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Atricle Dump - Coaching Every Play!
How To Close More Loans And Work LESS right thing towards your guests and staff, while at the same time creating opportunity for the future of the business to grow and be successful. The tool used to accomplish these feats is nothing less than Coaching!One of the most overlooked challenges a mortgage professional faces in their day to day sales cycle is the fallout that occurs when sending application packages out to prospects for approval. From my own experience coaching mortgage professionals, it's reported that as many as 30% of the packages sent are never returned.Imagine you owned a grocery store and you lost 30% of your inventory to thieves. How long would you expect to be in business?The mortgage industry enjoys relatively high profit margins. As a result, we tend to focus on the "low hanging fruit" and don't put much effort into our prospects that require some follow up. In this changing market that's a BIG mistake.Part of operating your mortgage business includes developing systems to plug the wholes in your sales funnel. 99% of your time is focused on getting the phones to ring. It would shock most to learn that plugging the wholes in your follow up can dramatically increase your overall closing ratio and bottom line profits.The good news is that it's actually cheaper and easier to bring back a lost borrower to your pipeline than it is to find a brand new one. All you need is to develop a system to stop or slow the fall out, like a grocery store security guard, and make it part of your standard operating procedure.A great place to start is http://www.lostborrowercampaign.com where you'll find a free report that explains why prospects don't return their applications.To summarize, try taking a step back and looking at your business from a new perspective. A pure volume business model may not be your best strategy moving forward. Your business strategy has to change with the market if you want to survive. I do not think you can talk too much on the subject of Coaching in our industry. The second most important subject for us at the unit level is Culture. Now let us understand more of the basics first. You will never be lacking in the Coaching department, and you will always have a Culture in your restaurant. It may be good or it may be bad, but regardless, you will have a Culture. The question is what kind is it? When you answer that question, you have a handle on the type of Coaching that exists also. Great restaurants that deliver WOW service AND amazing food AND unbelievable value, AND deliver great profits, (like the one in the beginning of our story) have great Cultures that nurture staff to perform at their very best, every guest, every table, every day. They have superb Coaching driving this Culture as well - leaders who Coach every employee, every play, at every table, every day. (Sorry if I rhyme!) Bad restaurants by contrast (and there are only the two kinds – more on that later!) de-evolve into a Culture of Bind On OK new restaurant owner. You open your doors for the first time; you are staffed to the gills to ensure you have enough staff to take really good care of the large amount of business you expect during the opening weeks. Hosts are all over the door, greeting each guest with enthusiasm and smiles. Managers everywhere are talking to guests and supporting staff. There is one server for every 2-3 tables, and one busser and host per 5 servers. Hosts are making small talk at tables as they seat guests who are eager to hear about your menu and drink lists. The kitchen manager/chef is doing a great job. Food comes out of the kitchen in record time with great presentations, feeding the eyes of the guest as they are placed superbly before them on exquisitely set tables. Bartenders are showing off their drink prep skills with awesome flair, while telling jokes and the sound of laughter is heard in the dining room coming from the bar. Guests are happy and you are able to put out operational fires practically before they flame up. Business is awesome and guest comment cards tell you to keep up the great job! You must be a genius! “This is easier than I thought!” you tell yourself.The concept is simple, the process is complex; but the development of an onsert that affixes to the advertisment within any magazine, exactly on the same or adjoining page of your advertising. Image the possibilities and the format. This author has developed exactly that system, both the process and the Onsert. I call them Response Triggers, that affix and adjoin on page, before the signature is folded. Affixing is done at any printing press speed up to 3,000 feet per minute with extreme accuracy.No longer does a magazine publisher have to go offline to include a response device for their advertisers. The revenue potentials are enormous and now can be delivered. The same page as the ad; no longer is it required that a bind in run between signatures of a magazine or publication. Right on the same page or adjoining page. The format can offer features and involvement for the reader. It triggers a response.The triggers can be printed on paper, plastic, or foils; on material as light as 2 pt to as heavy as 9 pt. Thickness is only limited by what the magazine will accept for thickness. Adhered with a removalable adhesive, it doesn't tear its host page. The adhesive also allows the trigger to be place on most surfaces and moved around; just like a MMM Note.The possibilities are endless!Write me if you'd like more detail!Rich Keeferich.keefe@att.net Fast-forward 4 weeks! Guests walk in the front door at 3:30pm and no one is there to greet them. They wait for 10 minutes before the two bartenders who are talking to each other at the bar, notice them and yell back to the kitchen for the host to come out and seat them. The host walks very briskly to the host stand barely making any eye contact and says, “Two?” “Smoking or non?” Then walks away from the guests and motions to them to take their seats at the table she throws two menus down onto, before once again she disappears into the kitchen. Ten more minutes go bye before the server arrives and says, “Are you ready to order yet?” Orders are taken but not written down because the server is, “very good at remembering things” and leaves talking under her breath. Drinks arrive. Food arrives relatively soon and has 2 side order mistakes as Miss Icanrememberalotofthings, forgot to put in the substitutions, and comments to the guest, “…well I guess I could have not understood what you were telling me!” But brings out the substituted items and fails to apologize. Server does not check back before all drinks are completely empty, and guests become worried that their friends who recommended you have misjudged your restaurant from the opening week they first tried you. What has happened? This is the same staff you had in the opening that performed superbly. Same great food and service? Why would sales begin to dip lower than anticipated? Guest counts drop? In a word, “UNDER-COACHING”! It is occurring in epidemic proportions everywhere I turn. By creating a false sense of the proper Culture in your restaurant from the beginning, you have taught your staff that the sense of urgency and pride with which you performed in the opening weeks, no longer is necessary or demanded by you. That now you have to be checking out servers in the office or checking in inventory and cannot be on the floor. You did not set up realistic labor scheduling from the beginning for either staff or management and now your staff has to learn a completely new way of working without the support of the army you gave them during the opening. You have trained guests to expect to be pampered by that same army but now that you need to run a decent labor cost, you cut back to “normal operating staffing” and leave the guest wondering what has happened to such a good place so soon? And now what are you going to do? Coupons? Discounts? Quick fix, short-term gimmick marketing that will only further confuse your guests and at the same time tell them that the price they paid for their experience in the beginning was way too much? Profits begin to drop toward red levels, while costs soar as you sit in your office wondering what the license number of that truck was that you just got run over by? Unfortunately, this is not a made up scenario. It actually happened to the restaurant owners that just opened their latest unit close to where I live. And my wife and I were the guests. So when I asked the manager what happened? His reply was, “…well we had hoped it would last longer than it did, but we knew that eventually business would drop off. Now we’re all about our bottom line.” And of course, when I offered my help (for free!) in recreating the excitement and level of business they enjoyed before their expected reality set in, they politely declined. What a very sad statement to make on what started out to be a fantastic example of how to do it right, but is now nothing more than fodder for magazine articles on what not to do. This kind of scenario plays out all too often in our world. However, it can be avoided. Moreover, if it has happened to you, you can recover from it. Let us start at the beginning. Leadership is about creating a Culture that achieves the vision set out for the business. It is about doing the right thing towards your guests and staff, while at the same time creating opportunity for the future of the business to grow and be successful. The tool used to accomplish these feats is nothing less than Coaching! I do not think you can talk too much on the subject of Coaching in our industry. The second most important subject for us at the unit level is Culture. Now let us understand more of the basics first. You will never be lacking in the Coaching department, and you will always have a Culture in your restaurant. It may be good or it may be bad, but regardless, you will have a Culture. The question is what kind is it? When you answer that question, you have a handle on the type of Coaching that exists also. Great restaurants that deliver WOW service AND amazing food AND unbelievable value, AND deliver great profits, (like the one in the beginning of our story) have great Cultures that nurture staff to perform at their very best, every guest, every table, every day. They have superb Coaching driving this Culture as well - leaders who Coach every employee, every play, at every table, every day. (Sorry if I rhyme!) Bad restaurants by contrast (and there are only the two kinds – more on that later!) de-evolve into a Culture of s SSTOP! 5 Steps to Approach Complaining Customers one is there to greet them. They wait for 10 minutes before the two bartenders who are talking to each other at the bar, notice them and yell back to the kitchen for the host to come out and seat them. The host walks very briskly to the host stand barely making any eye contact and says, “Two?” “Smoking or non?” Then walks away from the guests and motions to them to take their seats at the table she throws two menus down onto, before once again she disappears into the kitchen. Ten more minutes go bye before the server arrives and says, “Are you ready to order yet?” Orders are taken but not written down because the server is, “very good at remembering things” and leaves talking under her breath. Drinks arrive. Food arrives relatively soon and has 2 side order mistakes as Miss Icanrememberalotofthings, forgot to put in the substitutions, and comments to the guest, “…well I guess I could have not understood what you were telling me!” But brings out the substituted items and fails to apologize. Server does not check back before all drinks are completely empty, and guests become worried that their friends who recommended you have misjudged your restaurant from the opening week they first tried you.Let’s say a customer comes to you with a complaint.Maybe in person, via email or over the phone.What’s the best approach?It’s simple: SSTOP!No, that wasn’t a typo. You read it right: SSTOP. And it represents a five-step process for approaching problems, diffusing anger, changing minds and winning the customer back. Let’s take a look.S is for SURPRISE. Psychologically, if you respond to a problem, complaint or accusation with surprise, three things happen. First, you begin to diffuse anger. Secondly, your reactive response comes off as natural and sincere. Lastly, the customer is more willing to forgive you.PHRASES THAT PAYSES: “Really?”Really is one of the most versatile words in the English language. It exudes both concern and curiosity. And based on the severity of the problem, changing the inflection of your voice indicates numerous emotions. For example, stop reading right now. Try saying the word really two times: first with a low pitch and second with a high pitch.Two totally different meanings, right?CUSTOMER: “Hi, this is Miss Jackson from room 2321. Um, I asked for a non-smoking room, but I think Joe Camel must have stayed here last night.”YOU: “Really?”OK. Great job. You’ve immediately displayed concern for the problem. Let’s move on to step two.S is for SORRY. Customers don’t want apologies, they want solutions. Still, saying you’re sorry never hurts. You still need to take ownership of the problem. And an effective technique for doing so is to combine “Sorry” with its polar opposite: thank you.PHRASES THAT PAYSES: Sorry + Thank You.CUSTOMER: “Hi, this is Miss Jackson from room 2321. Um, I asked for a non-smoking room, but I think Joe Camel must have stayed here last night.”YOU: “Really? I’m sorr What has happened? This is the same staff you had in the opening that performed superbly. Same great food and service? Why would sales begin to dip lower than anticipated? Guest counts drop? In a word, “UNDER-COACHING”! It is occurring in epidemic proportions everywhere I turn. By creating a false sense of the proper Culture in your restaurant from the beginning, you have taught your staff that the sense of urgency and pride with which you performed in the opening weeks, no longer is necessary or demanded by you. That now you have to be checking out servers in the office or checking in inventory and cannot be on the floor. You did not set up realistic labor scheduling from the beginning for either staff or management and now your staff has to learn a completely new way of working without the support of the army you gave them during the opening. You have trained guests to expect to be pampered by that same army but now that you need to run a decent labor cost, you cut back to “normal operating staffing” and leave the guest wondering what has happened to such a good place so soon? And now what are you going to do? Coupons? Discounts? Quick fix, short-term gimmick marketing that will only further confuse your guests and at the same time tell them that the price they paid for their experience in the beginning was way too much? Profits begin to drop toward red levels, while costs soar as you sit in your office wondering what the license number of that truck was that you just got run over by? Unfortunately, this is not a made up scenario. It actually happened to the restaurant owners that just opened their latest unit close to where I live. And my wife and I were the guests. So when I asked the manager what happened? His reply was, “…well we had hoped it would last longer than it did, but we knew that eventually business would drop off. Now we’re all about our bottom line.” And of course, when I offered my help (for free!) in recreating the excitement and level of business they enjoyed before their expected reality set in, they politely declined. What a very sad statement to make on what started out to be a fantastic example of how to do it right, but is now nothing more than fodder for magazine articles on what not to do. This kind of scenario plays out all too often in our world. However, it can be avoided. Moreover, if it has happened to you, you can recover from it. Let us start at the beginning. Leadership is about creating a Culture that achieves the vision set out for the business. It is about doing the right thing towards your guests and staff, while at the same time creating opportunity for the future of the business to grow and be successful. The tool used to accomplish these feats is nothing less than Coaching! I do not think you can talk too much on the subject of Coaching in our industry. The second most important subject for us at the unit level is Culture. Now let us understand more of the basics first. You will never be lacking in the Coaching department, and you will always have a Culture in your restaurant. It may be good or it may be bad, but regardless, you will have a Culture. The question is what kind is it? When you answer that question, you have a handle on the type of Coaching that exists also. Great restaurants that deliver WOW service AND amazing food AND unbelievable value, AND deliver great profits, (like the one in the beginning of our story) have great Cultures that nurture staff to perform at their very best, every guest, every table, every day. They have superb Coaching driving this Culture as well - leaders who Coach every employee, every play, at every table, every day. (Sorry if I rhyme!) Bad restaurants by contrast (and there are only the two kinds – more on that later!) de-evolve into a Culture of How to Develop a Bigger and Better Business Strategy in the opening that performed superbly. Same great food and service? Why would sales begin to dip lower than anticipated? Guest counts drop?Are you considering taking your business bigger? The financial rewards can be massive. Your life will change overnight. If you are, have you considered the repercussions on your health, social life and personal relationships?For those who can cope have had a life of total luxury. The key is to have a solid plan that is difficult for you to deviate from. There are a number of elements to include in your plan.Have you ever imagined what it would be like to enjoy a business that returns you enough money to allow you to live on room service for the rest of your life?Check what you are now doingWhich position does your business fit into when considering your competitors? The areas to consider are:• Product• Price• Customer support• Costs• Market shareOther points to consider are how do you compare against your closest rival? Which businesses excel in your line of work? Once you have found that out work out what makes them different so you can be better.Create the planAlways focus your efforts to deliver great products and even better service. Questions you can ask yourself are:• Do you measure quality and reliability of products?• Is the performance of your business measured?• Is customer satisfaction measured?• Is your staff multi-skilled?• Do you communicate well?Establish time frames and actions to be carried out and by whom. Document and monitor to ensure it is completed.Set your targets When you are setting your time frames and targets make sure they are big, exciting and totally unreasonable without being over the top. Do it for one, two and three years out. If you are satisfied you won't have the drive to send yourself to the next level. If targets are too small, you will not generate excitement and urgency. In a word, “UNDER-COACHING”! It is occurring in epidemic proportions everywhere I turn. By creating a false sense of the proper Culture in your restaurant from the beginning, you have taught your staff that the sense of urgency and pride with which you performed in the opening weeks, no longer is necessary or demanded by you. That now you have to be checking out servers in the office or checking in inventory and cannot be on the floor. You did not set up realistic labor scheduling from the beginning for either staff or management and now your staff has to learn a completely new way of working without the support of the army you gave them during the opening. You have trained guests to expect to be pampered by that same army but now that you need to run a decent labor cost, you cut back to “normal operating staffing” and leave the guest wondering what has happened to such a good place so soon? And now what are you going to do? Coupons? Discounts? Quick fix, short-term gimmick marketing that will only further confuse your guests and at the same time tell them that the price they paid for their experience in the beginning was way too much? Profits begin to drop toward red levels, while costs soar as you sit in your office wondering what the license number of that truck was that you just got run over by? Unfortunately, this is not a made up scenario. It actually happened to the restaurant owners that just opened their latest unit close to where I live. And my wife and I were the guests. So when I asked the manager what happened? His reply was, “…well we had hoped it would last longer than it did, but we knew that eventually business would drop off. Now we’re all about our bottom line.” And of course, when I offered my help (for free!) in recreating the excitement and level of business they enjoyed before their expected reality set in, they politely declined. What a very sad statement to make on what started out to be a fantastic example of how to do it right, but is now nothing more than fodder for magazine articles on what not to do. This kind of scenario plays out all too often in our world. However, it can be avoided. Moreover, if it has happened to you, you can recover from it. Let us start at the beginning. Leadership is about creating a Culture that achieves the vision set out for the business. It is about doing the right thing towards your guests and staff, while at the same time creating opportunity for the future of the business to grow and be successful. The tool used to accomplish these feats is nothing less than Coaching! I do not think you can talk too much on the subject of Coaching in our industry. The second most important subject for us at the unit level is Culture. Now let us understand more of the basics first. You will never be lacking in the Coaching department, and you will always have a Culture in your restaurant. It may be good or it may be bad, but regardless, you will have a Culture. The question is what kind is it? When you answer that question, you have a handle on the type of Coaching that exists also. Great restaurants that deliver WOW service AND amazing food AND unbelievable value, AND deliver great profits, (like the one in the beginning of our story) have great Cultures that nurture staff to perform at their very best, every guest, every table, every day. They have superb Coaching driving this Culture as well - leaders who Coach every employee, every play, at every table, every day. (Sorry if I rhyme!) Bad restaurants by contrast (and there are only the two kinds – more on that later!) de-evolve into a Culture of Check Your Attitude - You Cannot Sell Ice To An Eskimo xperience in the beginning was way too much? Profits begin to drop toward red levels, while costs soar as you sit in your office wondering what the license number of that truck was that you just got run over by?Can you sell ice to an Eskimo? What about ice cream to an Eskimo? How about ice cubes?If you said yes to the above questions, then congratulations, you suck as a salesperson!Of course, nobody sells ice to an Eskimo. That is just a metaphor. But some salespeople love to boast that they can. It is my belief that those salespeople that claim to be able to sell ice to an Eskimo are actually bad salespeople. It is this cocky attitude that represents everything bad about the sales profession. When you say you can sell ice to an Eskimo, you are basically saying that you will sell anything to anybody, no matter if they actually need what you are selling or not. An Eskimo does not need ice.Think about the image of the slimy used car salesman. People hate this person and everything he represents. He is out to make a buck at the expense of anybody he can swindle. He doesn’t care if he sells you a lemon as long as he gets paid his commission. It is cocky people like this that give sales professionals a bad image.So, would you still want to sell ice to an Eskimo? If you sell something that doesn't actually need your product, your client will eventually come to terms with this fact and will probably end up telling others. You will eventually get a bad reputation and lose future customers. You can forget about getting future business referrals as well. People will generally dislike you.Stop selling ice to Eskimos! Unfortunately, this is not a made up scenario. It actually happened to the restaurant owners that just opened their latest unit close to where I live. And my wife and I were the guests. So when I asked the manager what happened? His reply was, “…well we had hoped it would last longer than it did, but we knew that eventually business would drop off. Now we’re all about our bottom line.” And of course, when I offered my help (for free!) in recreating the excitement and level of business they enjoyed before their expected reality set in, they politely declined. What a very sad statement to make on what started out to be a fantastic example of how to do it right, but is now nothing more than fodder for magazine articles on what not to do. This kind of scenario plays out all too often in our world. However, it can be avoided. Moreover, if it has happened to you, you can recover from it. Let us start at the beginning. Leadership is about creating a Culture that achieves the vision set out for the business. It is about doing the right thing towards your guests and staff, while at the same time creating opportunity for the future of the business to grow and be successful. The tool used to accomplish these feats is nothing less than Coaching! I do not think you can talk too much on the subject of Coaching in our industry. The second most important subject for us at the unit level is Culture. Now let us understand more of the basics first. You will never be lacking in the Coaching department, and you will always have a Culture in your restaurant. It may be good or it may be bad, but regardless, you will have a Culture. The question is what kind is it? When you answer that question, you have a handle on the type of Coaching that exists also. Great restaurants that deliver WOW service AND amazing food AND unbelievable value, AND deliver great profits, (like the one in the beginning of our story) have great Cultures that nurture staff to perform at their very best, every guest, every table, every day. They have superb Coaching driving this Culture as well - leaders who Coach every employee, every play, at every table, every day. (Sorry if I rhyme!) Bad restaurants by contrast (and there are only the two kinds – more on that later!) de-evolve into a Culture of Getting a Job is Hard Graft right thing towards your guests and staff, while at the same time creating opportunity for the future of the business to grow and be successful. The tool used to accomplish these feats is nothing less than Coaching!Well, I haven't been in this situation for some years now, thankfully, but it's good to reflect on old writings, and this is still true today, as it was then ...Probably the hardest part of being unemployed is not knowing when things are going to change for the better. That illusory hope for the future which encourages: "Only a little longer to go and I can get a raise, promotion or big commission deal - is simply not there.So as the bills creep up, (because however you try to work it, you never have quite enough to go 'round), and as the things you can't have or just really don't need become an ever-increasing weight on that other list (things you are going to pay for, sort out and get, once you have a job), you find that little by little your life is becoming smaller and smaller, and that you're in quite a trap.BENEFITSYou can't take just any job, because once you are back in work you lose whatever small relief you've been able to obtain from rates and other bills and once again these and the mortgage will be all yours to pay in full from your salary package.If you were in a well-paid position before, the chances are that your outgoings are still potentially high, and that outweighs the merits of taking just any job. So you need a position with a salary similar to your previous earnings. Or more - because now you have those other unemployment benefits called debts."Getting a job is a job in itself", say the Employment Service. It is indeed. Probably the hardest job of all because there are no guarantees no bonuses for effort, no overtime, and certainly no pay cheque at the end of the month.RESPONSESYou want to see my job search file. You really do. I went through it a few days ago and found that this year I have written over 90 letters, filled in 26 application forms, made I do not think you can talk too much on the subject of Coaching in our industry. The second most important subject for us at the unit level is Culture. Now let us understand more of the basics first. You will never be lacking in the Coaching department, and you will always have a Culture in your restaurant. It may be good or it may be bad, but regardless, you will have a Culture. The question is what kind is it? When you answer that question, you have a handle on the type of Coaching that exists also. Great restaurants that deliver WOW service AND amazing food AND unbelievable value, AND deliver great profits, (like the one in the beginning of our story) have great Cultures that nurture staff to perform at their very best, every guest, every table, every day. They have superb Coaching driving this Culture as well - leaders who Coach every employee, every play, at every table, every day. (Sorry if I rhyme!) Bad restaurants by contrast (and there are only the two kinds – more on that later!) de-evolve into a Culture of slackers performing tasks somewhat relative to service and placing what appears to be food in front of people who walk in and request something to eat while they sit down at a table where it will be placed for their consumption, and then expected to fork out greenbacks for it, as well as the opportunity to be ignored by their wait person who is off doing only God knows what, only God knows where. And although you think that these two places are universes apart, I guarantee you they are only a few subtleties different. Coaching is present here too, just not in the form you came to expect from the first restaurant. Coaching is the proactive job of restaurant managers in charge of a business. Not a novel idea but then again it is 2005 and I still rant over how a manager/owner can expect to be like restaurant number 1, and sit at a table in the dining room all day working the keys of a calculator trying to come up with the math that will allow him to pay his bills. Then wonder why he can’t. But I digress. Hey! Let’s talk football! Restaurant number 1, (let’s call it my restaurant) has a GM/Owner who, like the great Coach on a very good football team, is on the sidelines watching every play, calling the plays, Coaching the team through the series of plays that will lead to winning the game, and living the game through the actions of his team, one play at a time. Ever see Don Shula on the sidelines? He had one of the most intense gazes. You would always find Coach Shula focused every play, kneeling, squatting or standing intently on the yard line marker of where the ball was placed, watching each player execute his Coaching. Sending in every play. Giving feedback about everything he could to everyone he needed to in order to get the results he demanded. All this, every second of every game. Rewarding great players who executed great plays, as well as redirecting poor performance as it happened, before it had a chance to taint the rest of the team’s effort to lose the game. If they won, he praised the performances that led to the victory, rewarded outstanding individual efforts as well, and then began to prepare for the next game almost as immediately as the gun signaled the end of the current one. If they lost, he praised great performances and rewarded outstanding individual efforts as well, and then redirected poor performances so that those players could, in the next game, contribute to the team’s effort to win it. Winningest Coach in NFL history! The only Coach with a totally undefeated season! Several Super Bowl Rings! I think he has a restaurant or two as well. Compare that to the team in last place. Everybody wanting to call their own plays. Lots of penalties due to frustrations by players. No momentum gained at any point and seemingly no GamePlan! or team strategy. Lots of yelling by the Coach and tempers flaring. Player in fighting and finger pointing as to who is responsible for lackluster performances. Low morale. Players wanting to be traded or have their contracts renegotiated. Draftees not wanting to play for the team. Are you getting the drift here? Coaches must set expectations and performance standards in the beginning. Next, the Coach must be focused on watching each player on the field during every play in order to give feedback and support. Not pointing out every action to perform, but guiding then encouraging each player to execute their training 100%. Lastly, Coaches need to reward behavior through the measured results of active, participative goal setting as well as through individual performances. Failing to execute on the Coaches part is usually related to a failure to deliver 99% of these Coaching responsibilities. And every time I analyze a bad restaurant, it inevitably falls to these causes for the reasoning behind the poor results. How does it get so bad? There are many reasons, but my top 6 include: a lack of skill due to poor management training or the lack of ongoing training; the failure to establish the proper Culture to achieve the business goals and objectives; fear; trying to be a friend instead of a boss; condoning bad performance and failing to develop great players. The first one comes from my long-standing belief that you can never Coach or behave in any way that you have never personally experienced yourself. How can you Coach superior performance if you have never seen superior performance? How can you be a great Coach if you’ve never been Coached greatly? How can a server be great when they have never experienced great service? How can you overcome training issues if you do not devote yourself to Coaching your team? And who will Coach the Coaches? The Culture question is the extension of the lack of proper skills point. Culture is what happens in your restaurant in the absence of a policy or direct supervision. How can you create a high performance Culture if you have never been a part of one? Each and every employee needs to challenge any behavior that doesn’t accomplish the goals of th
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