How to Determine Pricing For Beer, Liquor & Wine [Restaurant Business Plan]

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 40

  • @cmcd3174
    @cmcd3174 Před rokem +2

    Thank You ! I do all the ordering for alcohol and it's harder than it sounds !

  • @tevietev
    @tevietev Před 13 dny

    Thank you, buddy. this was great

  • @DavidLopez-jn7pc
    @DavidLopez-jn7pc Před 3 lety +2

    Thank u so much. I honestly understood it perfectly. Now u got my brain working. Couldnt explained it better. Ur the best.

  • @juanpot123
    @juanpot123 Před rokem +1

    Thank you very much Sr

  • @qzwxecrv0192837465
    @qzwxecrv0192837465 Před 3 lety +1

    Great stuff. To add a bit more profit in your draft beer, you only need to use the per ounce value * the drink size. He got a value of $5.29 with an entire keg of those 24 ounce servings. A 24 oz beer @.06 cents per oz, with the 25% margin he mentioned = 5.76. 32 oz = $7.68 and 64 oz = $15.35. Your PER OUNCE price doesn't change based on number of specific size drinks.

    • @christopherlukas4145
      @christopherlukas4145 Před 3 lety

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      I stupidly lost my password. I love any assistance you can give me.

    • @christopherlukas4145
      @christopherlukas4145 Před 3 lety

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    • @christopherlukas4145
      @christopherlukas4145 Před 3 lety

      @Jordan Darian It did the trick and I actually got access to my account again. Im so happy:D
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    • @jordandarian4105
      @jordandarian4105 Před 3 lety

      @Christopher Lukas happy to help :)

  • @patrickphillips4210
    @patrickphillips4210 Před 3 lety +2

    I really like your content very helpful and to the point. Will be watching more content if it’s all like this. You see too much clickbait out there everybody tries to make a simple question ask situation into a 30 minute video. Keep working hard and stay safe

    • @DaveAllredTheRealBarman
      @DaveAllredTheRealBarman  Před 3 lety

      Thanks Patrick. Appreciate that.

    • @tbeehler
      @tbeehler Před rokem

      @@DaveAllredTheRealBarman I've been working on ramping up my own place for about a year now (long story), and you've always given me solid information and everything makes perfect sense. Thanks Dave!

  • @matthewhagglund7867
    @matthewhagglund7867 Před 3 lety +3

    Hello, awesome video man. What spillage rates do you use on your liquors, beer, and mixers?

  • @Karl3712
    @Karl3712 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you sir

  • @BadBlonde-CarHistory
    @BadBlonde-CarHistory Před 3 lety +1

    Appreciate your videos!

  • @reytrillana8608
    @reytrillana8608 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Dave. Great stuff. Question-should price per shot be more expensive than per bottle price?

    • @DaveAllredTheRealBarman
      @DaveAllredTheRealBarman  Před 2 lety +1

      Hey Rey, are you asking if the price per shot should be more expensive than the bottle of the same brand/product (i.e. Jack Daniels)? Or are you asking if a shot of liquor should be more expensive than a bottled beer? Not sure what bottle you are asking about exactly.

  • @sophiasurb3522
    @sophiasurb3522 Před 3 lety +1

    Hi Dave, I'm having trouble figuring what to charge for drinks with multiple mixers. Obviously, the first mixer is free, but we have people looking for multiple mixers off the gun, and sometimes adding grenadine, bitters or syrup...? It gets complex, so is it appropriate to add .25 - .50 for additional mixers? Or more?

    • @tiberivsgracchvs2393
      @tiberivsgracchvs2393 Před rokem +1

      Those are called cocktails, why do you have a bar if you don’t know what a cocktail is?

  • @suoyomakpah2362
    @suoyomakpah2362 Před 3 lety

    So basically I should stick a certain desired percentage for all the drinks?

  • @misterfister7714
    @misterfister7714 Před 2 lety

    Isnt 1:3 or 1:2,5 pure standard like 100 years now.

  • @ramysekaly8738
    @ramysekaly8738 Před 2 lety

    Can you do cl version? Cl/liter

  • @sabdamusic1578
    @sabdamusic1578 Před 3 lety

    how about cocktails pricing?

    • @DaveAllredTheRealBarman
      @DaveAllredTheRealBarman  Před 3 lety +1

      Hey Sabda, it's the same process. You can do it with anything, including your food. Just determine the total wholesale cost of the cocktail (what it's costing you as an owner) and divide it by the desired cost %.

  • @jettrealtygroupbyjlarealty6679

    But your not calculating cost of employees, rent, insurance, electricity ect?

    • @DaveAllredTheRealBarman
      @DaveAllredTheRealBarman  Před 4 lety +2

      Hey Jett, you are welcome to factor those things in. The point is to determine your desired cost % and then use that number to determine pricing. If you want a lower cost % to account for those things, then that's what you need to do. Just know that the lower the cost % goal you have, the higher the price you need to charge, or the cheaper your products need to be. Hopefully that makes sense.

  • @Grannyhauenstein
    @Grannyhauenstein Před 4 lety

    Those prices are really high. I've been saving a lot of money with the stay at home order. Twenty five percent cost on tap beer is crazy. If I'm going to pay a bar 4x the cost for a beer, they better give me something in return. Like a great atmosphere, and hot bartenders who are friendly. The bartender better thank me when she puts my change on the bar for the drink. If they just slap the money down and walk away, like many of them do, no tip for you. A tip is earned, not a given. So many places don't even have music going, and besides paying for overpriced drinks, they charge you a dollar for every fucking song in the jukebox. Screw that. I think many people are realizing now, by staying home, just how much money they blew at the bars. Many people are turning their garages into mancaves with a bar, and having their friends over.

    • @DaveAllredTheRealBarman
      @DaveAllredTheRealBarman  Před 4 lety +6

      You are correct, Jamie, it is the business's job and the bartenders' job to create a great atmosphere and great service to justify the higher prices you pay by going out. I fully agree.
      However, just so you (and other people) are aware, everyone assumes that because bars & restaurants have big mark-ups that they are making a killing, but it's simply not true. Bars and restaurants, on average, after they pay everything and BEFORE taxes, make about 3 - 6% profit. That means if they sell $1 million in a year, they make $30,000 - $60,000. Pretty pathetic profits.
      So give them a bit of a break. They're doing what they have to just to survive. But with that said, bartenders are also usually unaware of how hard it is for the owner to make money and so they walk around like they own the planet, which is just plain sad.
      Thanks for stopping by. Let me know when your man cave is finished and I'll stop by for a drink.
      Cheers.

    • @peecmkr45
      @peecmkr45 Před 4 lety

      @@DaveAllredTheRealBarman I was thinking like Jamie M when I saw the profit margins you were using. I was wondering if they were realistic or just being used for the example calculations. If they are realistic, that's 70% to 80% profit margins on alcohol. I know retail space rent is stupid high but Damn that's a high profit margin.

    • @cujero
      @cujero Před 3 lety +4

      @@peecmkr45 rent is definitely high but labor is the highest by far. Also prices on food fluctuate a lot every week. Cases of avocado go between 30 to 90 dollars and the meat as well changes a lot. Restaurants can't change prices every week to account for that. And food also has a small shelf life. Not to mention taxes. Its a hard business and most times the drinks are what makes the difference between annual profits or losses.

    • @MrLoddyDoddy
      @MrLoddyDoddy Před 3 lety +1

      @@cujero facts

    • @qzwxecrv0192837465
      @qzwxecrv0192837465 Před 3 lety +1

      @@peecmkr45 leave out utilities, etc and focus on bar staff. If the bar has 2 bartenders that are average, they should be making $12 / hour or so X 2 = $24/hour regardless if you buy a drink. Now throw in a bartender who has show skills, can serve fast, accurate, may has a bit of flair and a great personality, he is probably making $15-18 an hour because he brings in customers & keeps them happy. Doesn't sound like much VS 80% margin, but now pay the $500+ electric bill, rent, matching taxes for FICA, water & sewer, liability insurance, broken glasses, spillage, comped drinks, etc and as he stated above, margins shrink quick.

  • @khodalento3255
    @khodalento3255 Před 3 lety +1

    Calculation is wrong... Try .75 to 1$ beer

    • @DaveAllredTheRealBarman
      @DaveAllredTheRealBarman  Před 3 lety

      Hey Khoda, not sure what you're referring to. Which calculation is wrong exactly so I can correct it?

    • @nwouso1
      @nwouso1 Před 2 lety

      @@DaveAllredTheRealBarman 58.75 liters equal 1986.5738; not 1984

    • @DaveAllredTheRealBarman
      @DaveAllredTheRealBarman  Před 2 lety

      @@nwouso1 This depends on what metric you'd like to use. 15.5 gallons = 1,984 oz. 58.75 liters does = 1,986.57 oz. but these keg numbers are directly from the distributor. I didn't make them up. In addition, the difference between the two is 0.1% so no matter which one you choose, there is going to be no discernible difference. I hope that makes sense.

  • @cottagefarm3103
    @cottagefarm3103 Před rokem

    Don't you all wish you understood the metric system 😅