Move to the USA and we'll be partners....I am 50, can work another 15 years before mandatory retirement. I believe my generation and myself are going to get really old, out live our retirement funds (I live in South Africa, 1$ = 15 SA Rands). I would in a flash start a micro brewery at retirement, work wise it would beat making a living from carpentry or welding. After retirement age it is difficult to find employment in ones profession over here. To me the challenges would be certification or legalising and to develop a market...
How long does a typical brew day last on the brew magic? Like in terms of the actual brewing and then plus added cleanup?
The brewery near me recently got one of those for a pilot system and once they do a dry run to make sure its all good, Im gonna start going nuts on it
What a whiner.
Opening a small business comes with significant risk and (in many cases) little reward, and a hell of a lot of effort. The people that get a reality check about opening their own brewery from this article probably shouldn't be considering it in the first place, but I see how that is part of his issue.
I'm glad more people are taking the risk. I have had some damn good beer lately.
I would totally love to open a brewpub, but never a brewery. Selling every drop of beer made over the bar and some good simple food to go with it. In NJ that means having to fork over $250k to buy one from another current or closed bar.
What a whiner.
Opening a small business comes with significant risk and (in many cases) little reward, and a hell of a lot of effort. The people that get a reality check about opening their own brewery from this article probably shouldn't be considering it in the first place, but I see how that is part of his issue.
It's challenging to be an entrepreneur, and it's also exciting. Running a brewery is the same as running a restaurant, or a hair salon for that matter. The general challenges of running a successful business are fairly universal (or domestic, I mean). You (or I) can really tell when a new brewery has "the right stuff," the market will eventually weed out the rest.
I'm glad more people are taking the risk. I have had some damn good beer lately.
What a whiner.
Opening a small business comes with significant risk and (in many cases) little reward, and a hell of a lot of effort. The people that get a reality check about opening their own brewery from this article probably shouldn't be considering it in the first place, but I see how that is part of his issue.
It's challenging to be an entrepreneur, and it's also exciting. Running a brewery is the same as running a restaurant, or a hair salon for that matter. The general challenges of running a successful business are fairly universal (or domestic, I mean). You (or I) can really tell when a new brewery has "the right stuff," the market will eventually weed out the rest.
I'm glad more people are taking the risk. I have had some damn good beer lately.
Dude, hit the nail on the head! Heaven forbid you have to (wait for it) work hard for something.
So yes, the beer world would be a much better place if more people listened to the author.
How long does a typical brew day last on the brew magic? Like in terms of the actual brewing and then plus added cleanup?
The brewery near me recently got one of those for a pilot system and once they do a dry run to make sure its all good, Im gonna start going nuts on it
I can crank out two 15 gallon batches in 9-10 hours including clean up. My record is 5 batches in 19 hours with the help of my assistant. Full cip takes about an hour (caustic, rinse, saniclean, rinse)
This goes without saying for any entrepreneurial venture.
Shortest single batch brewday I've had on mine was ~5 hours. Longest was ~10.
All this discussion about working hard is ridiculous. One can work like a dog 16-18 hours a day, 7 days a week at something, but if you don't know the finer points, you're just wasting your time and energy. Let's go ahead and use the current topic. I don't care how hard you work, how great your beer is. If you are ignorant to the ways of successful business and marketing, you are going to simply brew a lot of beer that no one knows to come drink, and/or you don't know how to sell it at a profit.
The simple fact that those of you that would judge the author of the article based on his honest self assessment is proof of concept, as well as a glaring testament to why businesses that are started by hobbyists tend to fail more often. Why is it assumed that just because you know how to brew great beer, you automatically know how to pick a great location (yes, the real estate mantra: location, location, location DOES matter), or have great record keeping/financial controls in place, or are a great money manager, or you have excellent time management skills? Who says you are the best at customer service. Just because you can talk my ear off about your beer or your process, doesn't mean you can make me happy when I come in to your tap room and your bartender (who happens to be your wife, because cheap labor) can't pour a beer from the tap without giving me a glass with the top half being foam, and I say something to you (not knowing or caring that it's your wife I'm saying something about, she's an employee doing something wrong in a customer service based business) and you get all pissy with me, BECAUSE she's your wife and you are incapable of separating the two.
Lastly, if you REALLY understand the concept of working hard, you would not even venture to judge anyone about it, because you would understand the concept of burnout. Go ahead, put your family's entire future and well being squarely on the shoulders of your success as a brewery owner/operator(or any business for that matter), and see how many of you armchair quarterbacks lose your minds and whatever hope of retirement savings you had in less than a couple years.
There's a fine line between negativity and reality. They both suck, just one hurts a little less than the other when applied in appropriate measure. And one can save your sanity, your marriage, and your financial future.
I can crank out two 15 gallon batches in 9-10 hours including clean up. My record is 5 batches in 19 hours with the help of my assistant. Full cip takes about an hour (caustic, rinse, saniclean, rinse)