Lost Opportunity Cost

Simply defined, an opportunity cost is the cost of a missed opportunity. It is the opposite of the benefit that would have been gained had an action, not taken, been taken—the missed opportunity.

Applied to our business decisions, the opportunity cost might refer to the profit a business could have earned from its resources (talent, marketing, menu, capital, etc…) if these resources had been used in a different way. Consider these questions most operators have in common:

  • Is the service/production model you utilize maximizing sales and profits or minimizing costs? What’s your alternative?
  • Are your marketing efforts tied to a significant return? What’s your alternative?
  • Is the level of talent in your business effectively growing your business? What’s your alternative?
  • Is there a next level for your business and what will you need to do to get there? What’s your alternative?

Most operators consider the cost-benefit between two (or more) choices they want to consider. The problem lies in how they chose the options being considered and whether or not there were better alternatives.

[stm_quote quote=”“Most operators pay an extremely high ‘lost opportunity tax’ by not maximizing their own potential. This is a businesses single biggest expense and it’s not even on the P&L.”” author_name=”Jeffrey Summers” author_status=”Founder|Principal Summers Hospitality Group”]

Drilling Down Further

Although opportunity costs are not generally considered by most accountants—financial statements only include explicit costs, or actual outlays—they should be considered by you and your managers. Most operators do consider opportunity costs whenever they make a decision about which of two (or more) possible actions to take.

Example: Most caterers factor in opportunity costs when computing their operating expenses in order to provide a bid or estimate on the price of a job.

A caterer may be bidding on two jobs each of which will use half of his equipment during a particular period of time. As a result, they will forgo other catering opportunities some of which may be larger and potentially more profitable. Opportunity costs increase the cost of doing business, and thus should be recovered whenever possible as a portion of the overhead expense charged to every job.

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Digging Deeper

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Author:
For four decades, my Coaching, Consulting, & Learning Events have helped thousands of hospitality leaders worldwide, build successful businesses. Call or text me at +1-817-797-2929 or email me at Jeffrey@JeffreySummers.com.