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Sheila Raheja Institute of Hotel Management

Affiliated with University of Mumbai

HACCP compliant Food and Beverage Areas

B.A. Culinary Art

“Cloud Kitchen” the ray of hope for restaurant business

cloud-kitchen-SRIHM-Best-Hotel-Management-Institute

A kitchen that has no dining facility, no seats, no servers is called as a ghost/dark/cloud kitchen. Orders are received through an App or the customer calls the kitchen directly/internet-based ordering.

Such kitchens are the future of the eating-out industry. Such facilities are now are popular across India. Located in low-rent areas, they maximize a restaurant’s ability to service online orders. They can also operate multiple brands utilizing the same kitchen and resources. Not only individual aspirants but food aggregators such as Zomato, Swiggy, Ola have now cloud kitchen where they provide good space utilization, common storage, refrigeration and lockers for staff.

This means more market share and revenue at minimal added costs. They are economically more profitable than dining in a restaurant.

Present COVID-19-impacted world, cloud/ghost/virtual/dark kitchens have taken an even more prominent role. While there can be multiple types of cloud kitchens, in the simplest terms a cloud kitchen is a kitchen that accepts orders only through phone-in or online ordering systems. It is a base kitchen that delivers food to the customers’ doorstep. There are some cloud kitchens backed brands that may have small physical outlets but essentially are backed by a base kitchen or a chain of cloud kitchens. Among the advantages a cloud kitchen model provides is a low rent to revenue ratio. Characteristically, these kitchens are based in non-premium locations that do not command a high rental. Since there is no dine-in facility, the space required to operate is reduced by 75-80 per cent compared with a traditional premium restaurant. Cloud kitchens also save on front of the house expenses. They are not limited by seats and do not have to turn back customers due to restaurant running on full capacity. They also have the opportunity to potentially expand at a faster rate as a result of low capex requirements.

The online food delivery market, which was valued at INR 45.58 billion in 2017, is expected to grow at a compounded annual growth rate of about 38.08 per cent between 2018 and 2023, according to a report by Research on Global Markets. Of the total market size, dark kitchens constituted 30 per cent in 2017, the report said.

The COVID-19 storm, the dine-in restaurant industry has suffered significantly with the initial 120-day shutdown and followed now by demand failure as patrons continue to stay home. It’s a reality that many restaurants will go out of business. Every restaurant big or small are in survival mode. In the short term, it will become critical for traditional restaurants to pivot to delivery for survival. Even if they do make the pivot, many still will not make it. In the current environment and with the continued uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic, cloud kitchens or food and beverages outlets backed by a cloud kitchen network have a better chance of survival and are likely the future of the food industry.

With the hospitality industry, the public is aware that will pick up in the following months to come. For the same,

Sheila Raheja Institute of Hotel Management, in Mumbai offers aspiring students to register with the them under the following courses:

B.A. Culinary Arts
B.Sc in Hospitality Studies