night. The company may hold their interest, but how many diet soft drinks can one person drink in one sitting, and, more importantly, how much profit is this making you?

Sugar, Sugar Everywhere, and Not a Drop Worth Drinking

There are many different reasons for being a so-called teetotaler, but health is certainly one of them, and most bars don’t exactly offer the healthiest beverage options. Once the “virgin” cocktail and soft drink options are exhausted, what’s left includes cranberry “juice,” which generally contains high fructose corn syrup, and orange juice, which still contains more sugar, albeit naturally occurring, than the health-conscious patron desires without seeming to offer much else besides vitamin C in return. Even if you keep decent tea and freshly-brewed coffee around, a lot of people swear off caffeine past morning hours, so you may be left with half of your patrons chatting up a storm but hard-pressed to think of anything on your menu worth spending money on.

Healthier Options

“Drinkers” tend to look forward to enjoying what they order, while non-drinkers feel stuck with looking for something they can tolerate. Unless they’re really thirsty, they may feel that they aren’t “getting anything” out of the limited beverage choices on the menu.

If you think past basic juices like orange, cranberry, grapefruit, and apple, however, you’ll realize that variations like pomegranate and açai, while also being high in naturally occurring sugars, have become increasingly popular in recent years due to the health-boosting antioxidants they are also said to contain. As a bar and not a health food store, the question of whether they do in fact contain healthier ingredients than orange juice is of less concern to you than whether people will want to order them, and apparently they do. Kombucha is another drink that may appeal to patrons looking to get their “health buzz” on for the evening, as are beverages containing real ginger, such as ginger beer.

Spritzers, Etc.: Another Clear Menu Choice

If keeping a variety of juices beyond standard cocktail ingredients seem like too big of a risk, there are other ways to go, too. Just offering patrons an interesting, unique, and more classy alternative to soft drinks will make your menu of nonalcoholic options stand out as well. Well-made traditional thirst-quenchers like iced tea and lemonade are good choices, and changing things up with alternatives like Moroccan mint iced tea or limeade can help make these beverages memorable for non-drinkers. Spritzers that simply combine sparkling water with a simple syrup (basil-lime, for instance) can be finished off with whatever appropriate twist you have on hand (such as a sprig of mint). Don’t leave it up to patrons to ask what you can scrounge up; put these in a special section of the menu highlighting nonalcoholic choices.

Remember, people don’t just come to bars to drink alcohol. They come to socialize – and maybe that’s all they want, but you’re not making a dime from all the talking and laughing if it’s not interspersed with some drinking. If half the population doesn’t drink much alcohol, then that’s an untapped demographic that could be earning you profits some other way, so don’t ignore them. If you put your mind to it, the nonalcoholic drinks that you serve change from a glass “half empty” to a glass completely full of possibility – for you and your patrons alike.