Starting a small business with wife in the food industry. Small market type of a place. Any good books or podcasts involving small businesses/startup? Want to start immersing my self in the market prior to opening.
Correct. Only one client in that business survived, a family-owned Mexican food restaurant with about 90% of their employees being family members. Additionally, all were full-time involvement, no side businesses. Several others followed my advice and didn't go into business, many of those were going to be side businesses. My advice was that they might like doing chicken and ribs on the weekend, but doing that 363 days a year, from 10am to 11pm and worrying about their cook(s) not showing up, or the manager, while the owners were at their main job would be a disaster.DallasAggie89 said:
My advice - if you are planning on starting a food/restaurant business on the side - don't.
Save your money.
It's honestly not too late. Even if you've already incurred some costs. Sunk costs are sunk, but don't throw good money after bad.saysomethin said:
Too late. Trains moving
6 months is the absolute minimum and is when to pull the plug if you're not getting traction. Be prepared to lose that amount of money plus your initial outlay for equipment, etc. that 6 months will likely whittle down to a month or two quickly and have to replaced by volume. You'll struggle to break even and keep that balance for the next 18-24 months. And if you're successful and established at that point, it can finally start to pay dividends.saysomethin said:
Will be on the side for us. People is most important. Have a budget for a Really good manager…
I've been wondering about the amount of working capital..we should have 6 mos covered
The very first case in finance at HBS's MBA program for several decades was Butler Lumber. The question at the end of the case was basically "Is this a good business?" The primary takeaway was even though they were profitable on the P&L, it was so working capital intensive (inventory and A/R) they kept running out of cash.Bag said:
Cash flow is the #1 killer of small business and something I didnt fully understand when I started my company
No clue. It was a semi-retirement deal investment in a building and started restaurant for kids to run who were in the food biz. Not a franchise.topher06 said:
Were they highly leveraged? Franchise expenses? I assume you can now pay your employees like crap now that every order-at-a-counter-bus-yourself restaurant asks for a 18%-25% tip.