Food waste hurts your profits. Unplanned daily specials often create more excess inventory. A smart approach turns specials into profit drivers. They become guest favorites.
Define Your Specials’ Purpose
Why offer a special? Your answer guides your strategy. Are you clearing inventory? Testing new items? Boosting slow-period sales? Each goal needs a different special and price. Moving five pounds of sirloin nearing expiry differs from introducing a premium, high-margin seasonal dish. Define success for each special. This helps you choose ingredients, set prices, and measure results. Lavu POS tracks every sale against your specific goals.
Analyze Your Inventory and Sales Data
Guessing creates waste. Check your current inventory. What ingredients do you have a lot of? Which items sell slowly? Your Lavu POS gives you sales data. Marty AI, Lavu’s analytics layer, finds ingredient surplus. It identifies dishes that sell well at specific times. Use this insight for your specials. For instance, if you have too much chicken thigh, make a chicken special. This cuts food waste by up to 20%. It turns expiring stock into revenue.
Cost Each Special Meticulously
Profit comes from details. Calculate the exact food cost for every special. List all ingredients, including garnishes and sauces. Aim for your target food cost percentage, typically 25% to 35%. Do not forget labor costs. A complex special might increase prep time. This pushes labor cost up by 5% for that dish. Lavu’s inventory management tracks ingredient usage. It keeps your costs accurate. If a special’s food cost exceeds 40%, adjust the recipe or price. Do this before it hits the menu. Selling an extra 10 portions of a $20 special brings $200 more revenue. Price it correctly.
Craft Engaging Descriptions and Promote Effectively
A great special needs a great story. Write descriptive, enticing menu language. ‘Pan-seared scallops with saffron risotto’ sounds better than ‘today’s seafood special.’ Train your staff well. They promote your menu directly. Make sure they know every ingredient, preparation method, and allergen. Use digital menu boards, social media, and email newsletters to tell customers. Lavu’s sales reports show which specials connect with guests. This guides your future promotions. For more help creating a powerful strategy, check Lavu’s resources and see a demo at: https://lavu.com/demo
Monitor Performance and Adapt Quickly
A special’s success changes. Track its performance daily with your Lavu POS reports. How many units sold? What was the gross profit? Ask for customer feedback. Marty AI analyzes sales velocity. It suggests optimal pricing or ingredient adjustments. If a special sells poorly, change or remove it. Do not let pride cost you money. A special selling only five units but needing two hours of prep labor might lose money. Pivot fast based on real-time data.
FAQ
How often should I change my specials?
It depends on your concept and customers. Change them weekly or bi-weekly to keep things fresh for staff and guests.
Should specials always be cheaper than regular menu items?
No. Specials can be premium items. They increase average check size or move specific inventory.
How do I price a special correctly?
Calculate all ingredient costs first. Then apply your target food cost percentage, typically 25-35%.
Can specials help reduce food waste?
Yes. Specials move surplus ingredients or items nearing expiry. This turns potential waste into revenue.
What’s the best way to promote daily specials?
Inform your staff well so they can upsell them. Use chalkboards, digital displays, and social media posts.
Do I need different specials for lunch and dinner?
Yes, often. Lunch specials focus on speed and value. Dinner specials can be more elaborate or premium.
How do I know if a special is successful?
Track sales volume, profit margin, and customer feedback using your POS system like Lavu. A successful special meets your goals.
