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Report: restaurants having to adapt

Restaurants uncertain about the future are looking for new ways to thrive, according to a new report conducted by YouGov.

Restaurants uncertain about the future are seeking new ways to thrive, with more than four in five (82 per cent) restaurant owners who stayed open during the COVID-19 lockdowns adopting new ways of working; including new processes, systems, or technology, according to the inaugural Deliveroo HospoVitality Index Report.

Deliveroo’s report was conducted with research firm YouGov, which surveyed more than 500 restaurant owners across Australia to understand business confidence, the challenges they face, how they’ve responded to the COVID-19 pandemic, what government policy initiatives will help aid recovery and their plans for the future.

In exploring how restaurants navigated the national lockdowns, the Report reveals 48% of restaurant owners introduced new staffing and shift patterns, 42% optimised their menus and a quarter (25 per cent) made point of sale changes.

Nine in ten (91 per cent) of Australia’s restaurants stayed open and operating in some capacity, with 74 per cent adopting new revenue streams such as takeaway, delivery, ready to cook meals, adding alcohol options to food orders and hampers.

Of the restaurants that introduced new ways of making money during the COVID-19 lockdowns, 90% said they would maintain some or all of these revenue streams into the future, with takeaway (57%) and food delivery via a platform such as Deliveroo (55%) the most popular.

Looking ahead, restaurant owners said technological advancements in digital ordering and in-store collection processes are the most needed (45 per cent), followed by improved data insights to manage marketing (20 per cent) and developments in advanced online bookings (18 per cent), showing the vital role platforms will have in supporting the restaurant sector.

Nearly four in ten (39 per cent) of restaurant owners are feeling positive about their business prospects today and 26 per cent are concerned (net balance +13), while 30 per cent are positive about their prospects in three months’ time and more than a third (36 per cent) are worried (-6 net balance).

One in five (21 per cent) of all restaurant owners said they didn’t know at what stage they would be able to trade profitably and be viable within the Federal Government’s 3-step Framework for a COVID-safe Australia, demonstrating just how vulnerable many businesses are feeling.

However, more than half (52 per cent) of restaurant owners are optimistic about their own business prospects in 12 months’ time and only 15 per cent are concerned (+37 net balance). This is compared to more negative sentiment towards the sector as a whole. Four in ten (39 per cent) of all restaurant owners surveyed are feeling positive about the future of the hospitality sector, compared with 30% who are feeling pessimistic, giving a lower net balance score of +9.

The greatest challenges impacting business confidence are, equally, the slowing down of the economy and reduced dine-in capacity (each 68 per cent), followed by a reduction in consumer spending (64 per cent) and produce prices increasing (60 per cent).

Government assistance during the pandemic has been vital, with two thirds (65 per cent) of restaurant owners accessing JobKeeper. Of these restaurants, 44 per cent said they would not have been able to keep trading had JobKeeper not been available, equal to those who said they would have.  Two thirds (66 per cent) of restaurant owners sought rental relief from their landlords during the COVID-19 lockdown.

Restaurant owners were also asked to rank the government policies they felt were most important in aiding their recovery. Tax relief was the overwhelming priority (79 per cent), followed by payroll tax (49 per cent) and penalty rates (43 per cent), while more than a quarter (29 per cent) are keen to see a relaxation of regulations for outdoor seating.

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