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How Many Employees Should I Schedule Each Shift at My Cigar Lounge?

Kory White, Chief Revenue OfficerCurated by Chief Revenue Officer Kory White · CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · Updated · 11 min read
How Many Employees Should I Schedule Each Shift at My Cigar Lounge?

How Many Employees Should I Schedule Each Shift at My Cigar Lounge?

How Many Employees Should I Schedule Each Shift at My Cigar Lounge?

Direct Answer

You stop guessing and start dividing. The formula is employees needed for a given shift = that shift's average gross profit on that day of the week / your agreed-upon gross-profit-per-employee target. First, you and your leadership team agree on one number: the gross profit an average employee should produce running an average shift for an average number of members and walk-ins - call it $250 a shift.

That is a floor, not a ceiling. A cigar lounge earns on high-margin sticks, locker and membership dues, and a bar pour, so the per-person number sits higher than a coffee counter. Then you pull each shift's trailing three-to-six-month gross profit by day of week.

If your Thursday evening shift averages $750 in gross profit, then $750 / $250 = 3 people behind the humidor and bar that night. If a slow Monday afternoon averages $250, you need 1. You do that for every shift and every day, then place those bodies against when the receipts actually ring - the after-work rush, the weekend cigar-and-whiskey crowd, and the slow mid-afternoon - so staff are on the floor when the money is.

PULSE has a free Rep Scheduling Matrix that runs this division across every shift and every day at once. Below are the ten tools that solve this problem, ranked, with PULSE first because it is free and built around this exact method.

The Top 10 Tools to Staff a Cigar Lounge by the Numbers

Every tool below can build a schedule. Only a few build it off your gross-profit math, and only one is free and designed around the per-employee-target method that keeps you from over- or under-staffing your humidor floor. The rankings reflect how well each tool serves a lounge operator who wants the schedule to track the money, not just fill the grid.

A members-only cigar club, a walk-in smoke shop with a back lounge, a cigar bar with a full liquor license, or a multi-location group - same method, swap the room.

1. PULSE Rep Scheduling Matrix 🏆 BEST OVERALL

🛠️ Use it free now -> Rep Scheduling Matrix - no login, no spreadsheet, instant shift counts by day and daypart.

PULSE's free Rep Scheduling Matrix runs the whole method in your browser. It takes a weekly gross-profit target and a per-shift minimum and auto-distributes the head counts by day, protecting your highest-value selling hours instead of spreading bodies flat across the week.

Here is the method it is built on, step by step, because the math is the point:

Step one - agree on the per-employee shift number. Sit down with your leadership and set the gross profit an average employee should produce on an average shift. Say it out loud to the team: "In our lounge, if you show up, take care of an average number of members and walk-ins, recommend a stick, and keep the bar moving, you should produce no less than $250 a shift in gross profit." That is the honest floor.

The tobacconist who wants to make real money does not coast to $250 and lean on the counter - they hit $250 ringing average sticks and pours, then dig for the next $250 by walking a guest into a premium box or a locker membership. The number gives everyone the same yardstick: leadership, you, and every employee on the floor.

Step two - pull gross profit per shift, per day of week. Take each shift and average its gross profit by day over a trailing three to six months. A typical Thursday evening rings $750 in gross profit; a quiet Monday afternoon rings $250. Now divide by your $250 target.

Thursday night needs three people; Monday afternoon needs one. Three people each producing their honest $250 covers the $750 the lounge actually generates that night - and if they upsell a humidor purchase or sign a new locker member, the shift beats it. Run that division for every daypart and the staffing plan writes itself.

No favorites, no "we've always run two people," no manager scheduling their buddies - just gross profit divided by the target.

Step three - place the shifts where the receipts ring. The count tells you how many; the receipt timing tells you when. Pull the hourly sales and look at when transactions actually post. A lounge usually sees a thin lunch crowd, a hard after-work spike from 5 to 8, and a long weekend evening of cigars and drinks.

You staff one opener through the quiet stretch, then two or three for the evening rush, rather than parking everyone at 2 p.m. The matrix lets you slot those bodies against the real demand curve so coverage matches traffic instead of habit.

Because it is free, browser-only, and built by a 22-year revenue operator for exactly this question, it is the default pick for any cigar lounge. Best for: owners and managers who want the schedule to come straight off the gross-profit math and refuse to pay per-seat fees to get it.

2. 7shifts

7shifts is purpose-built for bars, lounges, and food-and-beverage operators, which makes it a natural fit for a cigar bar running a liquor license alongside the humidor. It offers a free Comp tier for one location, with paid plans from about $34.99 per location per month (Entree) to $76.99 (The Works).

It ties scheduling directly to POS sales and labor-percentage targets, so you can schedule a bar shift to a sales-per-labor-hour goal out of the box. For a lounge where pours and tabs drive a big slice of revenue, 7shifts keeps labor as a percentage of sales front and center the way a restaurant tool should.

3. Homebase 💎 BEST VALUE

Homebase is the best value in the category because its scheduling and time-clock tier is free for a single location with unlimited employees, and paid tiers (Essentials around $24.95 per location per month, Plus around $59.95, All-in-One around $99.95) are priced per location rather than per head.

A single cigar lounge with a handful of part-time tobacconists and a couple of bartenders can run the free tier and never pay a cent for scheduling, time tracking, and team messaging. You also get basic labor-cost forecasting against sales. It is the natural pick for an independent lounge watching every dollar that still wants sales-aware scheduling without an enterprise contract.

4. When I Work

When I Work is the most widely used shift-scheduling app for hourly teams, starting around $2.50 per user per month on the Essentials plan and climbing to roughly $8 per user per month with attendance and labor tools. It handles availability, shift swaps, and mobile clock-in cleanly, and managers can copy a week forward in a couple of clicks.

Where it is strong is execution - getting the published schedule onto every employee's phone with reminders so nobody no-shows the Friday evening rush. Where it leaves you on your own is the *why*: it will not tell you that Thursday night needs three people. You bring the head-count math; it runs the logistics.

5. Deputy

Deputy runs about $4.50 per user per month for scheduling and $6 for the premium tier that adds time and attendance. Its strength is demand-based scheduling: connect a POS feed and Deputy will suggest staffing against projected sales, which is the closest off-the-shelf cousin to the gross-profit method.

It also handles compliance - break rules, overtime alerts, fair-workweek laws - which matters once a lounge runs late nights and tipped bar staff. For an operator who wants auto-suggested coverage tied to bar and humidor sales and clean labor-law guardrails, Deputy earns its price.

6. Sling

Sling offers a genuinely useful free tier, with Premium around $1.70 per user per month and Business around $3.40. It leans into shift scheduling plus internal communication - newsfeeds, tasks, and announcements alongside the schedule. For a smaller lounge that wants one app for both the schedule and team messaging without a real budget, Sling covers a lot of ground cheaply.

It is lighter on sales-forecasting than Deputy or 7shifts, so you supply the head-count targets and it handles publishing and coverage.

7. Connecteam

Connecteam is free for up to 10 users and roughly $29 per month for up to 30 users on the Basic plan, which makes it one of the cheapest ways to cover a small staff. Beyond scheduling, it bundles checklists, training, and a full deskless-employee communication hub, so it doubles as an operations app for a lounge where staff are on the floor and never touch a back-office computer.

For owners who want scheduling plus daily humidor-rotation checklists and onboarding in one inexpensive package, Connecteam is hard to beat on breadth per dollar.

8. Workforce.com

Workforce.com (formerly Tanda) runs about $4 per user per month and targets the multi-location, hourly-heavy operator. It excels at demand-driven scheduling, wage-cost forecasting, and compliance across jurisdictions, with live labor-versus-sales tracking through the night. It is a step up in sophistication and is built for groups with enough locations that labor compliance and real-time cost control become daily concerns.

If you are running several lounges and want labor cost managed to the minute, this is the operator-grade choice.

9. HotSchedules (by Fourth)

HotSchedules, now part of the Fourth platform, is the long-standing enterprise option for bar and restaurant groups, typically priced through custom quotes starting around $40-plus per location per month. It offers deep forecasting, labor-budget enforcement, and integrations with most major POS and payroll systems.

The trade-off is cost and setup weight - it is built for large hospitality chains with dedicated operations staff, not a single lounge. For a regional group of cigar bars that needs forecasting and labor controls at scale, it remains a default.

10. Findmyshift

Findmyshift is a straightforward, browser-based scheduler priced around $25 per month per team for unlimited employees, with a free option for very small teams. It does the core job well: drag-and-drop shifts, availability, time-off requests, and a clear printable rota. It will not forecast sales or tie to your POS, so it sits at number ten for a lounge that wants something dead simple and cheap.

If your needs are just a clean weekly rota that everyone can see, it is an honest, low-cost pick.

How to Choose

FAQ

How do I set the gross-profit-per-employee target for a cigar lounge? Look at your trailing gross profit and current head count, then agree on the honest shift floor an average employee should produce - lounges with strong stick margins, dues, and bar pours often land between $200 and $350 a shift.

Set it with leadership so it is a shared yardstick, not a number one manager invented, and revisit it once or twice a year.

Should I count membership and locker dues in the gross profit I divide? Yes, but spread it sensibly. Allocate recurring dues across the shifts that actually serve those members rather than dumping it all on the day it bills, so your evening and weekend shifts get credit for the members they keep happy.

That keeps the head-count math honest about where the value is created.

What if a shift's gross profit swings a lot week to week? Use a trailing three-to-six-month average by day of week to smooth the noise, and schedule to that baseline. For known spikes - a new-release stick event, a fight night, a holiday weekend - add a manual bump on top of the calculated count rather than letting one wild week distort the whole average.

Why staff to gross profit instead of foot traffic or a fixed head count? Foot traffic and "we've always run two people" do not pay the labor bill - gross profit does. Tying head count to gross profit guarantees every scheduled employee is covered by real margin and forces the conversation about which shifts actually earn their coverage.

Bottom Line

The free PULSE Rep Scheduling Matrix is the Best Overall because it runs the exact gross-profit-divided-by-per-employee-target method in your browser at no cost, and Homebase is the Best Value for a single lounge thanks to per-location pricing and a free tier. Whichever you choose, the method wins: set a per-employee shift gross-profit target, divide each shift's gross profit by it to get head count, and place those bodies where the receipts actually ring.

Sources

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