Free classroom activity

Restaurant simulator for students

Students run a restaurant, test one decision against a baseline, and use matching results to explain what happened to demand, customer experience, cost, revenue, and profit. The simulator and printable worksheet are free and require no account.

Direct answer

How can students use a restaurant business simulator?

Use it as a controlled business experiment. Students first record a baseline restaurant strategy, then change one important decision—such as average ticket, ingredient quality, staffing, promotion, or delivery—and record the same output measures again.

The useful question is not “Which settings win?” It is “Which decision caused which change, what evidence supports that explanation, and what tradeoff appeared?” That approach supports business, entrepreneurship, economics, financial-literacy, and career-exploration lessons.

Learning outcomes

  • distinguish revenue, operating cost, and profit;
  • design a fair one-variable comparison;
  • connect capacity and customer experience to financial results; and
  • make a recommendation supported by matching evidence.

Ready-to-use sequence

A 50-minute restaurant simulation lesson

  1. Launch the question — 5 minutes. Ask why a busy restaurant might still lose money. Define operating profit as simulated revenue minus the operating costs shown by the model.
  2. Choose a role and question — 5 minutes. Pairs assign an operator and an evidence recorder. They select one investigation from the menu below.
  3. Build a baseline — 10 minutes. Choose a restaurant concept and location, run the starting strategy, and record price, decision settings, revenue, costs, profit, and two operational measures.
  4. Predict — 5 minutes. Write: “If we change ___, then ___ will change because ___.” Identify the possible downside before running the test.
  1. Test one change — 8 minutes. Change only the selected price, quality, staffing, promotion, menu, or delivery decision. Keep other major settings stable.
  2. Compare evidence — 8 minutes. Record the same metrics, calculate changes, and identify a bottleneck or tradeoff visible in the dashboard.
  3. Recommend and debrief — 9 minutes. Write a claim using at least two results. Compare whether teams found the same pattern and name one real-world factor absent from the model.
25-minute option: Give every pair the same concept, starting setup, and assigned change. Allow 6 minutes for the baseline, 6 for the test, 7 for comparison, and 6 for the written recommendation.

Investigation menu

Choose one restaurant decision to test

Each experiment changes one major lever. Students should use the dashboard to look for both the intended effect and an unintended consequence.

Price and demand

Change: average ticket or price strategy.

Watch: orders, revenue, satisfaction, and profit. Does a higher ticket improve margin enough to offset a demand response?

Quality and food cost

Change: ingredient or menu quality.

Watch: food cost, satisfaction, demand, revenue, and profit. Does the customer response justify the added cost?

Staffing and service capacity

Change: one staffing decision.

Watch: payroll, morale, service results, orders, satisfaction, and profit. Was labor a bottleneck or an unnecessary expense?

Promotion or delivery

Change: one campaign, promotion, or delivery choice.

Watch: demand, marketing share or delivery orders, fees, revenue, and profit. Did added volume create enough contribution?

Student evidence table

Record the same measures after both runs. If a metric does not apply to the chosen question, replace it with another visible dashboard measure and explain why.

EvidenceBaselineTestChange and meaning
Decision settingWhat exactly changed?
Orders or demand measureDid customer activity change?
RevenueDid sales dollars change?
Operating costsWhich cost moved most?
Customer or capacity measureWhat bottleneck or benefit appeared?
ProfitDid the change create value after cost?

Claim-evidence-reasoning frame

Claim: Our restaurant should ___.

Evidence: When we changed ___ from ___ to ___, the matching results changed from ___ to ___ and ___ to ___.

Reasoning: This evidence supports our claim because ___. The main tradeoff or uncertainty is ___, so our next test should ___.

Discussion prompts

  • Why did revenue and profit move together—or in different directions?
  • Which result suggests a demand, capacity, cost, or customer-experience constraint?
  • What evidence would help distinguish causation from coincidence?
  • Would the recommendation still make sense under weaker demand or higher costs?
  • Which real restaurant responsibility is missing from this model?

Assessment

Simple 12-point rubric

Criterion3 — Strong2 — Developing1 — Beginning
ExperimentUses a clear baseline and changes one major decision.Has a comparison, but more than one major decision changes.Has no usable baseline or controlled change.
EvidenceRecords matching settings and at least four relevant results.Records some matching evidence with a gap or inconsistency.Uses few results or incomparable measures.
ReasoningExplains the result and a tradeoff using at least two numbers.States a plausible explanation with limited numerical support.Makes a claim without connecting evidence to reasoning.
RecommendationProposes a specific next test and acknowledges uncertainty.Proposes a general next step or limitation.Offers no actionable next test or model limitation.

Differentiate the activity

  • More support: assign price and demand, provide the starting setup, and use the sentence frame.
  • More challenge: require a second controlled experiment or calculate percentage changes.
  • Team option: add finance, operations, and customer-experience roles.
  • Individual option: complete one worksheet and submit a written recommendation.

Keep the model in perspective

The simulator is an educational model, not a real forecast. It does not represent every tax, wage rule, permit, food-safety duty, accessibility requirement, lease term, financing constraint, or local customer pattern.

Students should identify missing factors before transferring a conclusion to a real restaurant. Actual operators must verify legal, safety, employment, tax, and licensing requirements with appropriate local authorities and qualified professionals.

Frequently asked questions

What do students learn from a restaurant simulator?

They compare how one pricing, quality, staffing, menu, promotion, or delivery decision affects demand, revenue, operating costs, customer experience, and profit.

How long does the lesson take?

The full controlled experiment takes about 50 minutes. The shorter teacher-directed version takes about 25 minutes.

Do students need an account?

No. The simulator and worksheet open in a browser without an account or student personal information.

Should the highest profit earn the highest grade?

No. Grade the experiment, matching evidence, reasoning, and recommendation. An unprofitable test with a careful explanation can demonstrate excellent learning.

Does the simulator predict real restaurant results?

No. It is a simplified model for practicing decisions and comparisons, not a forecast of real demand, cost, compliance, or business success.

Continue the restaurant lesson

Review the restaurant strategy guide, compare concepts in the restaurant business simulator resource, plan another activity from the teacher hub, or browse the complete learning-resource index.