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Coffee Cafe Designs Coffee Shop

Coffee Shop Design - How To Make Your Coffee Shop A Success

I am very fortunate to have a popular website about restaurant and coffee shop design which has thousands of visitors every week. As a result, very few days go by when my email inbox doesn't contain inquiries from people who want to open their first coffee shop and would like to know more about costs and design ideas. I have been receiving these emails for many years now, and I always take the time to reply. You'd be amazed how many people are in love with the notion of opening a coffee shop.

However, have a look around your local town centre and you're bound to notice that, whilst there will be several coffee shops; there will be very few independent operators. What prevents so many keen people from getting started? Well judging from the hundreds of emails I have received I have to say it's naivety, although perhaps this is better expressed as an underestimation of the task.

If you are an independent operator and want to get the best living from your coffee shop or cafA, you have to compete with the multiples that have marched across every high street in the country. In order to successfully enter a crowded market you have to displace powerful incumbents. To do this your coffee shop has to create a clear and compelling case for its own existence.

This means you have to match every skill and resource of the chain brands, and more again. It's for these reasons that you simply can't cut corners, or compete without adequate investment, professional guidance and, of course, hard work.

Thankfully as an independent you will have passion. This is your one weapon that no chain can consistently compete with. If you find a way to engage emotionally with your customers and understand their desires, you'll always outperform systematic and faceless organization.

Analyse your business model

Let's imagine that you have found an empty unit in your area, and are considering turning it into your dream coffee shop. You may already be running a successful business elsewhere, but there is no harm in getting back to the basics.

The first thing you might do is take a long hard look at your ideas and assess the strengths and weaknesses, opportunities and threats. As we know, food and drink-retailing operations suffer many failures. Many people start such a business simply because they like to cook, or to eat, or to hold coffee mornings for their friends, or even because they just like to design kitchens and dining rooms. They then expect a magic ingredient called "word of mouth" to do all their marketing for them.... Overnight! I am sure I sound cynical but I've got this notion in the same mental filing drawer as the tooth fairy.

What I'd suggest is that you look at the hard facts of business. By all means let yourself be carried away with the glamorous parts of the job you are looking forwards too but from time to time you will need to come down to earth. I see part of my role as keeping my clients grounded. You must not forget that there will be long hours, hard work and grit. Thomas Edison, who invented electric light and had well over 2000 patents to his name said:

"Genius is one per cent inspiration, ninety-nine per cent perspiration".

When a major coffee chain opens an outlet they think about how the kitchen will operate and not how much they would enjoy serving up vanilla lattes to their friends. They analyse the numbers. They look carefully and they ask themselves: how many customers will we fit in this unit? What is the footfall for take out trade? What will it cost to fit-out? (About 2,000 per square meter if done professionally.) Is there enough nearby parking? How many people can we serve? What can we charge? What ingredients can we buy at a competitive price, add value to and sell high? Is the labour market good so we can find staff? How are we going to engage with our customers and get them to tell their friends? Can we make a profit?

An American banker friend of mine (I know these days it is brave to admit to such friends) once said to me that he thought he knew why so many food-retailing businesses fail. He said that in his opinion, restaurants and their like are every dumb person's entrepreneurial venture of choice, and I am afraid to say I think he's right.

Most people that contact me about new concepts want to know if I can copy a design they have seen elsewhere, and if so, what it will cost. I am rarely, if ever, asked:

"what's the next new way to design an outlet that people will enjoy more than those already out there?"

My current answer to this question is to ask a young person what's most important to them. You may find, as I have, that they are very concerned about the mess we oldies have made of the world and are looking for ethical, genuinely sustainable businesses to engage with.

A lot of people that contact me think that their design tastes are the best and so all they need do is get in a builder and tell him to make the place look like somewhere else they like, and then people will flood in. The big thing to remember here is that just because you know what you like, and you may have strong convictions about this, does not mean that you know what other people, your customers, like.




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Lead - don't follow

To enter the market successfully you'll need to lead the market and not follow it. This requires an original well-contained design idea presented clearly to create genuine, sincere engagement. Creativity needs to be at the core of your business thinking. This is even more vital in the current economy. I believe now is a time of great opportunity when creativity will force new and exciting ideas to emerge from distress.

Already this year McDonalds announced a 2.2 billion investment programme, mostly outside the US. They rightly see the current recession as a time to grow when others are weak. They have implemented some amazing forward-looking designs around the world already.

On February 24th, in a speech that may save the capitalism, Barack Obama said:

"the costs of action may be great but the costs of inaction will be greater".

I find it hard not to agree with this, waiting for things to change is probably wasting time and costing money, we need leaders with good new ideas now.

Think about how many Starbucks there are now,because they are all vulnerable to the next big idea. It could be yours. Have you seen the latest McCafe designs? In my estimation they are at least one generation beyond Starbucks now but they are still corporate and impersonal.

Henry Ford famously said:

'if we'd asked the people what they wanted they'd have said faster horses."

By 1918 half the cars in America were Model T Fords.

Of course for every good idea that works there will be a lot of junk to wade through and this is where there's nothing like an impartial, experienced designer to help you work through your whole strategy dispassionately and then look for ways to create that genuine emotional engagement with your customers. All you need do is set aside enough time to do it. The task will be much easier if you do. Planning your inspiration beforehand is the key to looking like you came up with an instantaneous flash of creative genius. If you've already found the site it may be too late.

Finding a good designer

There are few barriers to entry of the design profession. Pretty well anyone who wants can open a design office. Consequently, there are some designers who simply copy the last design they saw and make a few changes. Since this is what anyone can do for themselves and since second-hand ideas rarely work well, a lot of aspiring coffee chain owners will not bother with designers, or they will just get in a general practice architect or shop fitting firm to build a shell for them to decorate and furnish. This is a shame, both for the independent operator and for the large number of good design firms who work hard and have their clients' best interests at heart. A good designer will learn to understand the needs of your business and find out at what you are expert. You should then recognise your designer's expertise stand back and let them get on. The difficulty is in finding a designer you can trust in this way. Another difficulty is in finding a way to explain your dream to your designer and for them to convey their interpretation and ideas back to you. After all, if an idea is truly original no one has seen it before, so no one can show you how it will look beforehand.

Allow yourself time to build trust and remember, if the design is wrong you'll be a long time paying for it but if it is right it will be the best investment you ever made.

Nigel Witham MCSD MIOD is a writer, designer and photographer and Member of the Chartered Society of Designers (interior and graphic design disciplines)

To view Nigel's designs visit:
http://www.restaurant-cafe-design.com/

To contact Nigel, view his Facebook account at:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nigel-Witham-Designer/326102020217

About the author: Nigel Witham MCSD MIOD
writer, designer and photographer
Member of the Chartered Society of Designers (interior and graphic design disciplines)

Clayhill, Goudhurst, Kent, TN17 1BD, United Kingdom

Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/entrepreneurship-articles/coffee-shop-design-how-to-make-your-coffee-shop-a-success-2188410.html





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Coffee Cafe Designs Coffee Shop
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Coffee Cafe Designs Coffee Shop

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6 Responses to Coffee Cafe Designs Coffee Shop

  1. fly boy

    How i can apply the art feeling on my coffee shop logo design?
    I’m doing a cafe project in school and i’m trying to come out with an idea that i can say here you go my coffee shop has an art gallery as part of the style the place call MAKAN cafe,my teacher said that i need add feeling of art on this logo..Please i need any tips ,ideas..thank you so much

    • Mary

      Feeling of art–
      art-related
      artsy
      creative
      Starbucks usually has art in their stores. The logo is proffessional looking, like it’s done by an artist. It includes an recognizable image.
      Tone of Starbucks: Mature, Easy-Going, Suave, Laid Back, Cozy (I’m not sure why I capitalize but it’s all ok)

      I guess you need to think about the tone your coffe shop/art gallery would have. Playful? Cuisine? Gourmet? Fancy? Local? Exotic? No?

      Once you have a mood you like, then you can do the logo I suppose… Think of how you can integrate the message of your dwelling place into your sign.
      Well-rounded place? You can round your letters.
      We’re the smartest kids in town? Pointy tips. (we’re sharp)
      We’ve got art? Well I don’t know how this would work. You can put it into your title, like MAKAN: cafe and gallery. Or, you can show it as, maybe, an underline underneath your title that looks like a paintbrush stroke.

  2. JadeWolf

    Do I need to go to college to start a coffee shop?
    Do you need a collage degree to open a simple coffee shop/ Cafe? I’ve heard a lot of people who have become successful business men and women who had no collage education at all. I was wondering if I NEED it to open a coffee shop. I’m not going to be doing this any time soon, still need to get the money together but it has been a life time dream to have a Cafe of my own. Please any help is appreciated. NO ADDS!!!!!! I have most of the information and websites in Word document as to how much it will/ should cost and the menu design and such so this is pretty much the last thing. Thank you all!!!

    • Matthew

      Simple put, no. You don’t NEED a degree to open a business. It is all a matter of how much business knowledge you have to determine it’s potential for success. I use the word potential, and I want you to pay close attention to that. There are McDonalds that close each year! So, even with one of the most sound business structures, you can still not succeed. Conversely, there are coffee shops across the street from a Starbucks that are still drawing in business. I am merely illustrating risk, not saying it is not a worthwhile venture.

      I do highly recommend looking into accounting, bookkeeping, marketing strategies, and above all locational analysis. In fact, the best thing you might find that college can help you with, is a good location to open a coffee shop! Students tend to love coffee shops as a place to read and look posh. Other good sites are near business districts (preferably just outside of a major business), near bookstores (if they don’t have a shop inside themselves), near courthouses, etc. In fact, another person asked a question about her cupcake shop, and I recommended her dealing coffee too… Might get in touch with her!

      Above all though, do the legwork. Research, research, research. Plan for the worst, hope for the best.

  3. sagrim702

    I’m looking to open my own cafe. What would be the most important things YOU would look for in a business?
    I’ve been working on a plan to start my own cafe. It will have more of a lounge feeling with the availability of live music at lewast once a week. I hope to bring a quality atmosphere to the environment and am looking for feedback from people. I have a few set ideas, but I’m hoping to find out what things people like when they look for the perfect place to hang out. One thing to keep in mind is that this is a place that’s designed for all ages. It will combine theenjoyment of a coffee shop with the atmosphere of a club. granted, the music won’t be as loud, but it will have enough to draw in a crowd. I’m just looking for more ideas to stir into the pot.

    • PinkieLiefie!

      If its a cafe with a lounge, club feel to it. A couch or two. A place to lounge. I like the idea of all ages, but no alcohol. People like places where alcohol isnt involved too. There isnt alot of places like that. What kind of food are you looking to have? If its got a coffee shop feel then make sure the food goes with it. Nothing too big or flashy.
      I would like a place that had a great atmosphere where you could meet your friends to get together once a week. Maybe get a bite to eat and coffee, dance.

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