News & Insights: Chef shortage - Why???

What is currently going on with Chefs

Why is the UK facing a massive Chef shortage since the reopening?

It has been all over the news regarding the shortage within the Chef market. We have been trading for 15 years and we have insights of the market. Over the past 15 years it has not been  like this in the chef world. 1st of all you have a chef shortage for the below reasons, you then have energy and food price increases, to top it off any kitchens are having to use Agency chefs which cost more, Agency chefs should just be for peak period not all year round. As well as this page to explain what is happening in the chef market, we also have a page for our predictions for 2023 in the chef market

What is going on?

Many Kitchens have been closed for nearly a year in 2020/21 and this has meant some workers have left the industry and others have not returned to the UK. This is a mixture of many factors. Many kitchens are reporting shortages, including Kitchens that we have never really seen shortages at in the past. Even a year later, some still have not come back to the trade.  The public also did not go out for a year, so there is so much demand in 2022 to then go out, which made many places full. This in turn then pushed up inflation around the world, which then has increased prices.

Chef left the industry?

Yes. Some Chefs have left the industry. In the trade some chefs work on a freelance basis (before IR35 rules started), this meant that many chefs could not get Furlough. You also find that March is a key month for new starters, this was the case in 2020. This meant these could not get Furlough.

The chef market has been high hours for years and some chefs are now looking for something different.

Overseas Chef

We have heard a number of stories of Chefs doing lockdown back in their EU country and not in the UK. With the 10 days period they need when returning to the UK, this can not be done in a staff live in block,  due to shared kitchens etc etc. This has reduced the number of Chefs in the UK, as they can not get back to the UK until their own country is in a green list.

 

New EU Chefs

We are finding the number of new chefs in the UK has not picked up yet, as they would need to be sponsored if not been in the UK before.

Why a move towards Agency work for some chefs

Some chefs have moved towards Agency work as they are paid hourly & paid for every hour. They also get more choice on days off etc.  Many of the same chefs are happy to be on a full time basis but would like to have 40 hours or 45 hour contracts or paid  for each hour. There has been a move away in the industry from the 70 hour week to a 45 hr week with paid overtime.  There are many chefs happy with a permanent contract, you just need a plan for this.   At the end of 2022 we are seeing a slight switch back now, as the cost of living and increased costs, some chefs want to now settle into a full time role. Many Hospitality companies are now doing paid overtime and benefits etc

Relief workers

A number of Chefs are doing relief work short term, this would be on PAYE via a agency. This is increasing the costs for businesses, which will increase prices for customers.  IR35 rules, which means companies with more then 50 staff must ensure the Agency pays the worker via PAYE not via a invoice means some chefs have also left the trade. IR35 laws put the focus on the Restaurant/Hotel to have the IR35 records & if it was not paid via PAYE, they will be liable for the backdated tax & NI and company NI. Companies need to follow these law changes and the penalty can be passive with back dated tax. This meant  Hotels now will only allow PAYE Relief workers on a Agency PAYE, which has meant some chefs left the trade sadly over IR35. This also effected some other sectors like drivers as well, the Ir35 laws.  IR35 is about making tax fair, so if you have 2 chef de partie’s, one on your pay and one on a agency, doing same work, they both must pay the same tax.

This all sounds bad news – what can be done?

Yes. the above might seem all doom and gloom, however their are many things that can be done to help your business. As a Finders Service, we are still making placements and helping clients source talent. What we are finding is some roles get loads of interest and others do not. The roles with a high level of interest and easier to fill include some of the below.

 

This is what some other clients are doing:

  • Offering a 4 day week (still 10-12 hr days but just over 4 days)
  • Closing on a Monday / Tuesday, which are often quite days to give workers set days off
  • Doing a rota for a day per week for a daytime shift
  • Offering a joining bonus after 3 months
  • Offering profit share at the end of each year
  • paid overtime (over a set hours, often over 45/48hours)
  • paying a hourly rate for extra hours
  • Offer extra pay for a extra day. A agency worker can be expensive, you could offer extra pay for a extra day and save on the agency cost.
  • Reduce the menu, to reduce prep,   this can help to reduce the hours

Wages:

Wage increase is one of the answers for many companies but often including some of the above as well. We have done a page about how to navigate wage increases in your business and looking at changing some of the benefits that employees are less interested in, into wage increase instead.

Average pay brackets at the moment (updated Oct 2022)

  • Commis chef: London £23-26k, Out of London £20-23k
  • Chef de partie: London £30-36k, Out of London £25-28k
  • Sous chef: London £35-40k, Out of London £32-34k
  • Head chef: London £45-60k, Out of London £38-48k (depending on the size etc)
  • Live in costs are currently averaging at £40-60 a week, this depends on location, quality of accommodation and if its within the establishment or if the company has rented a house for the employees to then sub-let. If a company does not have live in on site and sub let a local house, the weekly average is currently around £50-90 (this is due to it not being live in, it is a discounted rent instead)

All the above are only average pay rates, this can depend on total hours, 4 day weeks, other benefits, size of property etc etc. When interviewing a chef, many clients have now reduced to a 2-3 hour trial not a full day and 1st stage on the phone/zoom

Employer branding

The companies that HtE Recruitment partner with are all asked to follow a few very simple steps. In a chef shortage market, with the lower number of chefs available, it is  more important to follow some basic steps:

  • Feedback on CV’s and arrange interviews within 3 days. Research shows that candidates drop to 25% interested after 3 days.
  • Interview feedback within 2 days. After this point, a candidate is less likely to take a job
  • Making candidates at interview stage feel welcome. Candidates who are not made to feel welcome in the 1st 10 minutes are often not interested in moving forward. Simple things like getting them a coffee, glass of water. If it is a practical interview, make sure they have somewhere to get changed, introduce them to the team, make sure people talk to them and make them feel a valued member.
  • Ensure that at least 20% (ideally 50% ) of any sit down part of a interview is about what you can offer the candidate, the vision for the business, sell your company to the employee. Interviews that is all about asking the candidate are 10% likely to get a job offer over the line. Interviews that are 50/50 about the Employer/Employee are over 70% likely to get over the line at offer stage.

 

How can I find talent

  • Make sure your employer branding is great online and ensure that you treat people at interview stage / application stage like a employee. Inform them, update them, share your vision with them.
  • Make sure you are clear about the benefits
  • Think outside the box of ways to keep Chefs, like the 4 day week
  • When you have a possible candidate, ensure the interview process goes smooth. Here are some ways to interview a chef.

How can I keep talent?

Always ensure what is promised at offer stage can be delivered.  Have a retention plan in place, here is a guide to create one. If you have Temp Chefs in your kitchen, here a guide on how to create a plan to bring a team of permeant chefs into the kitchen [click here]

 

 

We are finding that their are Chefs looking and we are placing Chefs into jobs. We find that the roles which are easier to place are the roles that have 1 or 2 of the above (not everything, just a few options).

 

UPDATE ON PAGE NOVEMBER 2022:

Today the new minimum wage rates got announced by the Government, from April 2023. The now means a chef working 48 hours must be paid £26k, 40hrs is £21,674 a year, 45hrs is £24,383. This will mean either the hours will go down in kitchens or the basic pay will go up. This should help with the chef shortage as the two main reasons tends to be pay and hours. We will see from April the impact of these new rates

Chef predictions for 2023?

We have our 2023 page with what we think might happen in 2023 within the chef market. Click here to take a look at what might happen in 2023 (this prediction page was written in November 2022)

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