CASE STUDY: How a Cork City Pub Cut Their Deficit by €12,000
Running a busy pub in Cork is a dream for many. But for "Michael" (name changed), the owner of a popular, traditional pub near the Grand Parade, it had become a stressful reality.
His pub was busy. The atmosphere was great, the staff were friendly, and the till was ringing. But at the end of every month, the profit just wasn't there. His bank balance didn't reflect the packed house he saw every Friday and Saturday night. He was working 70-hour weeks and felt like he was just treading water.
He suspected shrinkage but had no way to prove it. He was doing his own "stocktake," which involved him and his bar manager counting bottles on a Sunday morning, but the numbers never seemed to add up, and he didn't know what to trust.
The Problem: "We Were Busy, But Profits Were Flat"
Michael's pub had a classic problem. Takings were up, but his Gross Profit (GP) margin on "wet stock" was hovering around 55%. He knew from friends in the industry that this was dangerously low. He should have been aiming for 65-70%.
That 10-15% gap was the difference between profit and loss. It was the money he needed to reinvest, pay down loans, and, most importantly, pay himself a proper wage. He was frustrated and on the brink of burnout. That's when he called us.
The Solution: The First Hospitality Partners Stocktake
Our team went in to conduct the first full, professional audit. We didn't just count. We analysed his invoices, his supplier pricing, and a full month of EPOS sales data.
Within 48 hours, we sat down with Michael and presented the report. The "smoking gun" was immediately obvious.
Our audit uncovered a 12% variance on premium spirits (gin and vodka) and a 5% variance on his two main draught lagers.
He wasn't being robbed in one big go. He was being bled dry, drop by drop, pint by pint.
The "Why": Drilling Down into the Data
The report gave him the "what." Our expertise gave him the "why."
1. The Spirits: The 12% loss on spirits wasn't theft. It was a combination of inconsistent free-pouring on busy nights and a "staff drinks" policy that was completely unmonitored.
2. The Lager: The 5% loss on his biggest-selling products was a cellar-management issue. His unrecorded line cleaning, combined with staff "topping off" frothy pints, meant he was losing nearly 15 pints per keg.
The Action Plan: Implementing Our Recommendations
We provided Michael with a simple, 3-point action plan. This wasn't about a huge investment; it was about simple controls.
1. Install Spirit Measures: We recommended installing 35.5ml measures (jiggers) on his 10 best-selling spirits. This would ensure 100% portion control.
2. Implement a Wastage Log: We provided a simple logbook for the bar. Every time a line was cleaned, a pint was dropped, or a drink was sent back, it had to be recorded.
3. Review Staff Policy: We advised him to move to a formal "staff drink" policy (e.g., one drink at the end of a shift) and to ring it through the till as "staff" at zero cost.
The Results: A €12,000 Annual Turnaround
Michael implemented all three recommendations.
We returned one month later for the second stocktake. The results were dramatic. His spirit variance had dropped from 12% to 3%. His lager variance had dropped from 5% to 1.5% (a healthy, manageable level).
His overall wet GP margin had jumped from 55% to 64%.
By the third stocktake, his new processes were embedded. His GP stabilised at 66%. We had identified and fixed leaks that were costing him just over €1,000 every single month.
"The first report was a tough read," Michael told us. "But it was the most important document for my business. I'm no longer guessing. I have control. Hospitality Partners didn't just 'do my stock'; they saved my pub."
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