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Dr. Joseph John said:Matt:
I assume you re referring to my post.
If one wants to be the best and serve the highest quality, one needs to seek out the sources that provide the best and of the highest quality. There might be a lcoal roaster that provides the best in the world, but it is unlikely, except perhaps in a few locales.
I have no problem focusing on the local sources if one's goal is to support the local businesses. Then they need to quit talking about serving the best. That is what I meant by people talking about serving the best and make all kinds of compromises along the way and end up being mediocre.
The other compromise I see is about machines. Serving the best and getting a machine with local support are not always consistent.
This is great. Had to read this and your first post a couple of times to really get what you meant... but I think I get it now, and you are absolutely right.
Serving the best means that you have to place quality absolutely above all else. All else (employees, customers, revenue, profitability, community, sustainability, equipment reliability, etc). That's why so few places nail it.
The key is to define a balance that you are comfortable with, that you feel fits you and your market. There is nothing inherently mediocre about a place that has made compromises, assuming that those compromises are smart and fit a well-executed concept. (Not sure if that reads like I intended it to, so will clarify if need be).
Food for thought, for sure.
Think about how much it's going to cost. Every Detail involved.
Buildout of an empty space is costly with lots of details
All the machines of course (Espresso, Coffee, Refridgerator, Grinders, ETC)
All smallwares (mugs, saucers, tampers, mats)
All the paper goods
All the coffee/pastries/milk
City Fee/Permits
State Fee/Permits
Deposits (Rent/Insurance/Utilities)
And so much more.
After your extensive research in learning the industry, you're going to spend months, (and I mean months), developing a business plan. If you're looking for investors a detailed business plan will help them clearly see what your vision is and the numbers that they really care about.
*A business plan clearly states what the goal of the business is, who you are and how that's going to grow the business. Plus, it outlines your menu and other services. Spend a lot of time on that so that it only becomes second nature to speak about it.
DONOT be surprised, though, if your investor skips straight to the financials. At the basic level, they could care less about what your serving. Instead how much does it cost? how much can you sell it for? and how many in what time period can you sell?
No your costs just as well as your know how to pull a good shot of espresso.
Matt,
I have to disagree, and Dr. Joseph John can correct me if I'm wrong, but he says,
"If one wants to be the best and serve the highest quality, one needs to seek out the sources that provide the best and of the highest quality. There might be a local roaster that provides the best in the world, but it is unlikely, except perhaps in a few locales."
He clearly states there MAY be a great local roaster... he never implies this is the road to mediocrity. He says if your sights are on excellence your first point is to source excellence, and if it's local, then more power to you. The reaction seems to be kind of defensive, like trying to justify a decision based on ease of access and not on quality.
For any new owner who opens a shop they have to decide exactly who they are at their core and be it. They can be honest with themselves or not. Nobody says, "I want to be average!" but many places are, and average is fine. A lot of people like average. But customers will always gravitate toward quality, so again to Stacy: Stick to your guns and actually BE great.
Matt B said:There are lots of "local" roasters who roast inferior coffees and generally don't do a very god job. I'd probably even say this is usually the case. But going with someone local--assuming the quality is there--does not necessarily mean that you are compromising and that your product is destined for "mediocrity," which is what Dr J's posts suggest. And there are real benefits with sourcing roasted coffee locally. Will it be the "best in the world" (whatever that means)? Maybe not. Then again, maybe it will be.
Stacy,
I want to take time to thank you for this topic. At the core of many barista's hearts is the strong desire to have a shop. You have brought out many great professionals to offer up unconditionally some very very nice suggestions. Each and every one of us comes from a different perspective on the coffee business. When you add all this up, here you will find one of the best "Real Time" resources out there today. I can't even begin to to share with you how much I have learned from this list/social networking site and applied to my business. Stay with us here, there is much much more to come.....
Joe
Ohhh, A big Happy Easter Bunny to you
and I do believe there is gold at the end of the rainbow.
--
Ambassador for Specialty Coffee and palate reform.
Been a good thread. While I'm not looking to open another new shop at the moment, am in the process of planning a re-launch of both my locations. Part being specifically taken all ingredients up another notch to match my coffees. Namely doing away 100% commercial pre-made syrups etc. Been making my own choco sauce for years but even in the process of re-formulating it getting rid of some compromise ingredients and going with Scharffen Berger cocoa powder base. (For me, even that's a bit of a compromise over like Bernard Callebaut, one of my faves but just not realistically financially feasable, even Scharf's gonna double the cost:) Been worrying about what I was going to do for the sugar free crowd. Already planned on making a few Splenda based syrups. This thread woke me up to also making sugar free top knotch choco sauce. Gonna cost 'em more, but taste will be worth it.
Maybe I missed a similar response in scanning this post, but Jeremiah's reply was the first "business related" that caught my attention.
I spend most of my time developing, training and supporting small businesses in my primary industry, which isn't coffee. But having founded and owned two medium sized companies, I've done both the start-up in the garage, and also the buyout of a small firm to make it bigger. Coffee is a passion, but shortly after the love affair, I looked hard at the business side. I've always said that there's the art of espresso (coffee), the science of espresso (coffee), and the business of espresso (coffee). In my strong opinion, it's merely "pipedream pondering" if one doesn't deal with each. (art = skills of the kitchen, so to speak, science = understanding product and process, and business..... which is really what this is all about.)
Stacy, I'm more venting than directing this to you or anyone else, and I'm only speaking for my own interests, but anytime I enter into a "I want to start a business.... what do I do?" discussion, especially in the context of a seminar, my question to the person or group is to quiz them on where they are in respect to knowing product, processing and the business skills in that, or in any similar small business. Without some background in all areas, especially business management experience, the discussion easily can go off course. Best example is... "I've always enjoyed cooking my Italian food for friends and family...... I think I wanna' start a small, romantic place, where I can share my love with the world!" And that from a school teacher that only knows the education biz.
And to directly address your questions? What's the hardest part of starting one's own business? FOCUSING ON THE BUSINESS OF BUSINESS AND NOT A DREAMSCAPE OF WHAT YOU PERCEIVE THE BUSINESS TO BE.
Advice for ANY entrepenuer? SEEK OUT CONSULTANTS AND CURRENT SUCCESSFUL OWNERS THAT HAVE, OR ARE DOING WHAT YOU WANT TO DO. Location? LOCATION LOCATION LOCATION...CART, KIOSK OR BUILD-OUT LEASE SPACE, IT'S PRIMARY TO SUCCESS. Demographics? YOUR LOCATION TIES INTO THE DEMO'S. Quality? YOU'LL ONLY DO THIS ONCE, WHY WASTE OPPORTUNITY ON RUN-OF-THE-MILL. Local Roasters? IF THAT WERE IMPORTANT, YOU COULD BUY YOUR SUPPLIES AT THE 7-11 DOWN THE STREET...... SCHEDULING OF INVENTORY WITH OUT OF TOWN SHIPPERS IS COMMON.
I've often told friends, who failed in start-ups....... "If I had offered to sit you down in a chair, have you write me a check for $10,000 and then I slapped you up one side and down the other for even thinking of going into that business...... what would you have said?" They usually respond with a meek, "...yes, I would'a thought you were nuts........ but after walking away from my investment, I admit, it would have been cheaper!" And that's the truth for many start-ups.
I would only wish the best for you or anyone that actually wants to start their own operation, but the statistics are heavily against you, and me, and anyone starting a business. And the sad thing is that none of us, well, maybe some, listen to advice... and we rarely ingest free advice as much as advice that we've paid for or learned from our own hard knocks. From experience, I've found that your chances are better if you find a consultant that has no financial interest in "selling you a startup package", or brokering you to a franchise. Just start by sitting with a general business consultant, or a coffee consultant that only consults and doesn't have fiduciary ties to your investment, and share all of your resources, (your life background and current financials). Discuss the merits of taking those resources into the coffee biz. You might find, and accept, that this isn't your best option?
You may just be testing the waters with your "starting my own shop", and that's great. But when one is seriously considering this huge life change, a "face to face" contact with those successful owners, consultants and also shop owners that failed miserably, is in order...... in my very humble opinion.
Jeremiah Perrine said:Think about how much it's going to cost. Every Detail involved.
Buildout of an empty space is costly with lots of details
All the machines of course (Espresso, Coffee, Refridgerator, Grinders, ETC)
All smallwares (mugs, saucers, tampers, mats)
All the paper goods
All the coffee/pastries/milk
City Fee/Permits
State Fee/Permits
Deposits (Rent/Insurance/Utilities)
And so much more.
After your extensive research in learning the industry, you're going to spend months, (and I mean months), developing a business plan. If you're looking for investors a detailed business plan will help them clearly see what your vision is and the numbers that they really care about.
*A business plan clearly states what the goal of the business is, who you are and how that's going to grow the business. Plus, it outlines your menu and other services. Spend a lot of time on that so that it only becomes second nature to speak about it.
DONOT be surprised, though, if your investor skips straight to the financials. At the basic level, they could care less about what your serving. Instead how much does it cost? how much can you sell it for? and how many in what time period can you sell?
No your costs just as well as your know how to pull a good shot of espresso.
Stacy,
Dr. Joseph John hit the nail on the head with probably the most salient advice given.
Take it with the kindness that was intended.
I know someone (not an isolated incident) who talked about being the best, and quality this and trained barista, etc. etc., and they couldn't understand why they were failing. After a while they say they are sourcing beans for about $4.50 per pound --ROASTED! Well, I don't need to taste their product to know that you can't source anything quality for that price... probably need to start in the neighborhood of twice that. Point being, many owners - both new and old alike, talk quality, but compromise from day one.
Don't compromise.
And everyone, especially you, will be happy.
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