Wisdom

How a Great Coffee Shop manager can make your coffee shop more profits

This is precisely the question that SCI and the SCI certified the team who created the coffee shop manager course tried to answer.  In this article, we will explore how a great coffee shop manager can help your coffee shop make more profit.

The problem

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In the coffee industry, it is ubiquitous for coffee shop managers to have little or no actual management training. Typically what happens is if a barista is talented the will get promoted and eventually they will become the store manager. 

However, the skills to be a good barista and be a good coffee shop manager are not necessarily the same.   Often coffee shop managers work for an owner that is involved in the business to some degree. 

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However, what authority belongs to the owner and what belongs to the coffee shop manager is not very clear. The job description usually is not clear. 

Moreover, even if it was clear there is normally no training to help the coffee shop manager successfully complete the job in the job description.  This confusion leads to the coffee shop not making a healthy profit.

The owner and the coffee shop manager being stress and a bad relationship.

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The customers not getting a good experience.

However big chains like Starbucks are successful because they have good management training and clear systems for them to follow. 

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Common Problems in cafe management


  1. Inconstancy: or product, service and wait time to make the product.

  2. No strategy:  often a coffee shop manager isn’t given a clear strategy of who their target customer is, what their coffee shops value proposition is. Giving the customer what you want not what they want.  

  3. Training staff:  Usually staff training is not consistent because standards have never been set. Staff not motivated:  Usually, the team is not motivated because their job isn’t clear and they can feel the “weight” of the coffee shop failing.  Moreover, nobody likes to fail! 

  4. Correcting and coaching staff: When there is not standard manager are slow to coach staff.  They are afraid team will take it personally however if there is a clear standard then manager are willing to coach and staff receive it well.

  5. Cleanliness: most stores without standards don’t have a consistent cleanliness.

  6. Service: Service is normally not at a level that will create long-term passionate fans. 

  7. Coffee Quality: Without standards and management coffee usually is inconsistent.  We must understand customers want consistency. 







The background of how the course was developed

We interview the lead content creator for this course Samuel Gurel.

“You might know, I managed a chain of coffee shops.  In the beginning, I made many mistakes but over the years I developed systems and processes like big coffee chains use to be successful. 

Then in April 2017 SCA ask me to share the Chinese coffee market at the SCA expo.  So we researched the Chinese coffee market.  We found that only 30% of the coffee market was making a healthy profit. 

The other 70% were losing profits, which leads to a lot of stress, which long-term will affect one's health, family and enjoyment of life. So I decided to start working on tools that would help make more cafe’s successful.  We realized that a great coffee shop manager was critical to a thriving cafe, but the training program for coffee shop managers is lacking. 

So I worked with SCI to research what a coffee shop manager needed to do and how.  We had participants from big companies like Starbucks and third wave companies like Onyx. 

The results are in SCI’s new Coffee Shop Manage Certification Course.  It is a five-day course with a six-month implementation plan.”




About the research:


We asked coffee shop owners and managers the following questions:


  • What are the skills need to be a good coffee shop manager?

  • What are the jobs that a coffee shop manager need to do?

  • What things in a coffee shop should be the authority and responsibility of the owner?

  • What things in a coffee shop should be the authority and responsibility of the coffee shop manager?

  • What things in a coffee shop should be the shared authority and responsibility of both the owner and the coffee shop manager?




The results of the of the research: 

When we asked owner and Coffee shop managers about the research we found that their were was a wide range in what how the authority and responsibility were divided between the owner and the manger. 

Through this we realized the only option is for the owner and the coffee shop manager to have candid conversation and put these on paper.  Otherwise it is quite likely the assumption between the owner and the manager are different. 

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What Qualities do better than average coffee shop managers possess?

  • Friendly

  • Soft with staff

  • Good personal skills

  • Punctual

  • Have hard conversations

  • View from the customer, staff, business perspective (perspective taking) 

  • Share the same philosophy as the owner                    

  • Problem-solving skills

  • Works on principles, not just rules                                 

Our analysis of the research was that it was clear that

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The the coffee shop manager needs a unique balance of being able to follow systems but use people skills to implement these systems in a friendly empathic way.  This was summed up by a Quote from one of our research participants.

“Enforce systems in a kind firm way.”

What you can do to solve the problem. 

The class is only five days. However, there is a six-month implementation plan where the following things are complete.

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We give you the tools, not just knowledge.

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We form a cohort of people that stay together as a group and mutually encourage each other.

If you follow the plan and your cafe is not more profitable after six months, there is a money back guarantee, and your course fees will be refunded. 

If you know somebody that needs this class let them know the next class will be in Shanghai.”

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11 Actual Confessions | Coffee Shop Owner’s

Starting a coffee business or any business is not for the faint of heart, believe me I know.  At first you worry a lot and then research your competition to a point of stalking. 

Only later to realize that you’re a community and are all in this together. On the opening day your nervous for all the wrong reasons as you put yourself and your business out there, realizing there is no turning back.  

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Then in the first couple of months, there is this new kind of anxiety, uncertainty and excitement about what the next day will bring. Looking back, this is when the fun of owning your own business truly begins. 

We can all agree the pursuit is truly worthwhile despite being strapped for cash and time. Many of us share the same reasons for starting our own business while others, not so much. For me, I just got tired of working for the man and now enjoy the sense of pride, in creating something from nothing.   What was your emotional reason for taking the plunge? 

Now for the good stuff… We asked individuals behind some of America’s best cups to share what they wish they knew before opening their coffee shops, or other caffeine-infused operations. The result is 11 pieces of advice that current coffee owners may learn from or maybe had the same type of experiences. 

From mistakes made to tricks of the trade, you’re bound to discover at least one nugget of wisdom that will save you time, money, energy and quite possibly your sanity—or all of the above. 

1

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“I wish I had become more of a handyman before launching my business.” 

– Peter Brown, Six Shooter Coffee (Cleveland, OH) 

2

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“I wish I knew… to hire a good bookkeeper! It’s my #1 piece of startup advice. They say, “what gets measured, gets done”. Well, if you can’t trust your numbers then you can’t really measure your business. Good information is critical to making good decisions. We’ve spent the better part of a year cleaning up the mistakes we made when managing our own books.” 

– Matt Bachmann, Wandering Bear Coffee (New York, NY) 

3

“I wish I had known that you could lease equipment, and they come with service contracts.”

 – Jonathan Rubinstein, Joe Coffee (New York, NY) 

4

“I think the thing I wish I had known was how many little decisions I would have to make! What kind of light bulbs, how many chairs? What kind of wood do we use, how far apart should the lattice be spaced? Do we use brown screws or black screws? What kind of patio furniture do we buy? The list goes on and on; I can’t even remember them all anymore!”

Elle Taylor, Amethyst Coffee Co. (Denver, CO) 

5

“Starting an online business with no previous experience with an online store, I wish I had known more about operating tools like Ship-station that are available to help small businesses. 

Learning that there are tools to help online stores get off the ground and find competitive pricing was game-changing. 

We could have saved a lot of time and money if we knew that from the beginning! We would have also benefitted from choosing a large online store platform from the beginning. BigCommerce and Shopify are worth the learning curve in the long run.”

 – Lacie Mackey, Caveman Coffee Co. (Albuquerque, NM)

6

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“I wish I had known to work with an accountant BEFORE the first dollar was ever put into a bank account.”

– Colby Barr, Verve Coffee Roasters (Santa Cruz, CA) 

7

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“The total lack of interest contractors have in keeping to a schedule. Time estimates are virtually useless. If you’re going to hire 3rd parties, contracts need to be made as airtight as possible before work begins. Include ratchets for failure to deliver on time or not meet specific project requirements. 

Clearly define milestones along the way with explicit penalties. The more granular you can get contractors to be in the breakdown of their bids, the better. This helps you understand the cost of work for each piece of the project and detect arbitrary markups.” 

– Matthew Tervooren, Pourt (New York, NY)

8

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“I wish I had known how important taking the time to eat proper meals and exercise could be for managing stress. When you are run down or not feeling well, no one is going to take care of the business for you. It is imperative you do all you can to try to stay as healthy as possible.” 

– Caroline Bell, Cafe Grumpy (New York, NY)

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“It’s so hard to narrow it down—I wish we would've known how much we truly didn’t know! Equipment, supplies, accounting, payroll, HR best practices, tax laws, scheduling, ordering and even water filtration systems. The list can go on forever.”

 – Janine Awan, Woodcat Coffee Bar (Los Angeles, CA)

10

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“I wish I knew that when we first got our La Marzocco machine in the shop, it was probably not a good idea to take 10 double shots of espresso a day to “train” as a barista!” 

– Adam Kallen, JANE Motorcycles (New York, NY)

11

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“I wish I would have known that people will drink specialty coffee above 14th Street I spent years listening to naysayers who said you had to be in The Village or Brooklyn—I wish we had opened earlier on the UES, Midtown, UWS.” 

– Jonathan Rubinstein 

Article forward from Loyalty Punch,opening a cafe is not as easy as you thought. At Torch we believe that through sharing knowledge can help the coffee community to grow, and avoid unecessary mistakes. 

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Last week we are given the opportunity to intereview few of the renowed cafe across the china and hongkong, and we will let them to tell more stories about their cafe stories next week. Do stay tuned, if you have any stories / advices you would like to share with us, drop us a comment below. :) see you!