Wait Staff and restaurant server tricks of the trade

Sometimes the experience our wait staff gains, the more we can create a false feeling of perfection. The more times we perform a task without complication, the more we tend to believe that we are performing it perfectly.  This isn’t always the case.

A false feeling of perfection is something I have witnessed many times in the restaurant industry. It seems that once your wait staff gets comfortable with their environment, they stop considering their actions.  As professional servers and managers, we must always strive to be better, to learn more, to hone our craft and to question our processes. When working with the same group of people, who have the same mentality and knowledge as ourselves, there is no one amongst us to correct us, to improve us or to guide us; we must rely on ourselves.

Below is a list of common things your wait staff may be doing wrong.  Do you do any of these?  What could you change tonight that could make you even better at your job?wait staff serving drinks

1.  Handle stem-ware from the stem not the globe.  Holding glasses from the base is what your customer can do, not you.  Keep the glass clean and free of smudges for as long as it is in your possession.

2.  When clearing glasses from a table DO NOT GRAB FROM THE RIM.  Palm the glasses in your hand or use a serving tray.  When you grab glasses from the top you are touching lots of people’s lips and spit…yuck.

3.  When you go to your table, return to the same spot every time.  People are creatures of habit.  Create a fast habit for your table and train them to notice you by being consistent.

4.  Seams down, seams in on all things linen. It’s a small thing but it creates a polished look that lets customers know that attention to detail is important to you.  That can create trust in the server/customer relationship.

5.  Do not carry your check presenter in your butt.  Some people do this and those people shouldn’t.

6.  Do not carry your serviette over your shoulder.  Your serviette should never be near your hair. Carry the serviette in your hand and pocket it when not in use.

7.  Do not point in the dining room.  Pointing is rude, you were taught that when you were little.  That rule applies in the dining room as well.  A flat hand or pointed fist is how you should show direction.

8.  Don’t call a female guest “Mam” or “Hun”.  Mams & Huns hate that!  Call them Miss.

9.  Don’t stand akimbo at a table (hands at hips).  Don’t stand with your hands in your pocket.  Stand with your arms at your side, clasped in front of you or clasped behind you.  This shows attention without showing a casual or over-familiar attitude.

10.  Present food open handed.  What is open handed?  If you could immediately and easily hug your customer after you set down their food that is open handed.  If when you set down their food Wait staff serving plates of foodyou could immediately and easily elbow them in the face, it’s not.

11.  Do not auction food.  Unless you work at Denny’s, Denny’s wait staff has a free pass. If you don’t work at Denny’s, know who ordered what before you get to the table.

12.  Don’t tell a guest how you are unless you are doing good.  If they say “how are you?” DO NOT tell them ANYTHING negative.  A customer should never have to hear that your house burned down, you’re tired or you’re having a bad night. When they ask how you are, treat it as a nicety and nicely reply.

13.  Don’t touch your face in front of guests.

14.  Don’t touch your hair in front of guests.

15.  Don’t interrupt your guest’s conversation.  If they are in conversation, go to your “speaking spot” at the table, count to five, if they don’t give you attention then walk away and try back in a few minutes.  Do this as many times as it takes.

16.  When asking permission to remove dinnerware from someone, do not ask the guest if they are “still working” on their meal.  Remember, dining on the food that your restaurant serves is not work.  Instead, ask if they are finished “enjoying” their meal.

17.  When bussing a table, don’t stack plates on top of food or silverware.  There is a correct way of stacking plates.  Hold one plate in your hand, this plate is for silverware, share plates, bread plates and food scraps.  Place the next plate on your forearm, balancing it.  From that position add more plates to the plate nearest you and the food scraps, silverware and small plates to the plate in your hand.  When you have stacked all you can, put the plate from your hand on the top of the plate stack nearest you.   You are left with a nice, neat, manageable stack of plates.

18.  When presenting plates to guests you should not have your thumb on the plate.  Carry with the meat of your thumb/palm as much as possible.

Wait staff opening a wine bottle

19.  When possible, remove from the right; deliver from the left…unless it is soup.  Soup is delivered or poured from the right.

20.  Do you follow a set direction on the floor?  Developing a traffic map will make service more seamless and less clumsy.

21.  When presenting a bottle of wine for a table, remember to place the cork on something, never just place it on the table. Your goal is to keep the table free of clutter and clean, not add to its messiness.

22.  Do you leave the cork on the table?  You shouldn’t…unless they want to keep it, so always ask. The idea here is table maintenance.  One of your constant goals is keeping the table free of clutter, mess or debris.  An unwanted cork on the table is a mess, clutter and debris.

About Jennifer Anderson

Jennifer Anderson is a server, certified Sommelier and FOH trainer/re-organizer. Please visit her for more tips, ideas and articles at http://iamWaitress.com.

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7 comments

  1. Thanks for finally talking about >Serving: Common Wrong-Ways of Doing Common
    Things | Back Burner <Loved it!

  2. One more servers’ hint about removing plates after a meal -wait until ALL the diners are finished with their meal to remove the plates. Don’t remove some plates leaving the other diners to finish. It’s rude.

    • Not always the case. Banquet service the 90% rule often applys. If there is a laggard it is in the greater good to move service along by starting the clearing process. Also if the guest pushes the plate away or hands it to you.

      • Although the guides for “everyone” and “90%” are good ones to go by – it is still a judgement call from party to party. When a guest is clearly done with their meal – it’s okay to start taking away things that they used in that course – monkey dishes for example, to facilitate a quick course buss – and to let them know you’re paying attention. You’ll remove these things “invisibly” and it will help you get through a course where the timing from guest-to-guest is off. There will also always be a guest who, CLEARLY, wants their plate removed, and you’ll want to do that – especially if they are the Host – and look for signs of how the other members of the party are feeling about it when you do. It’s important to learn the subtleties of Service. Teaching hard rules can get a new server in trouble – because bussing and keeping a neat table are key elements to a Party’s success and enjoyment, and most especially to a Server’s being able to maximizing sales.

  3. I still don’t know, are we supposed to hold the glasses away from the table when pouring water or we pour with the glasses on the table?

    • Tundra Restaurant Supply

      Hey Alex,

      Unless you have a very steady hand that can deliver a solid pour, then pouring away from the table tends to be the safer way to go in case there’s a spill.

      – Tundra Team

  4. I get annoyed when a server reaches across the table, or reaches behind me (this has actually happened), and tries to hand me my meal (expecting me to take a plate full of food out of their hand while I’m twisted around in my chair), instead of them walking around the table and placing it in front of me. I don’t ever take the plate. I ask them to please set it in front of me.

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