What Every To Be Coffee Shop Owner Must Know

We did a previous blog on the basics of starting a coffee shop talking about the “coffee ingredients” that go into a successful venture.  There was one important coffee ingredient we left out though: ambiance.

There is a saying that goes: “People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” This has been attributed to Maya Angelou and we believe the lady had a point.

Everything in life comes with a feeling, even coffee. If you serve good coffee people will remember how it made them feel. They may remember the taste of the coffee also, but especially how that taste made them feel.

In a coffee shop it isn’t all about coffee though. People won’t remember your coffee shop fondly because of just the coffee. Hard to believe but there are more “coffee ingredients” that go into the perfect cup.

The perfect cup of coffee, the one that makes people feel amazing is delivered with great service. Service is really, really important when running a coffee shop, because how clients feel when they walk into a coffee shop is greatly dependent on the service they get. If they are met by someone who greets them with a big smile, chats to them, and hopefully remember their name and some little things about them if they are regulars, they will feel welcome and at ease – they may even start feeling at home.

There is a coffee shop in the town where one of us crazy Wholesale Coffee Co. workers live (namely me) and when I first came to town I had to ask why people loved this coffee shop, because no one seemed to be very enthusiastic about neither the coffee, nor the food, nor the décor. It was explained to me then that people came there because of the owner. He knows the whole town and when you walk in he remembers you and chats to you. He might even introduce you to other people there. It feels like you walk straight into a family. And he pours everyone a glass of free grappa every Friday morning.

The other thing that affects people’s feeling is the actual place. If you walk into a place that makes you feel at home, it’s stunningly beautiful, or it excites your senses in some other way, then you are likely to come back. This isn’t just about the furniture, layout and wall paint, it’s also about the light, the temperature and the freshness in the air. Not to mention the toilets. Unwelcoming and dirty toilets can actually scare off clients, believe it or not!

So that’s it: one of the most important coffee ingredients is how you make people feel at your coffee shop!

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The perfect cup of coffee – a lot more than just coffee!

The secret coffee shop chain

Empty spaces, closing down sales and clone town high streets. Sound familiar? Clone towns and empty high street shop fronts aren’t new topics for discussion, but what about chain stores disguised to look like independently run shops?

This is exactly what Harris + Hoole, the new chain of high street coffee shops is doing. The company which is partially owned by Tesco plans to convert some of the now empty Clinton Cards shops into ‘indie’ like coffee houses.

Harris and Hoole may be 49% owned by Tesco but the company is also run by three siblings from London who aim to provide ‘good coffee’ made from fresh coffee beans served by ‘happy people’. The name of the chain comes from the book ‘The Diary of Samuel Pepys’. The characters Harris and Hoole’ are both keen coffee drinkers. It’s a nice idea for a name.

On the menu, you’ll find a variety of coffee drinks from the flat white to more unusual options and all the coffee beans used have been recently harvested – so the coffee blends change depending on the season. Also, according to the website, all coffee beans are sourced directly by Union Hand Roasted which means farmers get a better deal.

It sounds good; however, many local residents are angry about the connection with Tesco and feel tricked into thinking they were buying from an independently run coffee shop. It probably seemed like a brave move for an independent coffee house to open up on the same street as a Costa, Starbucks or Café Rouge after all.

The next question to ask is, could this be the future of our high streets? Will more corporations start to team up with entrepreneurs to open up seemingly independent looking shops in the empty spaces once inhabited by chains like Clintons or Woolworths? Is this a positive move or one to be avoided? What are your thoughts?