Start & Run a Catering Business. George Erdosh
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Название: Start & Run a Catering Business

Автор: George Erdosh

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Экономика

Серия: Start & Run Business Series

isbn: 9781770407244

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ with any large caterer in your area. You can offer competitive prices and far better quality than they can.

      What can you expect in catering? Briefly, long hours and little profit, at least in the beginning. As you establish your business, the profits will slowly creep up and the number of working hours hopefully will slide down. Yet a survey by the Department of Food and Beverage Management at Cornell University School of Hotel Administration, responded to by 340 US caterers, showed the following frightening answer: The average work week for caterers is 58.7 hours, but it ranges up to 100 hours.

      Don’t expect catering to be a get-rich-fast business. However, if you find just the right niche for yourself and you are good at what you do, there is no reason not to expect a very handsome profit.

      Be warned that the burnout rate in the food business is very high, in both restaurants and catering. If you put all your energy into the business for several years, you are likely to feel the symptoms. In the beginning the business will demand all your energy and enthusiasm, but eventually you have to channel your life in other directions as well or burnout will come even sooner. Mike Roman, president of Catersource, a respectable Chicago-based catering education institution, states in one of his ten catering rules: “Caterers have the right to a personal life away from business … make time for yourself, burnout is worse than bankruptcy.”

      In spite of these gloomy warnings, there are bright aspects to catering. If there weren’t, the business would not have any interested followers. It can be a glamorous, show-business-type world if you are in medium- to high-end catering. It is varied, rarely monotonous, and whenever there is a lot of routine work to do, it means you have a large party that will bring in a good profit if you priced your event right. That prospect surely brightens the hours of messing with unruly phyllo dough.

      2

      How to Become a Caterer

      There are three ways for you to get into the catering business:

      (a) start from scratch with nothing and build slowly into a business;

      (b) purchase an existing business with a name, client list, and equipment; or

      (c) buy into an existing business as a partner or work for an existing caterer to earn equity as a partner.

      The first method is by far the least expensive way to start, but without a client base, it is a slow rise to the top.

      Purchasing an existing business can be quite costly, but you are running a business from day one with a cash flow, presumably a positive one. Often the purchase agreement stipulates that the former owner will assist for several months with the smooth running of the business and perhaps even deal with the clients you inherit. You have all the equipment and staff in place.

      Buying into an existing business as a partner may also be costly, but you don’t want to take on all the responsibility and the tremendous tension of running a business by yourself all at once. Here you can ease into the business and partnership over several months or even years. These three methods are discussed in detail in this chapter.

      1. Starting Out on Your Own

      Most catering businesses start with one individual simply starting from scratch. Perhaps you are known as a good cook and organizer, have been in charge of several church dinners for 100 to 150 guests, and have pulled each one off beautifully. The dinners were great: the food was served on time and was plentiful; everyone was served promptly; you were showered with praise.

      Then someone who attended one of the dinners calls you and asks if you could cater her daughter’s wedding reception for 50 guests. You are stunned with the request and you give a noncommittal answer. You want to think about this for a day. But once you have a chance to consider the idea, it begins to take shape in your mind. What a challenge it would be! An exciting possibility to earn money while having fun at the same time. A career change is on your mind and by pure coincidence, an interesting possibility suggests itself: catering.

      So you agree to do the wedding, but before that event happens, someone else asks you to cater a classy dinner party for eight guests, which turns out to be a fabulous affair. You are gaining confidence, and by the time you’re getting ready for the wedding reception, you’ve not only earned a little unplanned income, you’ve also earned a great deal more self-confidence. You managed to cater two completely different events all by yourself. You may have made a few errors at the wedding reception, but neither the hostess nor the guests noticed anything thanks to your quick thinking in resolving the problems.

      This example illustrates how a large number of catering businesses start. When it is not by chance, it takes deliberate planning to begin a catering service. You may have worked for a caterer and come to the conclusion that you could do it even better. So you decide to go out on your own and perhaps even give yourself a tentative date to start your business.

      Virtually all caterers start out part time from their own kitchens on a very small scale and generally grow the business by word-of-mouth. This kind of catering is illegal in most, if not all, communities. Serving the public from a home kitchen is against health department standards; nonetheless, it is done all the time. As long as your business remains small, chances are you will not be investigated by the local health inspectors.

      Many caterers work out of their kitchens for years without a problem. But as the volume of business increases, you will attract more and more attention. If the local health department finds out about your catering business, an inspector will be ringing your doorbell and asking questions. Under very strict codes, you are legally allowed a limited number of meals served out of a home kitchen, perhaps eight meals a day, but this number varies in different municipalities.

      The next problem is your competitors. Once you challenge a significant part of their market share and undercut their prices (your overhead is almost nil when working from a home kitchen), they may report you to the health inspector. Zoning laws probably do not allow a commercial operation in your residential neighborhood, so an unfriendly neighbor may report you.

      Finally, chances are you are operating without insurance to cover your catering activities. Unless you are in commercial, approved facilities, you cannot be underwritten for a policy. It is unwise and dangerous to operate a food service business without substantial liability insurance. In our litigation-prone society, it would not take much provocation for a disgruntled client to sue you. Spoiled food that a guest became sick from, an olive pit inadvertently left in that broke a tooth, or a fish bone someone choked on when you served boneless fish fillets — all of these situations can result in a lawsuit that ruins your business. With no permit, no health inspection, no business license, and no sales tax registration, you don’t have a leg to stand on. That would be the permanent end to your catering career.

      Look into the laws in your area and decide for yourself if you want to start from your home to see if this field is for you. You may realize that the catering business is not just the pleasure of cooking, presenting, serving, and then waiting for the praise and the client’s check. Since you have invested very little money so far, you can easily change your mind. If you make arrangements for a commercial facility, you cannot change your mind without a great loss of investment, not to mention the blow to your ego.

      I know a caterer who worked eight years out of her home kitchen before trouble started from her competitors. She managed to avoid detection from the authorities for that long because her business started from a niche that didn’t bother the competition: She made the most sumptuous СКАЧАТЬ