We provide coffee and tea for free at Scrib Coworking in Boulder. Thank you
to our excellent sponsors who provide us with yummy product, *Atlas
Purveyors* and *The Tea Spot*.

Tripp

On Fri, Feb 8, 2013 at 7:28 PM, Jerome Chang <[email protected]> wrote:

> We offer the k-cup stuff for free.  I've always thought this was the best
> balance of choice and end-to-end cost for coffee (cost to clean up beans,
> machines, etc.).
>
>
> Jerome
> ______________
> BLANKSPACES
> "work FOR yourself, not BY yourself"
>
> www.blankspaces.com
> 5405 Wilshire Blvd (2 blocks west of La Brea) Los Angeles, CA 90036
> 323.330.9505 (office)
>
> On Feb 8, 2013, at 8:09 AM, Alex Hillman <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> I answered a "how" we provide coffee question here a while back:
>
> http://www.quora.com/Coworking/Whats-the-best-way-of-providing-coffee-in-my-new-coworking-space/answer/Alex-Hillman?srid=xym&st=ns
>
> We've since added a new Chemex pourover, and an espresso machine that gets
> daily use, but not a lot.
>
> But as I mention in my Quora post, it's the beans that are worth spending
> the money on. Almost daily we get comments about how great our coffee is,
> even the stuff that just comes out of the commercial drip setup. It comes
> down to 1) a decent water filter + 2) the best local, fresh roasted beans
> you can buy, ground to use. We picked up a commercial coffee grinder like
> the ones you see in a grocery store last year after killing a bunch of
> consumer burr grinders and it's been awesome.
>
> But back to your question about budgeting for coffee, we spent $5600 in
> 2012 on beans and related supplies, up from $3500 in 2011. That's $110/week
> on average. I hesitate to crunch that number down to the individual day or
> even person, because it would not be representative of anything worth
> making decisions based upon.
>
> But I'd also urge you to rethink your strategy about comparing your
> membership costs to cups of coffee at Starbucks. You're selling something
> that Starbucks can't offer (and I'm not talking about the space), so price
> fixing against them (and worse, below them) for the sake of marketing
> sounds like a decision that you'll regret before long.
>
> Think about the value you're offering. It should be a LOT more than the
> coffee. Why price yourself below coffee costs?
>
> Furthermore, anyone drinking 10 cups of coffee in a day is likely to be a
> short term member, given the likelihood that their heart explodes from
> over-caffeination ;)
>
> Bottom line takeaways:
> 1) Buy the best coffee you can afford. Buy fresh, local beans. Grind every
> pot fresh. Your members will thank you, and tell their friends.
> 2) Price on value, not on your "competition". Starbucks *probably* isn't
> your competition.
>
> -Alex
>
> --
> /ah
> indyhall.org
> coworking in philadelphia
>
> On Feb 7, 2013, at 3:50 AM, Tom Lewis <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Sorry for the double post but looking through your cost figures reminded
> me of something.  One of the scary big numbers on our business plan is for
> coffee (and tea, hey we're Brits!)- could you give us an idea of how much
> coffee people drink per day on average (I could ask you for your total
> spend, but from what I remember the cost of coffee differs a fair bit over
> there)?
>
> As an aside, one of my key principles in attracting people to want to join
> the space we're building is the promise that no membership will ever cost
> more per hour than a cup of coffee from Starbucks (and who wants to work
> there?).  So even at the drop in/associate level at £20/day or £49/month
> for 28 hours), it's still no more than £2 an hour for membership
>
> Still, the coffee cost does worry me, and I used to sell coffee for a
> living, though that was low end vending machine instant so not much use in
> these calculations!
>
> On Tuesday, 5 February 2013 16:31:25 UTC, Alex Hillman wrote:
>>
>> I spent some time last night summarizing some figures from our 2012 P&L
>> along with some insights and interpretations related to the numbers that
>> people might find valuable for doing their own analysis & projections.
>>
>> For reference, 2012 was Indy Hall's 5th full year of operation, and
>> included the 3rd major expansion of our workspace.
>>
>> Enjoy!
>>
>> http://dangerouslyawesome.com/**2013/02/indy-hall-2012-**
>> reviewing-our-coworking-**community-by-the-numbers/<http://dangerouslyawesome.com/2013/02/indy-hall-2012-reviewing-our-coworking-community-by-the-numbers/>
>>
>> -Alex
>>
>> --
>> /ah
>> indyhall.org
>> coworking in philadelphia
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> /ah
>> indyhall.org
>> coworking in philadelphia
>>
>>
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