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Profiting From Catering Services

Vital Information
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Start-up Investment

Low - $1,000 (working from your own kitchen)

High - $75,000 (outfitting a professional kitchen)
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Estimate of Annual Revenue and Profit

Revenue $200,000 - $2 million

Profit (Pre-tax) - $50,000 - $1 million
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(G)astronomical Profit Potential

Whether you plan to cater small, intimate affairs every day, or huge extravaganzas for 10,000 people once a year, the profit margin potential in the catering business is extremely high.

Some caters manage to walk away with 66% of pre-tax profits.

That figure may seem hard to believe, but when you stop and think about all the ways caterers can keep their overhead to practically nothing it becomes a more credible figure



You can begin your catering service out of your own home, using a spare bedroom as your office. You can use your own kitchen (but be careful about Health Department regulations) or perhaps rent a kitchen in a restaurant, school, or church on an as-needed basis.






You needn't employ any full-time waiters or bartenders etc.,there's a whole army of part-time people out there willing to work when you need them.

There are very few items you may need to cater an affair that you can't rent for the day, these include china, flatware, glasses, tents...

About the only immediate cash-outlay you'll encounter is what's needed to market your services. You will want to think carefully about what market you want to target and pick your advertising medium to reach that targeted population.

If you are interested in catering for weddings, you may want to contact florists, department store heads, musicians, and people in charge of places that book weddings.

 If corporate entertainment is more to your liking you'll want to contact the corporations in your area (the chambers of commerce should be able to supply you with area names).

Know Which Side Your Bread is Buttered On

By far the most important marketing tool you will need to cultivate is word of mouth. Most brides, corporations, etc.,are not going to risk embarrassment by trying an unknown caterer.

If you are fortunate enough to have a good reputation when you enter the catering business, i.e., were the chef at a successful restaurant on that in your advertising. If you are starting cold, you may need to be really creative in order to get your business going.

Perhaps you will need to invest some capital in throwing a party of your own and invite the decision-makers from various corporations in your area, or the aforementioned florists, department store heads, etc.

 These people are not going to risk their equally valuable reputations by recommending an unknown entity -- so give them something to remember and to endorse.

Also, especially in the beginning, add that little extra touch to the affairs you cater. DON'T CUT CORNERS!

Remember, your compensation will not always come in the form of dollars and cents, reputation is equally as valuable, perhaps more so in the long run.

 Remember -- that little "extra touch" is often more effective and sometimes cheaper than advertising.

Where Are You Going?

In the catering business, you have an unlimited growth potential. You can buy your own facilities and accouterments, hire full-time chefs and servers, use temperature-controlled holding cabinets and vans, or you can rent just about anything you need.

You may decide you want to cut down on the middle-man's profits by owning the items you find yourself renting on a regular basis: china, flatware, tents.

You may want to enhance your recognition factor by designing a "signature" for instant recognition, for example, painting your logo on the outside of your delivery van. People will see this logo as the van moves around the city and when it is at the site of an affair you are catering.

Food for Thought

While 70% of the restaurant is food oriented with the rest going for service, organization, etc.,this figure flip-flops to 30% in the catering business, the rest being delivery, transporting the food, lining up rental equipment, juggling personnel. Organization is what counts in the catering business.

You also need to be a "salesman" with a magnetic personality in the catering business. You are going to deal with corporate executives, party planners and nervous brides.

You will need to convince your prospective clients that you will not only provide a memorable feast, but it will be there on time, presented attractively, and served quickly and unobtrusively.

There are a number of sidelines that naturally spring from the catering business. You can act as a coordinator for flowers, party locations, or themes. You can be caterer and party planner, caterer and florists, caterer and rental agent. Don't limit your options. Be creative!

Remember, if people wanted to stick to a set menu, they could go to a restaurant, so be flexible. Make your menu suggestions, just suggestions ( a starting point, if you will). Le the client be your guide, but don't miss opportunities to turn a modest "do" into a major profit-making event.

Don't hesitate when you see an opportunity to "bump-up the bottom line of an event. You may be able to turn a barbecue into a Hawaiian luau complete with roast pig.

Make sure that every event is party to remember. Go that extra inch, sometimes it can be a mile -- and result in mile-high profits. The only restrictions placed on your catering business are those you place there yourself.

Resources
For additional information helpful in setting up your new business, information about structure of your business and much more refer to the Business Start-Up Fact Finder Manual

30 Helpful Blogging And Website Development Terms For Learners

1. Algorithm - This is a mathematical formulae that search engines use to rank websites online for web search results. It's based on a number of different factors that weigh a web page's importance. This usually changes regularly, for better results and best performances of results in searches.
2. Anchor Text - Anchor text refers to the visible text for a hyperlink.
For example the following will show up as "This is the Anchor Text" within the webpage and it would take you to the home page. This is the html code for it: < a href="
https://idearules.blogspot.com/" >This is the anchor text< /a >
3. Back Link - This is also referred to as an Inbound Link (IBL). These are links that come from one website to another. If you have 50 Back Links, then you have 50 links pointing to your website.
4. Bot - This is also referred to as a "Spider" or "SpiderBot". These are programs the scan (or Crawl) the World Wide Web. Their main purpose is to index web pages for the search engines.
5. Adsense - Google Adsense is a way for any website to display relevant Google ads anywhere on their web pages and earn money from clicks.
6. Ads - Google Ads is a way to advertise online. Your ads are seen in the Google Search Engine Results or on a network of other search engines and content based websites. You are charged Per Click. So it only costs you money if a visitor clicks on your ad and comes to your website.
7. Click-Through - This is just a term used to refer to the click that occurs on a hyperlink and as a result leads to another web page.
8. Click Through Rate - This is the ratio of impressions shown to the number of clicks you're getting.
9. Cloaking - This is a way to trick Search Engine spiders (it can get you banned so don't do it!).
It's a way to show or hide optimized content specifically for the purpose to make a page look good to a search engine.
10. Comment Tag - This is a tag that is only found in the "source code" in HTML. It is not meant to be viewed by visitors. It's just for the programmer.
11. Conversion - A website that is designed to sell a product or do some kind of action like filling out a form is concerned about converting their visitors. When the action of buying or filling out a form is performed, this is called conversion. It is used in combination with how much it costs to bring traffic to that page or product. You will then ultimately be able to figure out a product or website's Return on Investment ( ROI).
12. ROI is your Return on Investment. How much are you making in comparison to what you're spending.
13. Counter - This is a program or script that counts hits or visits to a web page.
14. CPA - (Cost Per Action) - This is how much you pay for some kind of action. This can be purchasing something, filling out a form, signing up for something, etc..
15. CPC - (Cost Per Click) - This is simply how much you are charged for a click on a link to your website from another location.
16. CPL - (Cost Per Lead) - How much you are charged for a lead. A lead is where someone does something like filling out a form.
17. CPM - (Cost Per Thousand) - How much you pay per 1000 impressions.
18. Crawler - It is a program used to go through a website to get information from the website and take it back to the originator.
19. Cross Linking - It's simply linking multiple websites together. Excessive cross-linking can get a website banned from a Search Engine.
20. CSS - (Cascading Style Sheets) - It is a feature that is added to HTML that helps website developers and users have more control over fonts, colors, layout, etc..
21. CTR - (Click Through Rate) - It is the ratio of impressions shown to the number of clicks. It's often used in Pay Per Click Advertising like Google Adwords.
22. Dead Link - It simply a link that doesn't work. It will normally produce an error called a "404 error (page not found)".
23. Directory - It's just a list of websites that are split into multiple categories for people to search.
24. Domain - (Domain Name) - This is a name for a website.
25. Doorway Page - This is another way to get banned by a Search Engine. These pages are not designed for the visitors. The are usually optimized for one keyword and only exist to get high rankings in the Search Engines Results Pages. They are sometimes called a Gateway Page.
26. Dynamic Page - This is a page that is generated automatically by a hosting server at the time it is requested (on-the-fly).
27. Google Everflux - It's a phenomenon that refers to the continuous changes in the Google search results pages at specific times (during the "Google Dance" for instance).
28. FFA Free For All - There is no content on these pages. They are just full of links added by visitors.
29. Fresh bot - It is a Google crawler that is known that adds pages to the Google index a little quicker than other Bots.
30. Gateway Page - This is another way to get banned by a Search Engine. These pages are not designed for the visitors. The are usually optimized for one keyword and only exist to get high rankings in the Search Engines Results Pages. They are sometimes called a Doorway Page. Have a nice day.