Why Your Bar Team Should See Your Numbers
Key Takeaways
- Your staff controls your P&L more than you do. Hiding the numbers hides the stakes from the people actually moving them.
- Share revenue, cost of goods sold, labor, and controllable expenses. Keep net profit, owner draws, debt service, and the full balance sheet private.
- Always translate percentages into dollars. “Four points of pour cost” means nothing to a bartender. “A thousand dollars a week” gets attention.
- Use a corkboard, a 60-second pre-shift update, or both. Attach every number to a specific action the team can take.
- Gamify monthly targets with team and individual scoreboards and follow through. Announcing a goal and ignoring it teaches your team that numbers don’t matter.
Introduction
Most of your staff thinks you’re rich. They could be wrong, but they have no way to know if they’re wrong. They see a busy Friday night, they see the register ringing, and they assume the money is piling up somewhere. They have no idea what you pay for beer delivery, what a broken glass actually costs, what your rent does to last night’s margin, or how much of the cash they just handled will be gone before it ever becomes profit.
This is the cost of closed-book management. The cost is that they cannot align their behavior with a set of goals and incentives they can’t see. They break glasses because glasses are free. They over-pour because liquor is free. They waste bar towels because bar towels are free. None of it is personal. It’s what people do when the consequences are invisible.
The fix is open book management — the deliberate practice of sharing operational financial information with your team so their decisions start to reflect real costs. Done right, it turns your staff from an uncontrolled variable into your best cost-control tool. Done wrong, it creates new problems and fixes none of the old ones. This article covers what to share and what to keep locked up, how to present the numbers so they actually move behavior, how to gamify targets without it feeling weird, and the single mistake that kills most transparency initiatives before they start.
Why Closed Books Work Against You
The conventional wisdom is that an owner’s financials are private business. Your numbers are yours, your losses are yours, your wins are yours. Share them at your peril. That logic sounds protective, and it’s almost completely backwards.
Here’s the math. Your team runs your cost of goods sold: every pour, every prep portion, every comped drink. Your team handles your cash: every register drop, every voided transaction, every missed pre-auth. Your team burns through your disposables: every bar towel, every straw, every receipt roll, every broken glass. The line items that actually move on your P&L month to month are the line items your team controls. You, as the owner, have almost no direct influence on any of them during service. You have only indirect influence, and that influence runs through what your team knows, cares about, and acts on.
A team with no visibility into costs assumes there are no costs. That’s not a character flaw. It’s a reasonable assumption given the information they have. When the owner guards the numbers, the team fills in the gap with whatever story is intuitive, and the intuitive story in the bar business is that all bar owners are rich. So your team lives inside that story, acts accordingly, and costs you money.
If you’re in the bar business to get rich, you’re in the wrong business. Most owners do this work for a solid living, a measure of independence, and the chance to build something. That reality never reaches the people standing behind the bar unless you put it there yourself.
The Two Fears Holding Owners Back
When I suggest sharing financials with a bar owner, I hear two objections. Both are real. Neither holds up.
“They’ll ask for a raise.” Maybe. More likely not. The first time I shared what I actually made with a couple of my bartenders and waitresses, their reaction was some version of “That’s it? I made more than that last year.” Tips are serious money, and most service industry veterans already have a rough sense that the owner is not living as large as the guests assume.
Even if someone does push back on compensation, transparency gives you a better answer than you had before. “I can’t give you a raise when our glassware cost is running 25% higher than last year because we keep breaking them” is a conversation you can actually have. It aligns your goals with theirs. When your team understands your margins, the entitlement conversations get quieter, not louder.
“They’ll realize I’m failing.” First, unless your situation is catastrophic, your team isn’t going to see “struggling” and read “failing.” They still have jobs, they still have paychecks, and you don’t have to share the bottom line anyway. Second, if you have a good team and you treat them well, they respond to struggle by pitching in. People who like where they work and like who they work for want to help that place succeed. The ownership mentality you’re trying to build depends on them feeling invested, and that starts with being informed.
Both fears are rational on paper. In practice, transparency beats them both.
What to Share, What to Keep Private
Not everything on your P&L needs to be on a corkboard. The rule I use: share everything through controllable expenses. Keep everything below the controllable line private.
| Share With Staff | Keep Private |
|---|---|
| Revenue and sales by category | Net profit |
| Cost of goods sold (food, liquor, beer, wine) | Owner draws and distributions |
| Labor cost | Debt service |
| Controllable expenses (paper goods, programming, live music, trivia) | Non-controllable expenses (rent, insurance, utilities) |
| Pour cost and labor cost percentages | Other income and expense |
| Check averages, upsell rates, sales vs. target | Full balance sheet |
The reasoning is simple. Your team can move the top of the P&L. They cannot move your rent or your debt service. Sharing the first group creates leverage. Sharing the second group creates anxiety and confusion for no operational benefit.
If you want to share more — even the whole thing — go ahead. At 86th Street Pub, I made my financials completely accessible to anyone in the store and let anyone who wanted to look at them look at them. That’s not required. It’s not even recommended for most owners. But it’s worth knowing that the ceiling on transparency is much higher than most owners think.
One thing worth adding to whatever you share: KPI data. Pour cost percentage, labor cost percentage, check average, sales vs. target, upsell rate. KPIs let you talk about performance without exposing every dollar, and they travel well in pre-shift meetings.
Frame Every Number in Dollars
Percentages are useless to most staff. A bartender does not feel the weight of “four points of pour cost.” A bartender feels the weight of “a thousand dollars a week.” Those are the same number. Only one of them changes behavior.
Translate everything. If labor is running three points over target, tell them what that is in dollars per week. If pour cost is up two points, show them what that equals across your volume. If paper goods are up 25% year-over-year, put a dollar figure on the variance. “We’re leaving $4,000 a month on the floor in over-pours” lands. “Pour cost is 22% instead of 20%” doesn’t.
This isn’t about dumbing things down. It’s about making the number mean something in a language the team already speaks. Tips are dollars. Breakage is dollars. Waste is dollars. When every operational number shows up in the same unit, the connections become obvious.
The formula is always the same:
[Metric change] × [volume] = [dollars per period]
Do that math before you share. Put the dollar figure in the conversation. Every time.
How to Actually Share
You have two good options and one great one. Pick whichever fits your operation, or run them together.
Pre-shift verbal update. Sixty seconds at the start of each shift. “Last night’s numbers were X. Our target was Y. Here’s what that means for tonight.” Always attach a specific action. Numbers without an action create anxiety and nothing else. Rotate the metric occasionally, but not weekly — give the team enough time to actually move the number before you swap it out. A month on one KPI, hammered every shift, will produce more movement than a different metric every week.
Posted numbers. Print the relevant section of your P&L or your KPI dashboard and pin it somewhere staff-only. Supply closet, back hallway, employee bathroom, wherever the traffic is. Some owners feel weird about this. Don’t. The paper itself isn’t the intervention; it’s the trigger for conversation. A P&L on a corkboard that nobody talks about is just wallpaper. A P&L on a corkboard that gets referenced in pre-shift meetings and check-ins becomes infrastructure.
Monthly team target with gamification. This is the version that actually changes culture. Covered in the next section.
A note on tone for all three methods: be direct, not performative. You’re not rallying the troops, you’re running a business and including the people who work in it. Treat the numbers as information, not as theater.
Gamify — Then Follow Through
The strongest version of open book management ties specific financial targets to team and individual performance, tracked publicly, with consequences.
Set a monthly target as a team. “We’re going to raise our guest check average by $2 this month.” Post the target publicly with numbers, not names. Talk about it every shift. Ask the team for ideas on how to hit it — some of your best operational insights will come from people who weren’t trained to give them, because they see the floor from an angle you don’t.
Then layer an individual scoreboard on top. Who has the highest guest check average this month? Who improved the most? Who upsold the most? You already know who your top bartender is, and so do they. The scoreboard makes the performance visible and creates space for people to compete with themselves, not just the leader.
Rewards matter less than recognition. A good team will work for a hundred-dollar gift card and bragging rights more than they’ll work for a raise they feel they already deserve.
Here is the discipline that makes all of this work, and its absence is the single most common reason bar owners give up on transparency: follow-through. If you announce a monthly target and then never mention it again, you have taught your team that numbers don’t matter. You’ve done worse than nothing — you’ve actively inoculated them against future attempts.
This means:
- If you set a month-long target, reference it in every pre-shift meeting that month.
- If you promise to share the P&L each month, share it each month, on time.
- If you offer a reward for hitting a goal, pay the reward immediately when the goal is hit.
- If you fail to hit a goal, talk about why — don’t ignore it.
Half-doing open-book management is worse than not doing it at all. It trains your team to discount anything you say about financial performance. Commit or don’t start.
Your Numbers Beat Industry Benchmarks
Industry benchmarks are useful for you, the owner, as a sanity check. They are mostly not useful in conversations with your team.
If your liquor cost is 52% and the industry benchmark is 20%, telling your team “we’re 32 points over the benchmark” is a dead-end conversation. It’s a shaming number, and it invites debates about whether the benchmark applies to your concept, your region, or your volume. None of that gets you closer to fixing the cost.
The conversation that works: “We’re at 52%. Here’s what that math looks like at our volume. At this rate, we cannot pay raises, we cannot invest in the bar, and we cannot fix what’s broken. We are spending $12,000 a month more than we should be. We need to get this closer to 20%, save those $12,000. Here’s the specific KPI we’re going to work on first. Let’s go.”
Hold your team accountable to your numbers, not to the industry’s numbers. Your concept, your location, your cost structure, your menu, your team — those variables are what produce your P&L. The benchmark is a starting point for strategy, not an endpoint for accountability.
Where Bar Owners Get This Wrong
Sharing percentages without dollar translations. The percentage never lands. Always do the math and give the team the dollar figure.
Starting with the full P&L before the team is ready. If your staff has never seen a financial statement, dropping the whole thing on them cold will shut them down. Start with one KPI, build fluency, then expand.
Announcing transparency and then going quiet. Every time you skip a promised update, you lose credibility. Consistency beats comprehensiveness. A single monthly number shared reliably for six months is worth more than a full P&L shared twice and then forgotten.
Punishing the messenger. If you invite staff to point out where money is being wasted and then react defensively when they do, you have trained them to stop pointing things out. The first few contributions from the team will often be clunky or off-base. Receive them anyway.
Forgetting the action. Numbers without actions create anxiety and no results. Every shared number should come with a specific, immediate, achievable thing the team can do about it.
Gamifying without funding the prizes. If you announce a reward for hitting a target, you need to pay that reward. A broken promise on compensation does more damage than never offering the compensation in the first place.
The Bottom Line
The bar business rewards owners who can turn their team into an asset on the P&L instead of a line item. That shift doesn’t happen because you hire harder, discipline better, or pay more. It happens because your team starts seeing what you see and acting on what they see. Transparency is the mechanism.
Share the numbers that your team can actually move. Translate every percentage into dollars. Pick a format you’ll sustain, whether that’s a corkboard, a pre-shift habit, or a monthly meeting. Gamify when you have the follow-through to back it up. Leave your balance sheet alone.
Do this for a quarter, and the conversations in your bar change. Do it for a year and your culture changes. Do it for two years and your P&L changes.
For a personalized look at how open-book management would work in your specific operation, book a free strategy session at barbusinesscoach.com/strategy-session.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is open-book management in a bar or restaurant?
Open book management is the practice of sharing operational financial information with staff, so their day-to-day decisions reflect real business costs. In a bar context, this typically means sharing revenue, cost of goods sold, labor, controllable expenses, and key performance indicators. Net profit, owner compensation, and the balance sheet usually remain private. The goal is alignment, not full disclosure.
Should I share my bar’s P&L with my staff?
Most bar owners benefit from sharing at least the portion of the P&L their staff can directly influence: revenue, cost of goods sold, labor, and controllable expenses. Sharing builds operational literacy and aligns staff behavior with business outcomes. Staff who understand the numbers typically make better day-to-day decisions around cost control, waste, and upselling.
What financial numbers should bar owners keep private?
Owners generally keep net profit, owner draws, debt service, and the full balance sheet private. Non-controllable expenses like rent, insurance, and utilities are also commonly excluded. The rule of thumb is to share numbers the team can influence and withhold numbers that invite confusion, anxiety, or personal comparison without producing operational benefit.
Will my staff ask for raises if I share the financials?
It’s possible, but not as common as owners fear. When staff see actual margins and specific cost pressures, compensation conversations often become more grounded, not less. Transparency also creates a shared vocabulary for discussing where the money goes, which makes it easier to explain why a raise is or isn’t possible in a given period.
How often should I share financial updates with my team?
Most bars do well with a weekly or pre-shift rhythm for key performance indicators and a monthly rhythm for bigger-picture P&L review. Consistency matters more than frequency. A single KPI shared reliably every shift produces more behavior change than a full P&L shared occasionally. The cadence should match what the owner can sustain without fail.
How do I share numbers without making staff meetings awkward?
Keep the delivery short and always attach a specific action. A 60-second pre-shift update, last night’s number, target, and what the team is going to do about it tonight, is usually more effective than a longer formal meeting. A posted corkboard of key numbers in a staff-only area works alongside verbal updates. The goal is infrastructure, not ceremony.
