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Chris, what is your definition of "indy". Is it: an independently owned business that is not publicly traded? The way you are talking about "indy" shops is making them sound small, poorly run, barely making ends meet, etc... This is not the way things are. If a company cannot afford to pay its workers what they are worth due to the market, due to cutting salaries to increase the quality of inventory, etc... Then this company cannot afford to be around. The model today is to have 15 college or high school kids pulling 4-6 hour shifts part time, filtering in and out between classes, and going away over the summer months. This is not a sustainable model. We have to hire less people who are more qualified and will receive the proper income they are due. If a shop is making less than $1500 a day, there is no need for more than a couple of fantastic baristas at a time. This model does not exclude the "indies", of which I consider Kaldi's to be one, even though we have a roasting facility and more than one shop... we started with one shop in '94 and are successful. This model will help shops save money in the long run. Less turn over, more consistency, less put toward training new people over and over.
As for the history of tips: Tips were people's ONLY income in the service industry for a long time. This is how one would pay a shoe shiner, bell hop, or server. Now we have wage standards, thus a person's salary is decided upon and the goods and services are a transaction between the ownership and the patron, and the salary of the employee is decided between the employee and the ownership. The tip now is a BONUS! The bonus is a transaction between the employee and the patron that goes ABOVE AND BEYOND the expected salary, due to the fact the employee's service and presentation went ABOVE AND BEYOND the expectations of the customer. This is convoluted by the restaurants that are allowed to pay their servers less than minimum wage on the basis that tips will be culculated into their salary. Coffee shops are not doing this. Coffee shops pay a wage without the expectation of tips, but then add, "Oh, on top of minimum wage you'll also be recieving tips."
We could argue about this 'til we are blue in the face. But, long story short, it's like my grandpa and dad always say, "You get waht you pay for." Or, "You get out what you put in." If finances are too tight to pay employees what they are worth, then we have to find another place in the company to tighten the belt. If we do not, then when we tighten our belts we are choking our biggest assets, great people.
Chris,
I can relate to your situation more than you realize. I am from small town America. I worked at an "Indy"shop in Cape Girardeau, MO for a few years. I managed it with Robbie Britt, who is now with Zoka in Seattle. We grew, we learned, we had to move on. We have families and bills and that shop could not sustain us. Now, Grace's is closed. It is a sad story. We were invested in on the education and quality side, but not on the financial side. Thus, we could no longer afford to work there. But, without sustainability built in, the shop began to be unsustainable itself. There are tons of factors to this tragedy. But, in my opinion it was just focused on too many things and not streamlined enough. We were spread to thin. The market in Cape Girardeau would definitely be similar to yours. Medium size town, blue collar, thrifty, and totally uneducated about things like specialty coffee. It was a battle to get people into the door. We were not a $1500 a day store. We should have and could have been though. You have to consider markets by their per capita value. How many shops per how many people. If you look at it from this vantage point, in a place like Muncie you may actually have an edge over a market with more saturation. So, take heart... keep plugging away. St. Louis may be a bigger market, but it is still the mid-west, a quality coffee desert. We all have a work cut out for us in this industry, where ever we are.
Anyway, i will also apologize. I may have been a bit defensive about the "indy" thing. We get all kinds of flack for being too "big", and "coporate" even though we are still a tiny company. I'm sorry if I came back too strong.
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