20 February 2020

Tumultuous With A T


My store has had a tumultuous year so far. Our sales are up 23%, with net income up 230%, which is easy to do when we were at a negative net income a year ago at this time. The San Francisco Bay Area is on fire, thankfully only figuratively. The Bay Area would be the world's 19th largest economy, if it were tracked that way. I just want to crow about how well we're doing, how well everyone here is doing, so this post doesn't sound like a pity party.

We have transitioned nearly our entire staff this year, a staff that averages a turnover every three years. It has been a huge hit to our institutional knowledge, which means training has been a huge expense. Training means overlapping, unproductive shifts, and it's is our single largest expense this year, when you also include the tremendous wage inflation we've got here in California (at the bottom tier of employment). Starting wages for part timers are going up a dollar a year, but it's not fast enough for many, who criticize us for not having every job starting at a living wage (likely in the $20+ range). We'll get there Felicia, just give it a minute. Enthusiastic new staff are a strong reason for that 23% growth, most of it really, so you get what you pay for.

I will refer to 2019 as my Year of Entropy, assuming my store makes it out alive. Besides expensive staff transitions, our drink cooler died ($2,000). One of our two, multi ton air conditioning units gave up the ghost a couple weeks ago, requiring a new compressor ($3,000). By the end of the year, we'll need two new computers, including a replacement of our six year old POS system which will need the POS software and hardware reinstalled ($5,000). Overall, add these expenses to the usual entropy of plumbing problems and CAM increase and it's about $20,000 out of pocket.

We're still a profitable business. About half that profit goes towards construction loans, so I feel we're investing in the business each month when those checks get processed, even if nothing new arrives. I'm thankful to have windfall profits in a year with crazy high expenses. Imagine having flat sales and all these expenses start beating you down. It's why the threat of failure never goes away for small businesses, never reduces the chance of closing no matter how many years you've been in business. 

Are new expenses hitting us while we're on an upward trajectory or downward? It becomes a simple calculation. Should we cut bait or cast out again? Some of our competitors disappeared this year after doing that calculation. This has added a lot of unexpected energy to our store as the displaced seek new homes. Thankfully there's light at the end of the tunnel. We haven't really been walking in darkness, since it's a profitable business. Having debt while encountering the usual entropy is like walking through a dim tunnel while bats fly overhead and muss your hair. You'll make it, it's just disconcerting.

Meanwhile we'll enjoy a little money thrown at re-branding and selling our updated image. We've had enthusiasm for our new logo, sold some stickers, and talked with people who were unaware of our previous brand identity, which is currently limited to our website and business cards.


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