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David,
Many of the corporate success stories of the last decade or so have involved "co-branding" i.e KFC/Pizza Hut/Taco Bell). Limiting your "brand" to only coffee is a sure sign for failure. I agree that you need to be extremely selective in picking the additional offerings, but as S'bucks (and others) have figured out, if you offer them only coffee, they will go elsewhere for other complementary items. One of the more successful models that we have helped to grow is the Cafe/Creperie- perfect complimentary items that have done well for many years in Europe and now are proliferating the west coast of the USA and moving eastward. David, I couldn't disagree more. With the numerous options that have popped up in the last decade that that now sell"gourmet coffee" (McD, Dunkin D, etc. - even your local gas station now sells Green Mountain or some equivalent), the fastest route to failure is the coffee shop that concentrates only on coffee.
Pile it high and watch it fly- your customers want other items at your cafe; they expect them , and deserve them as part of the complete experience.
(this portion edited to remove commercial content)
Rick
Mocha Magic
Though it only represents a small part of your overall sales, don't take your eye off the "add-on" items like chocolate covered espresso beans, biscotti, cookies, etc. Not only may that be your most profitable sales per square foot, but it ensures the complete experience for the customer and they come back for items that they can't buy anywhere else. (edited) Rick
We made a conscious decision to keep coffee at the center but add a pretty broad range of offerings. Shooting more for "comfortable neighborhood coffee place". We're in semi-rural suburbia - surrounded by subdivisions (3 golf courses), 45 minutes from city center. We offer coffees, espresso drinks, baked goods, bagels in the morning, a limited housemade sandwich menu at lunchtime, sweet snacks too. Beverage menu includes typical coffeehouse offerings (hot, iced, and blended), hot and iced teas, smoothies and juice based drinks, plus a selection of bottled sodas.
This grew organically. We started with the idea that people would come for coffee. Understanding that those on their way to work would want to grab a quick breakfast to go OR meet friends or coworkers for a light breakfast, we offered the bakery items and fresh fruit.
What we found was that people would come and meet friends, have business meetings, or study all morning. Then leave at lunchtime (or ask to bring in food from other establishments). The shop would sit empty until afternoon coffee time - so from 10ish to 3 or so. Rather than close during those hours we added a simple cold sandwich menu. Now we have people stay for lunch, and come for lunch, or grab to-go lunch with their morning coffee.
For merchandise, we sell bagged coffee, prints from local artists (all customers), handmade greeting cards (made by a customer), and a limited selection of handmade jewelry (made by a customer). You see a trend? All of this (with exception of the coffee) is displayed off to the side and away from the primary ordering area... within view but not cluttering the primary purpose - to sell drinks. Sales are very low, but those customers are good regulars and now they feel like partners in our shop - sending even more of their friends in.
Breakdowns: Drip coffee and espresso beverages make up the large majority of our beverage sales, though the balance between the two changes through the seasons. Baked goods and sandwiches make up most of the remainder of the total. Deli drinks, iced tea, and merchandise items are all small contributors.
Why bother offering other stuff (like sodas) if they aren't big sellers? Every group that meets seems to have one non-coffee-drinker. If you offer something for that person, they'll happily go along the next time someone suggests meeting at your place. If not, they'll want to go somewhere else. That coke might be worth 4 lattes next week, and the week after...
I look at it this way, your customers want to come for your coffee. They like your place and want to spend time there and support your business. If you give them something else to come for, they can come more often.
It depends on you - your interest, your customers, your location. If you can draw enough customers with just coffee, great. Some locations can't support this. Not all KFCs had to pair with Taco Bells to stay afloat, but some did. Know your business and do what makes sense.
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