How To Choose The Right Bar Stools For Your Business

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Communicating Effectively With Your Food Supplier

A few months ago, I realized that our restaurant orders were getting messed up at least once a month. It was frustrating, but after a little careful analysis, I realized that the issue was my fault, not the representative who handled our food supplier account. I started thinking about where and when I was placing orders, and it occurred to me that I was almost always in a hurry and trying to get things ordered quickly. To correct the issue, I started slowing down, double checking my food orders, and asking the supplier to repeat information back to me. Overnight, issues with my food orders went away. Check out this blog to learn how to communicate effectively with your food supplier.

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How To Choose The Right Bar Stools For Your Business

15 February 2016
 Categories: , Blog


If you have a bar in your restaurant, you probably want to be sure that the stools that you purchase for the bar are as comfortable as possible. You want people to linger at the bar so that they buy as much product from you as possible, be it alcohol or food. If your stools are not comfortable, customers will not want to stay around and will move on to another venue, cutting into your potential sales. Here are some tips for making sure that you get the right bar stools for your establishment.

1. Make Sure They Are the Right Height

Your first step is to make sure that your bar stools are the perfect height. First, take a tape measure and measure the bottom of your bar, meaning the space where the counter of the bar ends, to the ground. You want to be sure that you get bar stools that won't result in your customer's legs being squished up against the bottom surface of the bar because this will make it hard for your customers to get in and out of the stools.

If the measurement of your bar to the ground is between 34 and 39 inches, you will want to purchase a stool that has a height of between 24 and 29 inches. If your bar's counter is between 40 and 46 inches, then you need to get stools that are between 30 and 36 inches.

2. Decide if You Need Stools With Backs

If you are trying to encourage your customers to come in and eat a full meal, you will want to provide stools that have backs that people can lean against. This is because it makes the stool more comfortable to sit in for extended periods of time. If you want your customers to sit for a half hour to an hour and you are an establishment that is not necessarily trying to encourage people to stay for hours, go ahead and purchase stools that do not have backs. You're not looking for long-term customer comfort and stools without backs have less material that stools with backs, making them cheaper.

3. Determine How Much Space You Have

If your aisles are not going to be clear if you leave your stools not pushed in, then you want to avoid getting bar stools with arms because these will take up more room, even when pushed in. If space is not as much of a concern for you, then consider getting stools with armrests.

For more information, talk to a company that specializes in bar equipment. To learn more, contact a company like Budget Restaurant Supply