Tags:
our top 5 are consistently week to week:
1)cappuccino
2)small latte
3)small iced mocha
4)small hot mocha
5)large iced mocha
regular drip coffee is always a contender,as well as medium lattes and iced lattes. the top 5 account for over 80% every week.
For almost anything other than a concept shop, I'd say the essentials are:
Espresso
Americano
Brewed coffee (not necessarily an auto-drip)
Macchiato
Cappuccino
Latte
If you're main focus is gonna be high end coffee, those should have you pretty well covered. If you don't have qualms with adding flavors, then simple options like vanilla, mocha, honey and caramel are good choices. It's always easier to add to the menu rather than take away from it (trust me, customers will get pissed if you delete things from the menu). Those 4 flavors will give you the options you want while clearly and non-offensively iterating that you are about the coffee (if in fact you are). Plus it's a heck of a lot cheaper to buy those flavors rather than a dozen bottles of each of 20 flavors, it saves on storage space, etc.
need more details:
1.what is the climate like?
2.is it urban or rural?
3.what age group are you trying to market to?
4.are you a frozen yogurt bar serving coffee or a coffee bar serving frozen yogurt? (pick one, not two)
5. are there people who 'understand' coffee there?
1. Right now very hot & humid.
2. kind of in between, on the outskirts of Memphis
3. 18-50
4. yogurt bar selling coffee
5. yes, Starbucks on the opposite corner of intersection.
If Starbucks is across the street you need to run a different game than what they are offering. I would keep your menu as simple as possible (see something like 9th Street Espresso's menu: http://www.flickr.com/photos/yehwan/283326423/lightbox/) and focus on making your simple menu as high quality as possible. If you want to offer a sweet treat, perhaps you could add an affogato-like concoction with frozen yogurt, but I would try not to get into the candy-bar latte business and offer tons of flavors and blended beverages.
1. Right now very hot & humid.
2. kind of in between, on the outskirts of Memphis
3. 18-50
4. yogurt bar selling coffee
5. yes, Starbucks on the opposite corner of intersection.
I'll have to agree with James on giving the customer something that bux cant offer. Run a simple high quality operation but do your research and find out what customers want; dont limit yourself too much. if you were a coffee bar mainly i would not offer blended, but b/c ur a frozen yogurt shop offering coffee i would say go for it and use yogurt in the blended beverages with your coffee as a binder for the ice in the drink. use flavors that the competition cant compete with and be creative and original.
Steven Graig said:
1. Right now very hot & humid.
2. kind of in between, on the outskirts of Memphis
3. 18-50
4. yogurt bar selling coffee
5. yes, Starbucks on the opposite corner of intersection.
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