Exploring Front-of-House and Back-of-House Manager Perceptions, Attitudes, and Motivations of Restaurant Food Waste Mitigation: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- (1)
- Are FOH and BOH restaurant managers aware of food waste and the movement to reduce it?
- (2)
- What are the attitudes of BOH and FOH restaurant managers towards food waste in restaurants and the reduction of food waste?
- (3)
- What are the motivations for FOH and BOH restaurant managers to reduce food waste?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Restaurant Food Waste
2.2. Food Waste Mitigation in Restaurants
The Role of Restaurant Managers in Restaurant Food Waste Management
2.3. Theoretical Foundation
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Population and Sampling Method
3.2. Protocol Development
3.3. Data Collection
3.4. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Participant Demographic Information
4.2. Overall Results
4.2.1. Food Waste Attitudes
“I think it is a shame that there is so much food waste in general… Which is upsetting because being in that industry [restaurant industry], it [wasted food] kind of pulls at the heartstrings that you’re part of the problem”.(Participant 1, FOH Manager, Casual Restaurant)
“Personally, I detest wasting food. It’s one of my biggest pet peeves; I hate it both at home and at work”.(Participant 5, BOH, Casual Restaurant)
4.2.2. Food Waste Awareness
“I come from a family where we don’t waste food and it’s how we were brought up”.(Participant 6, FOH, Fast Food Restaurant)
“I ended up moving to and working in India. So, I got the chance to sort of see that [cultural difference in approach to food waste] first hand. See, I’m thinking about water right now,… the importance of saving the food and what we could do with this food and things like that. So, I would say traveling to other countries, seeing how some families have worked so hard to eat so little, and the daily portions and the general consumption of groceries compared to the US”.(Participant 11, BOH, Fine Dining Restaurant)
“Working in restaurants just kind of opens your eyes [to the problem of restaurant food waste]”.(Participant 1, FOH, Casual Restaurant)
“…seeing the numbers side of it [food waste] now, I’m becoming more aware of the financial impact that it has”.(Participant 13, BOH, Casual Restaurant)
“Both chefs and people in my position [management], I think we’re more aware of food waste… a lot of hotel chefs and F&B directors, hotels in general, are very much driven by food cost”.(Participant 4, FOH, Casual Restaurant)
“It’s [minimizing food waste] just been something that’s been drilled into me for a long time”.(Participant 12, BOH, Fine Dining Restaurant)
4.2.3. Motivations to Reduce Food Waste
“It’s really the financial side of it. Like where can we optimize cost and make that extra dollar any way possible?”(Participant 8, FOH, Fine Dining Restaurant)
“It’s [reducing food waste] obviously in our financial interest; it drives down our food cost”.(Participant 1, FOH, Casual Restaurant)
“It’s also a sustainability thing; we don’t want to throw away food that’s usable”.(Participant 1, FOH, Casual Restaurant)
“You feel bad throwing away, overcooking, or burning vegetables when you know the farmer and picked up the vegetables out of their pickup truck that morning”.(Participant 9, BOH, Fine Dining Restaurant)
“Respecting the ingredients [is a motivation] because we get a lot of our produce from local farmers that have spent a lot of hard work growing that product, and we have good relationships with them so for them to do all that hard work and us take the ingredient and just use half of it is kind of disrespectful. That’s a key motivating factor”.(Participant 13, BOH, Casual Restaurant)
5. Discussion
5.1. Implications
5.1.1. Theoretical Implications
5.1.2. Practical Implications
5.2. Limitations, Future Research, and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Semi-Structured Interview Protocol
- 1.
- Generally and from a personal perspective, how do you feel about food waste in the hospitality industry?
- 2.
- Generally and from a business perspective, how does your company feel about food waste in the hospitality industry?
- 3.
- How long have you been aware of this topic?
- 4.
- What in particular has driven your awareness level as it relates to food waste?
- 5.
- How prevalent of a topic is food waste for your operation/company? Is it measured in any way? If so, how and how often?
- How do you deal with inedible food waste?
- How do you deal with edible food waste?
- 6.
- Do you collaborate with other restaurants in the area in disposing of edible and/or inedible food waste?
- 7.
- Does it feature in the strategic or operational planning efforts of your restaurant or company? If so, how?
- 8.
- What is the key motivation for doing so?
- 9.
- What would you describe as the biggest causes of food waste for your company?
- 10.
- What would you describe as the greatest benefits of reducing food waste for your company?
- 11.
- What methods/solutions are currently employed by your company to reduce food waste? Reduce/Reuse/Recycle?
- Do you have a food waste team charged with reduction?
- Has your menu ever changed as a means of reducing food waste?
- Have you ever employed the use of smaller plates and smaller portions?
- Is daily purchasing a factor on certain menu items?
- Is there a proper rotation and inventory systems for perishable and nonperishable food items?
- 12.
- Does your company employ any form of donation or resale system for unconsumed food? If so, what?
- 13.
- If not, are there specific barriers that prevent you from doing so–for example liability concerns or local regulations?
- 14.
- Do you educate employees about food waste and/or being more sustainably oriented?
- 15.
- What is the culture amongst employees at your restaurant in regards to food waste?
- 16.
- What areas of the restaurant generate food waste?
- 17.
- How would you say your awareness and attitude towards food waste has changed when you became a manager as opposed to being a restaurant employee?
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Variable | n | % |
---|---|---|
Gender | ||
Male | 13 | 100 |
Female | 0 | 0 |
Race/Ethnicity | ||
Caucasian | 11 | 84 |
Asian | 1 | 8 |
Hispanic | 1 | 8 |
Restaurant operational area | ||
Front of house | 6 | 46 |
Back of house | 7 | 54 |
Restaurant type | ||
Independent | 11 | 84 |
Chain | 2 | 16 |
Restaurant Segment | ||
Fast food | 1 | 8 |
Fast casual | 2 | 16 |
Casual | 5 | 38 |
Fine dining | 5 | 38 |
Theme | Subtheme | Sample Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Attitudes | Negative sentiments | “It’s sad that there is so much food waste” (Participant 2, BOH, Fast Casual Restaurant) “People get pretty upset when we throw away food” (Participant 13, BOH, Casual Restaurant) |
Awareness | Source of awareness | “My grandparents stressed [limiting] food waste” (Participant 2, BOH, Fast Casual Restaurant) |
Increased from restaurants | “I’ve been in kitchens for ten years now, it [food waste] is something they showed me in the first kitchen I ever worked in and it’s stuck with me ever since” (Participant 13, BOH, Casual Restuarnt) | |
Increased from management role | “inherently knowing the costs associated with that [food waste] as a leader certainly makes a bigger impact” (Participant 4, FOH, Casual Restaurant) “The bottom line definitely makes you more aware” (Participant 13, BOH, Casual Restaurant) “I definitely have a deeper awareness than I probably did when I was just an employee” (Participant 6, FOH, Fast Food Restaurant) | |
Kitchen culture | “It’s so routine for the kitchen to be on top of reducing waste. It’s a part of how you run a good kitchen” (Participant 1, FOH, Casual Restaurant) “As a chef, you wanna [want to] utilize your waste as much as possible” (Participant 13, BOH, Casual Restaurant) | |
Motivations | Costs | “The more we can get out of every piece of food that comes into that building, the less we have to purchase, and the more money we can make” (Participant 1, FOH, Casual Restaurant) “[food waste] affects the bottom line if you look at the books. We pay for that ingredient, and we’ve gotta [got to] utilize it the best we can” (Participant 2, BOH, Fast Casual Restaurant) |
Personal values | “I hate throwing food away…It’s an affront to me personally.” (Participant 5, BOH, Casual Restaurant) “it’s wasteful in a world where people don’t have enough to eat” (Participant 6, FOH, Fast Food Restaurant) “you wouldn’t just constantly waste food when there’s starving people all around you” (Participant 11, BOH Manager, Fine Dining Restaurant) | |
Respect for product | “for me, it’s respecting the product… I have a lot of respect for the product that we use and I don’t want to waste it” (Participant 9, BOH Manager, Fine Dining Restaurant) “it doesn’t even start as a financial thing for me, it starts as a respecting the product thing” (Participant 13, BOH Manager, Casual Restaurant) |
Motivational Subtheme | FOH (% of FOH) | BOH (% of BOH) | Total (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Costs | 6 (100%) | 7 (100%) | 13 (100%) |
Personal values | 3 (50%) | 5 (71%) | 8 (62%) |
Respect for product | 0 (0%) | 5 (71%) | 5 (38%) |
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O’Neill, S.; Traynor, M.; Rahman, I.; Lee, Y.M. Exploring Front-of-House and Back-of-House Manager Perceptions, Attitudes, and Motivations of Restaurant Food Waste Mitigation: A Qualitative Study. Sustainability 2024, 16, 6694. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16156694
O’Neill S, Traynor M, Rahman I, Lee YM. Exploring Front-of-House and Back-of-House Manager Perceptions, Attitudes, and Motivations of Restaurant Food Waste Mitigation: A Qualitative Study. Sustainability. 2024; 16(15):6694. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16156694
Chicago/Turabian StyleO’Neill, Sorcha, Mark Traynor, Imran Rahman, and Yee Ming Lee. 2024. "Exploring Front-of-House and Back-of-House Manager Perceptions, Attitudes, and Motivations of Restaurant Food Waste Mitigation: A Qualitative Study" Sustainability 16, no. 15: 6694. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16156694
APA StyleO’Neill, S., Traynor, M., Rahman, I., & Lee, Y. M. (2024). Exploring Front-of-House and Back-of-House Manager Perceptions, Attitudes, and Motivations of Restaurant Food Waste Mitigation: A Qualitative Study. Sustainability, 16(15), 6694. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16156694