How
To Make Money In The Kitchen Products Business
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1993 by Home Business Publications
There are many business possibilities that can
be built on products from your kitchen: candies, jams, pies, egg
rolls, and special recipes of all descriptions, and the same general
business approach will work with most of them.
You can produce any one or more of these or other
kitchen products -- or specialize in one category, such as diet
foods (sugarless pastries), ethnic dishes (strudel, lumpia rolls),
breads, or old fashioned meals. Whatever your specialty, the business
applications are similar.
Your first decision is to select a line of products
-- a decision that will be heavily influenced by what you are
good at!
Another influence should be what will sell in
your area. If there are a lot of a particular ethnic group, that
may be good or bad for a potential business: good because people
will know what makes your dishes are; bad because every housewife
makes the same thing.
Many Vietnamese restaurants have failed because
they advertised vietnamese food, most of which is delicious, but
still not well-known in this country.
Accordingly, most of their clientele were other
Vietnamese -- who can cook their own Vietnamese dishes.
Some of those who did quite well specialized in
Chinese food -- which is similar but more importantly it is well
known here.
Once the patrons were inside, they found both
Chinese and Vietnamese cuisine on the menu! The message here is
that it is usually better to start a new business with a known
product. Give your product a name that will be recognized by your
intended market!
Next, you should decide whether to wholesale or
retail your products (or both).
Where you live will have a lot to do with type
marketing you use. In rural area, you might check with stores
to carry your products, or it might be better to build a route
and deliver fresh to several stores and/or individuals on a daily
or weekly basis.
An alternative is to preserve your products (freeze,
can,dry so they can be accumulated and sent over longer distances.
Shipping and advertising costs are higher in rural areas, but
operating costs are lower.
In more densely populated areas, you have more
choices and more marketing opportunities in the immediate area.
Sometimes you can simply advertise your products for pickup or
special order and be in business.
When you wholesale, you are spared the extra effort
(and worry) to find and collect form individuals and have less
waste because you fill orders -- but you don't get as much for
your products.
The question is, can you make more profit by concentrating
your efforts on production? If so, you will rely on your retailers
to find, sell to and collect from the customers.
Or, should you do all that yourself and pocket
the extra markup?
The answer might well be influenced by your personality
as well as other, more practical considerations like how much
time you have and the size of your market.
An easy way to handle your price list is to print
retail prices only and simply inform the client of his discount.
This way, the client and store clerks can refer to a ready-made
price list -- it is easy for your retailers to sell your products.
It is also a good idea to leave a margin between
your name and the prices -- so the retailer can fold or cut it
off and post it for his customers.
For some products, it would be wise to have stands
or display cartons made to help assure your products will be displayed
tastefully and to make it easy for the retailer to show and sell
your products at their best.
These could be cardboard or Masonite, and you
can have your name or brand put on them to prevent them being
used for other products. You can even lend them to the accounts
with an understanding as to their use.
As your wholesale business grows, you should consider
advertising now and then -- it will help retail sales, which in
turn, helps wholesale sales. Although some of these may sound
like little things -- making your products easy to display, price
and sell is the way to make BIG THINGS happen!
Retailing definitely requires advertising.
Since you do not have a store, where many people
can see your products each day, you need some way to get out the
word and keep your products before the public.
Word of mouth is great (highest quality), but
painfully slow in the beginning.
Think about an ad in the local paper, a pair of
magnetic signs on your car (a cake logo, your name and phone number),
renting a display window, notices on community bulletin boards,
even announcements on the local radio or cable station.
Arrange to have some of your products given away
as prizes at community affairs or auctioned at fund raisers, anything
that will help make people aware of your products.
A third option is to "wholesale" to
the public. This is simply taking orders for subsequent pick-up.
You can set minimum orders for small items (a dozen tamales) and
give discounts for large( or family size) orders.
This option does not necessarily require delivery
and there is very little waste, Since you know ahead of time how
much will sell. You will either make a little more profit this
way, or you can lower your retail rates about 20%.
Whichever option you use, plan your activities
carefully to take fullest advantage of your capabilities.
For example, if you are filling an order
for 6 dozen cookies, always make the
maximum amount you can at one time.
If you can bake up 15 dozen cookies
at one time and you have a way to keep
the overages fresh, NEVER bake fewer
than 15 dozen UNLESS YOU CAN USE
THE VACANT PART OF THE OVEN
for something else.
The same holds true for the batter -- if your
mixer will make dough for 15 dozen cookies, make as much as you
can and store any excess. This will save you time, your equipment
and your sanity!
Whenever you produce a less than your capacity,
your production costs per item go UP; your profits go DOWN. it
is also good business to select products and ingredients that
do not spoil easily -- things that can be frozen, canned or dried.
In this business, like any other, you must keep
records to tell how you are doing, learn from your experience
and keep out of trouble with the IRS.
As long as you are a one person (or family) business
there need not be complex records keeping.
Keep a notebook by the phone and systematically
write down all incoming orders -- and "suspense" them
with a circle or box that you check off as the orders are filled.
This lets you tell at a glance which orders are still pending.
Use the same notebook to write down any information that could
help your daily or long-term activities.
DO NOT TRUST THEM TO MEMORY.
Those "I won't forgets" soon get lost
in the confusion of a new business. This is a LESSON that many
beginners PAY DEARLY to learn.
If you have a tax person, all you need is an accurate
(and complete) record of what you spend for the business and what
you take in form it.
Many single proprietorship use a simple single-entry
ledger.
Put down all business transactions that involve
money in Chronological (by date) order: date, name or company,
action, amount.
If the money is paid out, put the amount in a
column marked OUT or EXPENSES;
if it came in, put in the other (IN or INCOME)
column. At the end of each month, total them both to see how you
are doing.
This record, along with ALL RECEIPTS and checks
will be the meat of what your tax person will need to make out
your taxes.
Kitchen products can, but need not remain a small
operation.
While it is easy to stay small (raise prices when
business gets "too good," cut back on advertising, etc.)
it is also quite possible to "graduate" to supplying
gourmet dishes to restaurants or delicatessens or package your
products for supermarket sales.
Always keep your eyes open and your imagination
alive. Be on the lookout for that special need that YOU can fill!
A couple of possible problem areas are licenses
and insurance.
When you process and sell any type of food, you
may come under any number of state or local regulations.
Some of these will prevent you from making doughnuts
in your kitchen and selling them to the local market.
Admittedly, sometimes these rules are more to
prevent competition than protect the public, but they must be
obeyed just the same. Most rules are quite logical -- if you make
sandwiches, your kitchen should be open to health inspections
from time to time, and your area and procedures should meet minimum
standards. If you run up against "one of those" rules,
consider alternatives.
For example, if it is illegal to make doughnuts
in your kitchen, perhaps it is legal to open a snack shop or rent
a corner of local cafe for your operation.
The second area to watch is insurance.
Ironically, passing a health inspection is not
an absolute guarantee that someone won't sue you.
If you wholesale AND retail, it is very important
to maintain your prices. If you cut prices to retail customers
your wholesale accounts will feel betrayed.
The best way to handle this situation is to give
your wholesale accounts "suggested retail" prices --
which are actually your own retail prices.
Of course, you can't control what they charge,
but they can't accuse you of underselling them if you sell at
your own "advertised" prices.
To price your products, you should scientifically
compute the exact cost of all the ingredients, containers, wrappers,
shipping or delivery, plus an estimate of the utilities (gas,
electricity).
Then, add your labor (what it would cost to hire
someone to do the job). Add these and double the result for your
wholesale price.
This formula will give you a quick and easy way
to price your foods, and allow for some spoilage and waste.
Now, add another 66.7 percent to get the "suggested
retail" price (this equates to a 40% profit margin for your
retailers).
For example, if a loaf of your homemade rye bread
costs fifty cents to make (counting all costs), your wholesale
price would be $1.00 (double).
To add 66.7 percent, punch in 1.00 on your pocket
adding machine then "+," then 66.7, then "percentage."
This will give you $1.6667, which rounded off to $1.67. Note that
40% off that (1.67 - 40% is 1.002(rounded off to a dollar).
If you wanted to give your retailers a 40 percent
markup (which is not the same as a 40% profit margin), you add
40% to the wholesale price (1.00 plus 40%) you would get a suggested
retail price of$1.40 per loaf.
The more markup you give your retailers, the more
incentive they will have to push your products, os if most of
your business is wholesale, consider the bigger markup. Your retailers
can always lower the price.
For clarification, MARKUP is the amount the dealer
adds to his wholesale cost.
An item that costs him one dollar and he sells
for 41.25 is marked up 25 percent.
PROFIT MARGIN is the percentage of the sale price
that is gross profit.
If the item costs him a dollar and he sells for
$1.25, the 25 cents is only 20 per cent (5 quarters in $1.25,
each = 1/5 of 20% of the total) of the total sales price (profit
divided by sales price, or .25 divided by 1.25) -- or, a 20% profit
margin.
To set up an area wholesale business, call on
prospective retailers,let them know of your plans and ask for
their suggestions.
If possible leave a few samples with them, and
ask for an order. Do this early, so if any needed production adjustments
can be implemented before your procedures are finalized. tell
the prospective retailers what you have too offer, what it costs,
how much profit then makes, and when you deliver.
It is extremely important that you do exactly
what you say you will.
If you say you deliver on Monday's make it a point
to drop by those who have not yet ordered -- just to show them
they can rely on you.
If your products could be blamed for something
that would involve a lawsuit, consider some general liability
insurance.
Check with (more than one) commercial insurance
agents to find out how you can be protected against such an eventually.
This is an area where conferring with others in similar businesses
is a particularly good idea.
BUSINESS SOURCES
FROSTY, Box 8014, Blaine,WA 92830. Offers a booklet
showing how to set up an ice cream making business - $12.
OZARK COOPERATIVE WAREHOUSE, Box 30, Fayettville,
AR 72702. Consumer owned warehouse that sells mostly to privately
owned food buying clubs; over 1,000 items; Catalog $4.78.
FOOD SERVICE MARKETING, 2132 Forden Ave.,Madison,
WI 53784. Monthly trade journal for the food service industry.
SO-GOOD, INC.,Union, IL 60180. 815/923-2144. Supplies
local distributors with specialty foods (bar-B-Sauces, etc.) for
restaurants, church groups, etc. Free info.
OLSON PUBLICATIONS, INC., Box 1208, Woodstock,
GA 30188, 404/928-8994. Publishes monthly FOOD PEOPLE for retail
food industry (not restaurants).
HBJ PUBLICATIONS, INC., 131 W. 1st St.,Duluth,
MN 55802, 218/723-9343. Publishes SNACK FOOD, monthly trade magazine
for manufacturers and distributors.
WHOLE FOODS COMMUNICATIONS, INC., 195 Main St.,Metuchen,
NJ 08840. Publishes WHOLE FOODS, "Largest circulation in
the natural food industry," monthly for health food dealers.
EDWARD HAMILTON BOOKSELLER, Falls Village, CT
06031-0358. Discount reference books, including cookbooks.
DISCOUNT BOOKS, INC.,427 Ferry St.,Newark, NJ
07105. Discount and close-out books, including cookbooks.
BARNS & NOBLE, 126 Fifth Ave.,New York, NY
11011. Discount books, clip art, stencils, etc.
QUILL CORPORATION, 100 Schelter Rd.,Lincolnshire,
IL 60917-4700, 312/634-4800. Office supplies.
NEBS, 500 Main St.,Groton, MA 04171, 800/225-6380.
Office supplies.
SWEDCO, Box 29, Mooresville, NC 28115. 3 line
rubber stamps - $3; business cards - $13 per thousand.
ZPS, Box 581, Libertyville, IL 60048-2556. Business
cards (raised print - $11.50 per K) and letterhead stationery.
Will print your copy ready logo or design, even whole card.
WALTER DRAKE, 4119 Drake Bldg.,Colorado Springs,
CO 80940. Short run business cards ($250 - $3), stationery, etc.
Good quality, but no choice of style or color.

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