How to train your restaurant staff for opening night

The days and weeks leading up to a restaurant opening are sheer madness. As the big day approaches, hours will come and go at an ever-increasing pace, and the pressure to get everything done can be both invigorating and debilitating. Financial concerns, last-minute construction or permit woes and the other curveballs that always arise can entice restaurateurs to cut corners like pre-opening staff training.

In simple terms, neglecting staff training can be a hugely expensive mistake. While training may entail short-term revenue loss, the long-term benefits of a well-trained staff cannot be overlooked. Lower turnover rates, exceptional guest experiences, and favourable media coverage are among the potential positive outcomes in the long run.

Properly preparing your team is an investment in your restaurant getting off on the best foot possible. The following pre-opening training tips will ensure that your team is knowledgeable, confident and well-rehearsed come opening day.

A group of restaurant employees are gathered around in a circle for a team meeting

Start early and plan ahead

Designing an effective pre-opening training program is extremely time consuming, especially if you’ve never done it before. So make sure you start early.

Getting all of your employees in the same place at the same time before you even start generating revenue is a big financial investment; don’t squander that commitment by procrastinating on the planning front.
Confident opening teams are born out of an efficient, dynamic and well organised onboarding process, so make this a priority months in advance of bringing on staff, not weeks (and certainly not days).

Schedule a training program

Your training schedule will be your roadmap, so this is the best piece to start with. Even though your schedule will change countless times as opening day gets closer, it will

  • Set expectations for managers
  • Help determine what written materials you’ll need to put together for employees
  • Provide structure that ensures you’re making the most out of this precious time.

Ultimately, what ends up on your training program should represent the organisation’s values and the key elements of the concept, but these are some important topics that almost every restaurant should consider including:

Employee handbook review

Employees that have a clear understanding of what they should expect to give and to receive from their employer are more comfortable and confident, allowing them to do a better job. Simply handing out an employee handbook and asking staff to read it and sign it isn’t enough to be sure that they are absorbing its contents.

Introducing leaders
Be sure to introduce each member of the leadership team and allow them to speak briefly about themselves and why they are proud to be a part of the restaurant. Depending on the size of the staff, giving the rest of the employees the opportunity to do the same sends a positive message and reinforces how much you value what each team member brings to the table.

Product knowledge.
What you cover and how much time you devote to each subject will greatly depend on the restaurant’s concept. All of these topics provide the best opportunity to include the vendors, farmers and distributors you’ve been working with; they will appreciate the opportunity to share their passion for their products and staff will benefit from learning from different people.

These are the major categories to consider:

  • Menu (ingredients, cooking techniques, presentation, allergens, substitutions)
  • Cheese
  • Wine
  • House cocktails
  • Classic cocktails
  • Spirits
  • Beer
  • Coffee
  • Tea

Service standards

Pre-opening training is the best opportunity you’ll have in the life of your restaurant to define what is right and what is wrong when it comes to technical service. How do you want tables to be cleared? What’s the proper way to transfer a bar check?

It may feel tedious, but on your first busy night you’ll be grateful that you aren’t wasting time explaining the same thing to 20 different people and being frustrated that they don’t already know the “right” way of doing things. Managers and employees will also be more comfortable if they have a clear understanding of your expectations.

Safety standards

Safety remains paramount in any restaurant setting. Ensuring a secure environment is crucial, and staff must be cognisant of potential risks, hazards and effective mitigation strategies. Some key safety training areas include things like food handling techniques to maintain hygiene standards.

You should also cover injury prevention and management, encompassing burns, slips, falls, eye injuries, sprains, strains, lacerations and punctures. And don’t forget about fire safety procedures, including appropriate operation of restaurant equipment by kitchen staff.

POS training

Sure, most of us have used every POS system under the sun, but none of these experiences have been in your restaurant. You don’t want staff searching for a tomato salad button for five minutes in the middle of the first night of service, only to find that it was never programmed to begin with.

Give your team members time to familiarise themselves with the locations of functions and menu items in your POS and use this same time to ensure that every menu item is in the computer in the right place at the correct price and printing where it’s supposed to.

A restaurant worker is compiling some paperwork while working on their laptop

Create written materials

Having a vision of what service should look and feel like is one thing, but being able to put that vision on paper and teach it to others is something else entirely. Creating written standards for your team creates one solid point of reference that can serve as everyone’s North Star.

By taking the time to write documents like a comprehensive service manual, you’ll give yourself an opportunity to edit your thoughts in advance of teaching them to others and ensure that they’re cohesive, as well as make new hire training dramatically more consistent and efficient before and after you open.

Build in performance measurement

Pre-opening training is a big investment so it’s critical that you’re holding your team accountable for learning and retaining everything you’re teaching them throughout the process.

Daily written quizzes will ensure that employees are taking the time needed to commit important information to memory and send a clear message about the level of dedication you expect.

Incorporating verbal testing into daily training exercises is also a great way to make sure that your employees are comfortable communicating with guests about everything related to the restaurant come opening day.

Perfect practice makes perfect

Before you dive into preview events, do some dress rehearsals just among your staff to get some of the bigger kinks worked out. Yes, preview events are designed to do this too, but wouldn’t you rather find out your expediting printer doesn’t work before you have guests of any variety in your house?

Organising some “staff on staff” exercises where one group serves while the other dines is a great way to make some early improvements and discoveries. What’s the best place for trays to go in the service stations? How should the service bartender organise their tickets? These exercises should include the whole team – a well-practised service team is useless without a well-practised kitchen team.

A restaurant meeting taking place in a restaurant right before the start of shift

Don’t forget that it’s your team, and not you, that will be directly responsible for the quality of your guests’ experiences day in and day out. Choosing to invest in properly preparing your employees to execute your vision will be more healthy and empowering in the short term, and more cost-effective in the long term.

The big night

Opening night only comes around once, and getting it right the first time will lead to regulars, great press and a foundation of success for years to come.

 

When it comes to opening a restaurant smoothly and running it successfully, Alison Arth is a pro. She held leadership positions on the opening teams of multiple restaurants within Daniel Boulud’s prestigious Dinex Group in New York before working as General Manager ofLocanda and Director of Food and Beverage at The Battery in San Francisco. Now, as the founder and principal of hospitality consulting firm Salt & Roe, she partners with restaurants to create consistent, genuine guest experiences and build long-term success. To date, she’s been involved in 13 restaurant openings; most recently, she has consulted on the opening of Gavin Kaysen’s Spoon and Stable in Minneapolis.