Tags:
What part of camping for hours using the network do you find objectionable? Is it camping but not buying anything more than one cup? Is it them being in the seat for 4 hours? Is it them being on the network? Answer that and you'll know how best to address the situation.
Personally, I think the problem you are anticipating has nothing to do with wifi. Regardless of whether or not you offer access, if you design your space to be comfortable you'll have campers. People will have meetings, sit and read for hours, take a nap, whatever. You need to define your cafe's philosophy on this and make a policy to address it - whether that is just allowing them to camp, telling them to leave, or something in between. Apply this policy across the board and the whole wifi thing becomes irrelevant. With the growing popularity of mobile broadband, you'll need this kind of policy anyway.
Us? We offer free wifi for customers. We have a network code that doesn't change. We use network management software to allow or ban individual computers from the network. You must be in our store and have purchased something to get network access.
Assuming they've bought something and we don't have a capacity crowd, we don't really mind people "camping". We designed a space that people would want to spend time in for a reason. We have "camping" readers, workers, people having meetings, you name it. We see most of them daily. They call us "their office" or "their other home". We know their names. That's just the kind of place we run and it works for us.
Overall, I encourage you to look at this from a more general standpoint and decide where to go from there. Good luck.
WiFi? Don't do it.
Simple solution.
The new place we're about to open will not have wifi - at all.
What I did is I purchased a router that comes with a little printer, it auto creates usernames and you can set each button up on the printer (has 3) for how ever much time you want the login to be good for, I did 15min, 1 hour and forever. You just press the button it prints the ticket with login info on it and you give it to the customer, each sale = 1 hour, stops all that nonsense and has worked perfect, and I always secure the WiFi so people outside cant sit on the curb and suck up all the bandwidth.
Might you know the brand/model of this router?
Cyber Infusion Internet Cafe said:What I did is I purchased a router that comes with a little printer, it auto creates usernames and you can set each button up on the printer (has 3) for how ever much time you want the login to be good for, I did 15min, 1 hour and forever. You just press the button it prints the ticket with login info on it and you give it to the customer, each sale = 1 hour, stops all that nonsense and has worked perfect, and I always secure the WiFi so people outside cant sit on the curb and suck up all the bandwidth.
Good article in the SF Chronicle today on this:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/01/08/DDKR1B2...
Seems like the way to go is to offer free wifi and do 1 of 2 things:
1) Charge for extra time or place a sign saying $5min purchase for wifi
2) cover up outlets, which will restrict users to battery life (1-3hrs)
I like #1, then if you get really full, I'd start covering up plugs and most of all, always communicate with your customers. Let them know what you are doing and why. My biggest pet peeve is when businesses never tell me what or why they do things.
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