Quick answer

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.

2–12%
average café net margin in India — well-run: 10–18%
₹60–72k
annual cost of a 40ml milk over-pour at 80 lattes/day
3–5%
revenue leaked without daily reconciliation
How KhanaOS helps: hourly sales heatmaps for staffing, recipe-linked milk deduction that exposes over-pouring the day it happens, beverage-vs-food mix on the dashboard, and automatic daily reconciliation across cash, UPI and card. See also the café profit margins guide.

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.