Tags:
As a roaster and cafe owner struggling to keep the doors open I can honestly say I'd close the doors before I'd flavor any roast. That is not the customer base I'm working to build.
Anyone have experience with this Monin product? I've seen it but not tried it yet. We do currently stock a limited number of "flavored" coffees. Some mornings they represent a significant portion of our drip sales (perhaps 20%), other mornings they hardly move.
Nasty stuff, I'd just as soon drop it altogether. I was toying with the idea of a "no flavoreds" day once a week... just to get them to try a great real coffee.
Curiously, very few of my flavored coffee customers accept a cup of coffee with a flavor syrup shot as a substitute... not sure why. Even if they sweeten it, they just don't like it. Curious.
Oh, not to be argumentative, but you actually can polish a turd - saw it on Mythbusters a few nights ago. When prepped properly, a ball of poo will take quite a nice shine. Perhaps I digress, but only very slightly. :)
miKe mcKoffee aka Mike McGinness said:As a roaster and cafe owner struggling to keep the doors open I can honestly say I'd close the doors before I'd flavor any roast. That is not the customer base I'm working to build.
That’s insane! So many people love flavored coffee and are stuck in the matrix. I would hate to see a indy shop fail all because the owner didn’t want to sell flavored coffee. Get them in the shop and educate them. This whole "we are greater than thou flavored coffee drinker/you cant taste the Chocolate in my Brazilian single origin?- You are not my type of customer"mindset is really getting to me. The Red Pill! Give them the Red Pill! (NEO)
Bwynn said:miKe mcKoffee aka Mike McGinness said:As a roaster and cafe owner struggling to keep the doors open I can honestly say I'd close the doors before I'd flavor any roast. That is not the customer base I'm working to build.
That’s insane! So many people love flavored coffee and are stuck in the matrix. I would hate to see a indy shop fail all because the owner didn’t want to sell flavored coffee. Get them in the shop and educate them. This whole "we are greater than thou flavored coffee drinker/you cant taste the Chocolate in my Brazilian single origin?- You are not my type of customer"mindset is really getting to me. The Red Pill! Give them the Red Pill! (NEO)
No more insane than a high end steak house not offering a 99cent McDonald's style hamburger. Or a purportedly Artisan roaster offering low grade specialty coffees instead of cupping lots to find the good stuff... My business model does not include the lowest common denominator in coffee.
Wow, this is a firestarter of a discussion. You have two choices for flavored coffee. Either flavor it before brewed, either through introducing a flavoring agent before or after roast, or use a flavored syrup such as Torani, as the customer requests it. Here's the bottom line about flavored coffee, it's an introduction alot of us wouldn't have gotten that allows us an opportunity to educate them about coffee further. My wife is a great example of someone who didn't like coffee, then liked flavored coffees or really sweet espresso drinks, and now can drink coffee black and enjoy it. We must take every opportunity we can to introduce people to coffee, and work to educate them to coffee in it's purest forms. I hate to say that, but I think it's idealistic to assume they go from little experience into Chemex pourover Rwanda Bufcafe, or traditional capp. They have to come in somewhere, and for a lot of people, flavored coffee is where they come in.
I don't like it, won't drink it, but I think it does have a place in the specialty coffee industry, a comment I know will make people cringe at my very words. But it does. Here in the South, that's my experience, and I know many will back me up on it. I have visited some shops recently, even blogged about them, where they are working towards getting customers to that purist point quicker, but it will take more time around here, I feel. Since I have been with Dilworth Coffee here in Charlotte, we have whittled our flavored coffee selection down to a handful from probably 20. Things are improving, but it has helped us to have it, so we could have the opportunity to get them into regular SO coffees gradually.
exactly! how far are you willing to bend your values in order to make a buck? (snip)
...How can your business be sustainable if you're slowly clogging the arteries of the customers AND the staff.
Here's the bottom line about flavored coffee, it's an introduction alot of us wouldn't have gotten that allows us an opportunity to educate them about coffee further. My wife is a great example of someone who didn't like coffee, then liked flavored coffees or really sweet espresso drinks, and now can drink coffee black and enjoy it. We must take every opportunity we can to introduce people to coffee, and work to educate them to coffee in it's purest forms. I hate to say that, but I think it's idealistic to assume they go from little experience into Chemex pourover Rwanda Bufcafe, or traditional capp. They have to come in somewhere, and for a lot of people, flavored coffee is where they come in.
.
stumptown, intelligentsia, gimme - do these guys serve flavored coffee? i'd call that a good outcome
BR>I'd love to hear some great ideas that you may have to get our flavored customers converted away. Or some stories from those that have just stopped serving it and had a good outcome.
Are you enjoying Barista Exchange? Is it helping you promote your business and helping you network in this great industry? Donate today to keep it free to all members. Supporters can join the "Supporters Group" with a donation. Thanks!
© 2024 Created by Matt Milletto. Powered by