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First, I want to briefly note what a
terrible situation a location fire or any catastrophic event can be for an
operator. As prepared as you think you might be, you are never prepared for the
fallout and the lessons you will learn through the process of rebuilding.
If you decide to rebuild, there are
some very difficult issues that need to be dealt with. Hopefully through our
tragedy, I will be able to insulate you against some of the pains we at La Nova
went through this fall with our situation. I personally hope no one has to go
through this, but as we know, situations like this do occur. Here are what I
hope to be some pitfalls to avoid and some direction to take if this
circumstance befalls your business. Prepare for the worst
It is so easy to be caught up in the
daily operations and all of the issues we deal with as pizza makers and totally
overlook potential disaster. As many times as we have heard others having like
circumstances, we never thought it would happen to us. When it did, our
insurance relationship came under a microscope and luckily we had some
foresight. You need to be prepared with both traditional insurance and lost
business insurance. One will help in the process of rebuilding the location; the
other will, hopefully, allow you to maintain some of the vendor and employee
relationships you have developed throughout your business tenure. Understand
though that this is NEVER enough. Without constant revenues and with the delays
in benefits and relief from carriers, the flow of money in and the banking
relationship you have is going to be under stress. When times are good, you need to
SAVE. That means you need to have not burned through all of the profits when
things are going well and market conditions are beneficial. Without those
savings, most operators have to go through bankruptcy if a fire, flood, or any
other catastrophic event makes them cease doing business for any amount of
time. It will be difficult, if not
impossible to go through a rebuilding process without some personal savings to
be leveraged or used during the situation. Week to week operators should proceed
with great caution. Small amounts of sacrifice now will save you a lifetime of
pain later. Keep Key Employees In the Process
One of the hard lessons we learned
was that people are not going to be able to sit around and wait for you to
reopen. Your best employees will have no problem finding work, and your marginal
employees will sit back and wait for you to come back. Not a good equation for
the future. What we did, and it was a luxury to have it, was to have management
and key employees get time in at our other location. We also had many of our own
employees work with us in the tear down and build process. If there was a way to
keep a key employee on the payroll, we found it. Sadly, there is going to be
some loss there. We also were very aggressive in trying to find new staff almost
four weeks before our scheduled reopening. It allowed us to be well ahead of the
game when it came time to reopen. It also allowed for us to trim some of the
weaker staff we had prior to the fire. Understand and Be Involved in the
Process As store owners, many of us have
been in building, remodel and repair situations. The most important lesson that
we knew was if you are not there, things won't get done. We had a member of
ownership or management at the location, involved in the process, and monitoring
the contractors every single day! If you are not there, you might as well kiss
money goodbye. Timeframes are already going to be delayed, goals will be pushed
back, and costs will increase without question regardless of the time spent and
level of involvement. If you allow the process to go unchecked, these situations
will multiply fast. Just like if you are in your stores when they are in
operation, your stores run well, the same rings true for the rebuild; at least
as well as possible. Be Prepared for the
Opening: Estimate your reopening timeframe
and then add three to four weeks as a realistic point. Unfortunately, there will
be costs, outside factors and issues that will inevitably set the opening back.
Hopefully, you have a system that keeps records of your customers. If you do,
you need to stimulate those customers to come back. Make them feel part of the
celebration of reopening. Remember, there is great competition out there. Every
time a customer tried to order from you and you weren't open, they tried another
pizzeria's goods. Sometimes you might lose them, especially if they don't know
when you are back in business. Phone and mailing notices are the best avenues to
let them know how much you value their business. There is no good way to prevent the
situation, but there are ways to be prepared. Again, make sure your insurance
package prepares you for a loss of business. Be frugal during great times and
good profits. Create environments that make your good people want to stay or
return in a gap situation. Manage your banking relationships professionally.
Communicate at all levels and be
involved in the process. Let your customers know what is going on as far as your
brand is concerned. These tips are a lot of the same
things that you should be doing to separate yourself from the competition.
Hopefully, you'll never have to be put in the position La Nova was and have to
use these systems. A note of thanks to PMQ and all of
the other supporters of La Nova that helped us during our time of
need. – PMQ
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