Shifty
Guides

How to Create a Fair Shift Schedule for Your Cafe

A step-by-step guide to building shift schedules that keep your cafe team happy, productive, and fairly treated.

· 3 min read · Guides
How to Create a Fair Shift Schedule for Your Cafe

Creating a fair and efficient shift schedule is one of the biggest challenges cafe owners face. A poorly designed roster leads to burnout, unhappy staff, and ultimately — poor customer service.

In this guide, we’ll walk through a proven step-by-step process to build schedules your team will actually appreciate.

Key Takeaways

  • Map your peak hours before building any schedule
  • Collect availability first, then create the roster
  • Rotate undesirable shifts fairly across the team
  • Publish schedules at least one week in advance
  • Use 15-minute overlaps between shifts for smooth handoffs

Why Fair Scheduling Matters

Research shows that employees who perceive their schedules as fair are 23% more productive and significantly less likely to quit. For cafes operating on thin margins, reducing turnover alone can save thousands per year.

A schedule isn’t just a timetable — it’s a message to your team about how much you value their time and well-being.

Step 1: Understand Your Peak Hours

Before assigning anyone, map out your cafe’s traffic patterns. Most coffee shops see three distinct rushes:

  • Morning rush (7:00–9:30 AM) — highest volume, needs your strongest baristas
  • Lunch peak (11:30 AM–1:30 PM) — moderate, food-focused
  • Afternoon lull (2:00–4:00 PM) — lighter, good for training new staff

Track your POS data for 2–3 weeks to get accurate numbers. Don’t guess — measure.

Step 2: Collect Availability First

The biggest mistake managers make is creating the schedule and then asking for availability. Flip this around:

  1. Send out an availability form every Thursday (for the following week)
  2. Set a deadline — Friday evening
  3. No response = available for all shifts

This simple change eliminates 80% of scheduling conflicts.

Step 3: Rotate Undesirable Shifts

Nobody wants to close every Saturday night. Create a rotation system:

Week Saturday Close Sunday Open
Week 1 Alex Jordan
Week 2 Jordan Sam
Week 3 Sam Alex

This way, no one feels singled out. Transparency builds trust.

Step 4: Build in Buffer Time

Schedule 15-minute overlaps between shifts. This allows for proper handoff — the closing barista briefs the opener on what’s running low, any equipment issues, and pending orders.

Those 15 minutes prevent miscommunication and make your operation run smoother.

Step 5: Publish Early and Stick to It

Aim to publish schedules at least one week in advance. Two weeks is even better. Last-minute changes should be the exception, not the rule.

Consistency here builds reliability — your staff can plan their lives around predictable work hours.

Common Scheduling Mistakes to Avoid

  • Favoritism — giving the «best» shifts to the same people every week
  • Ignoring labor laws — minimum rest between shifts varies by region
  • Over-scheduling — more staff doesn’t always mean better service
  • No backup plan — always have 1–2 on-call staff for emergencies

Tools That Help

While spreadsheets work for very small teams, they quickly become unmanageable once you have more than 5 employees. Modern scheduling apps let you:

  • Drag and drop shifts visually
  • Automatically check for conflicts and overtime
  • Let employees swap shifts with manager approval
  • Send push notifications when schedules change

Skip the spreadsheet hassle

Shifty lets you build fair shift schedules in minutes — with automatic conflict detection and instant team notifications.

Try Shifty Free