Selling Better vs Buying Better Wine: Why You Need Both
They are two sides of the same business with different tools and mindsets. Real wine profitability only comes when you activate both levers at once.
In wine management for hospitality, there are two major profitability levers: selling better and buying better. Most restaurants focus on just one — and miss half the potential. The difference is not theoretical. It is operational, strategic, and has a direct impact on the P&L. Understanding what each one involves is the first step to activating both.
Selling Better: The Visible Side
Selling better does not mean selling more expensively. It means optimizing the performance of what you already have. What It Involves - Better average ticket per table: smart recommendations, not pressure. - Better rotation: references should move, not stagnate. - Better by-the-glass strategy: the glass is your best testing and selling tool. - Better training: a team that knows the list sells more and better. - Better design: a well-structured list guides the customer toward profitable choices. What Winerim Core Brings: - Reference performance analysis: what sells, what doesn't, what's asleep. - By-the-glass optimization: which wines work best by the glass, with margin and rotation data. - Margin visibility by reference: not just cost, but real contribution. - Performance-based recommendations: data to decide what to promote, change, or remove.
Buying Better: The Hidden Side
Buying better does not mean buying the cheapest. It means buying the most suitable at the best conditions. What It Involves - Better prices: negotiate with data, not intuition. - Better conditions: payment terms, minimums, returns. - Better selection: buy what sells, not what the supplier wants to place. - Less waste: forecast real consumption, not buy from a catalog. What Winerim Supply Brings: - Price comparison across suppliers. - Immobilized stock alerts. - Smart purchase lists based on real consumption. - Overprice detection.
Why Separating the Concepts Is Key
| Dimension | Selling Better | Buying Better | |---|---|---| | Objective | Maximize revenue and experience | Minimize cost and dormant capital | | Key data | Sales, ticket, rotation | Prices, stock, waste, suppliers | | Responsible | Sommelier, floor, F&B | Purchasing, F&B, management | | Frequency | Daily / weekly | Weekly / monthly | | Impact | Revenue line | Cost line |
The Combination That Multiplies
| Only selling better | Only buying better | Both | |---|---|---| | Better average ticket | Lower cost | Better net margin | | Better experience | Less waste | Efficient operation | | More by-the-glass sales | Optimized assortment | Every reference justified | | More engaged team | Controlled capital | Sustainable profitability |
Common Mistakes
Focusing only on purchasing Buying at 5% less means nothing if the wine does not sell. The best purchase price is useless if the reference sleeps in the warehouse. Focusing only on sales Selling more of a wine with bad margin or replacement cost is a trap. Revenue without margin control is vanity, not profitability. Not connecting both areas In many restaurants, purchasing and sales are separate departments that don't share data. Without connection, each optimizes its part and nobody optimizes the whole.
How to Activate Both
1. Measure both. Separate dashboards but connected: what you buy vs. what you sell vs. what stays. 2. Align incentives. The sommelier should know the cost and margin of what they recommend. Purchasing should know what actually sells. 3. Review together. Monthly meeting where purchasing and floor review the same data. 4. Decide with data. Every wine on the list should justify its presence on both sides: does it sell well AND do we buy it well?
Conclusion
Selling better and buying better are not alternatives. They are complementary forces that, when combined, multiply results. A restaurant that only buys well leaves money on the table. One that only sells well leaves money with suppliers. The one that does both well builds a sustainable and profitable wine operation. If you want to activate both levers with a single tool, [Winerim integrates sales management and purchasing intelligence](/producto/winerim-core).