Restaurant Operator: It’s OK to Raise Prices

The fear of alienating customers may be keeping independent restaurants from increasing prices.

As they struggle to balance the need to drive sales, to maintain a high quality of service and to mind their margins, price increases may be the only thing that gives them a fighting chance.

Nomie Hamid, founder and CEO of digital food hall company Virtual X Kitchen, noted in an interview with PYMNTS’ Karen Webster as part of our SMB TV series, which is available Thursday nights at 10 pm and is presented in partnership with PayPal, that many small restaurants are underestimating their ability to raise prices.

“I have been to numerous mom-and-pop restaurants, and I love going to them and supporting them, and when I look at their pricing, I am just amazed at how inexpensive it is,” Hamid said. “But then I see that they’re working on very extreme skeletal shifts, where they have only two or three people working … where they could use other bodies. But why aren’t the other bodies there?”

He added that the “fear factor” of losing customers is keeping them from implementing the price increases they need to give them room within the budget to keep the restaurant staffed. Hamid shared that, in his own business, it was his employees who recommended raising prices, and the benefits were significant.

Jordan Boesch, CEO of restaurant team management platform 7shifts, agreed in the same conversation that staffing needs to be the top priority, adding that soliciting regular feedback from employees is key to keeping everything on the right track.

“Focus on fixing your foundation, and then continue to build the next story in your house,” Boesch said.

Why It Matters

Independents may be worried about how raising prices would affect their customers’ relationships with the restaurant, but the impact of staffing issues on diner loyalty could take its own toll.

Research from the 2022 edition of PYMNTS’ Restaurant Readiness Index, which drew from a survey of more than 500 managers of quick-service restaurants (QSRs) and full-service restaurants (FSRs) across the country, found that about one in three restaurants reported that their level of service had decreased as a result of staffing issues. Additionally, 29% said that they had not been able to open as many tables as they could, which translated to missed sales opportunities.

Yet, despite these challenges, many restaurants have been absorbing much of the inflation with which they are faced. Data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) found that, while food prices were up 11.2% year over year in September, restaurants’ menu prices only increased 8.5%.

What a Flex

One of the ways that restaurants can handle their labor challenges, in addition to raising menu prices, is by looking for alternative work models.

Boesch said one of workers’ top priorities right now is flexibility, opening up new possibilities for employment.

“We are seeing people working multiple jobs in other industries and taking up gig work elsewhere as well, so it’s not just full-time and part-time work,” Boesch said. “There’s full-time, part-time and almost a third category, which is flex/gig work.”

He added that this latter category is “such an important aspect of the future,” noting that 7shifts’ network can help match qualified workers to restaurants for these kinds of shifts.

He explained that this kind of staffing is more complicated than, say, finding an available Uber driver, given that different restaurants require different training and skill sets, such that more factors go into which gig or flex worker is right for a given shift. Consequently, he said that “to be successful,” the restaurant industry needs to view this kind of labor model as “a matching opportunity.”

Keeping It in the Family

On the flip side, Hamid has seen value in just the opposite kind of work, investing in employees over a long period of time and building connections with them.

He noted that Virtual X Kitchen is next to the campus of The University of Maryland, College Park. As such, in addition to the full-time staff who have worked at the company “for a very long time,” Hamid becomes a mentor to the high school and college students who work part time.

In turn, these relationships yield long-term value for the company. Hamid stated that during busy periods, such as during the holiday season, former employees often step in to help.

“Anybody who has worked for us and [then moved onto] … other things and what not, has always said, ‘If you ever need help, call me,’” Hamid said. “So, I actually call them all the time.”

He explained that he’ll pay them extra, let them know the details of the shift, and if they are around, they will often come.

And the strongest incentive drawing

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Red Stag Supperclub in Minneapolis is closing

This month is the last for Red Stag Supperclub, a restaurant that has served hearty, homey fare in Northeast Minneapolis for 15 years.

Opened in 2007 by restaurateur Kim Bartmann, Red Stag was a prominent example of the trendy Twin Cities supper club with a mid-century Wisconsin vibe, adapted most recently by The Apostle Supper Club across from the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul.

Red Stag announced the closure last month, writing on Instagram that the “restaurant business has been challenged since the onset of COVID-19, and in turn, the changing of consumer habits.”

“These challenges have affected how all restaurants do business,” the post continued.

The restaurant will serve its final meals on Dec. 31 but is continuing regular service — including weekly events such as Friday fish fries and Sunday chicken dinners — until then. Red Stag is also hosting a holiday craft market on Dec. 11.

Bartmann’s business practices during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic landed her in hot water with Attorney General Keith Ellison’s office. Following a state investigation into alleged wage theft, Bartmann’s company was required to repay more than $230,000 to employees last year. In response to continued criticism earlier this year when Bartmann was named a semifinalist for a James Beard award for Outstanding Restaurateur, she blamed the backlash on “double standards” and “misogyny.” Bartmann’s restaurant group, Placemaker Hospitality, did not return a request for comment.

As Red Stag closes, Placemaker Hospitality is making other moves in Minneapolis. After the Italian spot Amore Uptown closed last month, Bartmann bought the space — which is located across Lake Street from another restaurant of hers, Barbette — and she plans to reopen an Italian restaurant there in the near future.

Bartmann also operates the Minneapolis restaurants Book Club, Tiny Diner, Gigi’s Cafe and Pat’s Tap, and the concession stand Bread & Pickle at Lake Harriet. She also helped open Kyatchi in Lowertown, which closed earlier this year.

Red Stag Super Club: 509 1st Avenue NE, Minneapolis; 612-767-7766; www.redstagsupperclub.com/

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Cincinnati restaurants hit by Facebook, Instagram social media hackers

Arnold's Bar & Grill, a historic bar and restaurant in downtown Cincinnati, was targeted by social media hackers, the owner says.

Arnold’s Bar & Grill’s Facebook account was hacked over the weekend in what owner Chris Breeden says is a scheme that has targeted several Cincinnati small businesses.

According to Breeden, he received a notification Friday that someone in Los Angeles had logged into his personal Facebook account. Minutes later, he was alerted that an unknown user had accepted his friend request.

“I went in and unfriended that person and removed everyone that was logged in,” he said.

Breeden also changed his password. However, the user was added back as a friend, and the next morning, Breeden was locked out of his personal Facebook account, Instagram and the Arnold’s Bar & Grill business page for violating Facebook’s terms of service.

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The small business owner says two of his credit cards, which were linked to Facebook to pay for Arnold’s Bar & Grill advertising, were charged a total of $2,800. Two of four fraudulent charges were flagged by his bank before going through, and he was reimbursed for the other two.

As of Tuesday, the Downtown bar’s Facebook page is visible online, but Breeden says he can’t log into it. The Arnold’s Bar & Grill account on Instagram, which is owned by the Facebook parent company Meta, has been taken down.

Multiple Cincinnati restaurants have been targeted

Breeden believes what happened to him is part of a hacking scheme that has hit multiple small businesses around the country. Hackers can gain access to a user’s Facebook account, add themselves as an administrator for their business page and make purchases with linked credit cards or PayPal accounts, according to a Reddit page dedicated to the issue. The hackers quickly block users from regaining entry to their accounts by posting explicit or copyrighted content, getting the page taken down by Facebook.

Hackers gained entry to Chris Breeden's personal Facebook account and, from there, hacked into the Arnold's Bar & Grill business page.  A Subreddit suggests the issue is nationwide.

Crown Restaurant Group, which owns Losanti, Crown Republic Gastropub, Crown Cantina and Rosie’s Italian, experienced similar hacking issues in October.

Hayley Sitek, the group’s co-owner and social media manager, said she was notified on Oct. 18 that one of the restaurants’ posts had violated Facebook’s terms of service. After contesting the ban, her personal Facebook account was hacked, and she was locked out of all four restaurants’ Instagram profiles.

“You merge these accounts together and it’s advertised to make your life easier, but as soon as you connect them, they can take you down,” she told The Enquirer.

The restaurants’ Facebook pages were able to remain active because they had an administrator besides Sitek who could still access them, he said. Sitek didn’t save any credit card information to the business pages because he managed multiple accounts, so no fraudulent charges were made.

However, the restaurants’ Instagram pages and Sitek’s personal accounts were permanently removed, but she was able to create new pages for the businesses last week following a 30-day ban.

Breeden said he has connected with 10 local businesses, including Crown Restaurant Group’s, that have been targeted, seven of which were hacked within the past two months.

One business, bar and music venue the Belle & the Bear, said in a post it was forced to create new Facebook and Instagram pages after being hacked in September. Breeden also said Via Vite, which is owned by Cristian Pietoso, was affected by a hack. Via Vite, as well as Forno Osteria & Bar, one of Pietoso’s other establishments, began inexplicably posting out-of-place movie clips on Facebook in the past few weeks.

The Enquirer has reached out to Pietoso and other restaurant owners who might have been affected but did not hear back.

For small business owners, losing access to social media is “instantly crippling,” Breeden said, especially amidst the holiday season.

“We have a large Facebook presence that I’ve been working for over a decade to build,” he said. “We have our holiday show that we are doing with OTRimprov coming up, and I have no way to promote it.”

Breeden has begun Facebook’s appeal process to regain access to his account. He plans to contact the Cincinnati City Council and Ohio attorney general with a list of local businesses that have been targeted.

The Enquirer will continue updating this story as we get more information.

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