Despite how hard you work to attract customers and make great-tasting food at a great value, it all goes away if the last thing your guest does in your restaurant completely grosses them-out. Conversely, if the last thing your customer experiences is a hands-free, quick, clean trash deposit into a container that saves thousands of trash bags, that’s a big plus for customer satisfaction.
Savings: $2.50/day/compactor
“The effects of poor customer service ripple far beyond the revenue lost with that one person. Customers are the foundation of success for any business, and if customers are not treated right, the business can lose its reason for existence. If you aren’t taking care of your customers, and your business becomes known for poor customer service, expect several things to happen — and none of them are good news for your business.”
Jan Birch April 20, 2018
How Does Poor Customer Service Affect a Business?
Compacting six trash bags into one with Original ecotrash® reduces trash bag changes by 83%. This means 83% fewer trips through the dining area with “the gray whale” or whatever name you give the container that hauls trash bags from the dining area to the dumpster. It’s a nuisance guests when it’s in the dining area because it blocks the aisle and adds congestion to an already crowded area.
The distance from your dining room trash cans to the dumpster is a huge deal. If it’s 100 feet, 300 feet or 1,000 feet, your team spends an inordinate amount of time transporting trash over a long distance. While it’s hard to move the dumpster closer to the dining room, Original ecotrash makes it easy to reduce the frequency of trips and reduce the time your team spends moving trash.
Leave the frequent traveler programs for your sales people, and get your trash out of the travel business.
Savings: 1 hour per compactor per day ($12.00 for $12.00/hr)
Foodservice operators face rising wages and fierce competition to recruit, hire, train and keep quality employees. Each time an employee leaves, it costs $5,846 according to The Center for Hospitality Research at Cornell.
Foodservice operators face rising wages and fierce competition to recruit, hire, train and keep quality employees. Each time an employee leaves, it costs $5,846 according to The Center for Hospitality Research at Cornell.
Employees LOVE Original ecotrash and LOVE emptying the trash 80% less than before. Automating a mundane task that employees generally hate doing (like trash handling) will not only keep current employees more satisfied, but also give you a point of difference against competitors trying to hire the same candidates you are.
Savings: $10.00/day or $5/day/compactor*
*Based on 5% of employees turning-over at 10 months instead of 8 months
“Maybe you know your restaurant is hemorrhaging money by losing employees, but how do you find out just how much you’re losing on a per employee level? The Center for Hospitality Research at Cornell estimates that the cost of employee turnover averages around $5,864 per person for a typical front-line employee.
Lucky for us, the CHR broke that number down even further. Here’s how they got to $5,864:
3 Percent Pre-departure: $176
20 Percent Recruiting: $1,173
11 Percent Selection: $645
14 Percent Orientation & Training: $821
52 Percent Productivity Loss: $3,049”
Ryan Mack July 6, 2017
What is the Real Cost of Restaurant Employee Turnover?
Note: Your overall savings will depend on your individual circumstances and may vary from the examples above. For more specific information, reach-out to us at contactus@compactiontechnogies.com