April 18

How To Get Hired: Springtime Redux

A Guide on the Restaurant Spring Hiring Season and How To Stand Out Against the Competition To Get Hired.

Across the nation, countless restaurants and bars are expanding their seating capacity by opening their patio and sidewalk tables while catering calendars fill up with weddings and summer celebrations.

The industry’s staffing is up, which means more employment opportunities, but they won’t hire just any joker that darkens their doorway.

Here’s the exclusive Poached Jobs list of pointers on how to get hired so you can get on the schedule this summer.

Job Searching Tips To Get Hired

1. WHERE AM I?

  • Front of the house = servers, bartenders, bussers, food runners, hosts, and floor managers.
  • Back of the house = cooks, chefs, expos, and dishwashers.

First things First. Know what you are capable of and apply accordingly.

2. HAVE YOUR PERMITS IN HAND AND UP TO DATE

Liquor service and food handler permits take little time to obtain, and not having them up-to-date is a really silly reason to get passed over for a job.

3. I LOVE THIS PLACE, WHAT DID YOU SAY IT WAS CALLED?

Know with whom you’re applying:

  1. Where is it?
  2. What’s on the menu?
  3. What’s their mission? 
  4. What’s the work environment and atmosphere like?
  5. What’s the typical customer and target clientele? 

Do your research or risk missing the job and looking like an ass. You didn’t know it was a snack bar at a medical marijuana dispensary? Whose fault is that?

4. EXPERIENCE REQUIRED

Don’t apply if you don’t have any. If you have worked in casual dining for 6 months and the posting asks for 3+ years of fine dining experience, you’d better have some pretty compelling reasons as to why you think you can make the leap aside from “fast learner and great people skills” (you’re not the first to use that line).

Resume Tips To Stand Out From The Crowd

CLEAR + SIMPLE = SEXY

State your employment history with business names and, unless there’s one in every city, describe the type of business (“kebab window at music venue”) along with the city where the business is located.

State the duration of employment in each position listed, along with the skills and experience gained.

Concise language with bullet points and action words will make your resume easier to read and understand, endearing you to someone short on time who may have to filter through hundreds of resumes for a single position.

NIFE SKILLZ

Grammar and spelling mistakes put your competence and eye for detail into question, no matter how much experience you have.

Run a grammar and spell check, AND have someone read it.

Spellcheck will not let you know when you made a “friend” a “fiend”, nor when you testify that you are a “goof people person”.

EXPERIENCED-ISH, OR HOW TO MAKE NEW WORK FOR YOU

Not so seasoned yet? Highlight past experiences that are relative to a service-based industry.

Have you interned, volunteered, or staged in food/drink environments? Get that on the page! Multi-tasking, interacting with different types of personalities, and time management are necessary in any part of a restaurant.

SERVICE INTERUPTUS: TACKY, TACKY, TACKY

Keep your bunny slippers on and get your resume right to the hiring manager’s desk with Poached. Download the Poached app to keep track of all your applications and any messages or interview requests from the employer. 

However, if you must drop your resume off in person, do so before or within the first hour of opening. Never show up when the staff is obviously busy as you’re basically proving you’re insensitive to your potential co-workers and don’t understand the work. Your résumé will get circular-filed before you can say, “order up”.

Interview Tips To Help Land That Job

DID YOU ACTUALLY WANT THIS JOB?

Be on time. Always.

DON’T DRESS LIKE A DIRTBAG

Wear clean, wrinkle-free clothes at every in-person interaction.

Always think about what the hiring managers are looking for. If it’s a fine dining place, consider a suit; if it’s more casual, adapt accordingly, but leave your Korn tank top at home (unless unbeknownst to us, Korn has recently opened a sno-cone shack, in which case let us know and tank it up).

TAKE NAMES AND SHAKE (UNLESS THEY’RE GUTTING STURGEON)

Give good eye contact, smile, and remember to whom you’re introduced. Offer firm handshakes when appropriate, and don’t be offended if people prepping food opt to just smile and nod in your direction.

NEVER TALK SHIT ABOUT YOUR EX

We know you don’t work there anymore, but ALL restaurant communities are small ones. Assume you are talking to the best friend of that creepy sous chef who made your life Hell in the last place. You learned SOMETHING from that experience, right? Spinning a bad situation at a previous job in a positive light can go a long way in getting hired.

AVAILABLE EVERY OTHER MONDAY AFTERNOON

Most restaurants and bars do the lion’s share of their business at night. New hires often have to weather very early or late duties and/or may be asked to cover weekend and holiday shifts.

There’s also a chance these shifts may not tip well, if at all, depending on your position, but that’s how almost everyone starts out in this industry. Sound awful? I am sure there’s a nice desk with a telephone waiting for you out there somewhere.

THE FAST LANE TO MONEY AND ADORATION

Want better shifts, hours, and tips? Pick up any and every shift offered within reason. Bailing out fellow employees with emergencies is good Karma.

Taking hours means you’re making money (and not blowing it on brunches, drop-in Zumba classes, and bowling league beers) while making your manager’s life easier, and that tactic, my friend, will pay off in more ways than one.

We’re posting more jobs than ever this spring, so strike while the iron’s hot and your options are plentiful: smear on an unshakable smile, roll up your sleeves, and earn that shift meal. 

Get hired even quicker with the Poached app, available in the App Store and Google Play store. Poached is always free for workers, and with tools that help you manage your application process—you can enjoy more transparency and more control to get the job of your dreams. 


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About the author

Jakup is a skilled mixologist, cook and writer and by "skilled" we mean enthusiastic and by mixologist we mean he drinks. Sometimes when he drinks he also writes blogs for Poached...

About the author

Jakup is a skilled mixologist, cook and writer and by "skilled" we mean enthusiastic and by mixologist we mean he drinks. Sometimes when he drinks he also writes blogs for Poached...

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