Managing a café well comes down to defending five numbers weekly: rent under 12% of revenue, blended food cost 25–35%, beverage share 65–70%, daily reconciliation, and staffing matched to the two peak windows. Everything else — ambience, menu, marketing — works only when these hold.
The café paradox you're managing against
Your cappuccino carries a 75–80% gross margin, yet the average Indian café nets just 2–12%. The gap is operations: rent, staffing, milk discipline and reconciliation. Well-managed cafés reach 10–18% net serving the same coffee at the same price — management, not menu, is the difference.
Tip 1 — Know your two peaks and staff for them
Cafés earn in two windows: 7–10am and 4–8pm. Stagger shifts so full strength covers the peaks and a skeleton crew holds the 11am–3pm trough. Cross-train everyone: the barista who can also bill and the counter person who can pull a decent shot are what make lean staffing possible.
Tip 2 — Enforce recipes, especially milk
A latte spec'd at 200ml that pours 240ml runs 20% over on milk — roughly ₹5,000–6,000 a month at 80 lattes/day, invisible unless measured. Recipe cards at the machine, portioned jugs, and weekly actual-vs-expected milk consumption checks close the gap.
Tip 3 — Protect the beverage mix
Beverages carry 70–88% gross margins; food items 50–60%. Keep food at 30–35% of revenue — enough to build ticket size, not enough to drag blended margins down. The best upsell in the category is a beverage modifier (flavour shot, oat milk, size upgrade): nearly pure margin, zero prep time.
Tip 4 — Reconcile daily, review weekly
Cafés on manual or partial-digital billing typically leak 3–5% of revenue in errors and discrepancies nobody catches. A daily 10-minute close — POS total vs cash drawer vs UPI settlements — plus a weekly look at the five numbers above is the entire management system a small café needs.
Tips 5–10 — The rest of the checklist
Seasonality: plan a monsoon staffing tier (June–August dips are structural, not your fault). Suppliers: never depend on a single milk or bean vendor. Menu size: a tight menu with consistent execution beats a long one with variance. Regulars: capture customers at billing — a café's economics run on repeat visits. Cleanliness cadence: schedule it like shifts, not vibes. Your own numbers: the owner who reviews weekly beats the owner who discovers problems in the accountant's month-end file.
Frequently asked questions
What are the most important numbers to track in a café?
Five: rent as % of revenue (keep under 12%), blended food cost (25–35%), beverage share of revenue (target 65–70%), daily POS-vs-cash reconciliation, and sales by hour for staffing. Review them weekly, not at month-end.
How many staff does a small café need?
Most small Indian cafés run well with 2–3 people per shift, staggered around the two peaks (7–10am, 4–8pm). Cross-train everyone on machine and counter so the 11am–3pm dead zone runs lean — a full roster at 1pm is pure margin destruction.
Why do most cafés fail in the first two years?
The most common structural cause is rent above 15% of revenue — a pre-opening lease decision good coffee can't fix. Operationally: untracked recipes (milk over-pouring alone can cost ₹60,000+/year), overstaffing off-peak, and no daily reconciliation.