1 / 13

SAN FRANCISCO’S FIRST INCUBATOR KITCHEN

SAN FRANCISCO’S FIRST INCUBATOR KITCHEN. Our Mission. La Cocina is a non-profit incubator kitchen that provides affordable commercial kitchen space and technical assistance to low-income entrepreneurs who are starting, launching or growing a food business. The History of La Cocina.

kezia
Télécharger la présentation

SAN FRANCISCO’S FIRST INCUBATOR KITCHEN

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SAN FRANCISCO’S FIRST INCUBATOR KITCHEN

  2. Our Mission La Cocina is a non-profit incubator kitchen that provides affordable commercial kitchen space and technical assistance to low-income entrepreneurs who are starting, launching or growing a food business.

  3. The History of La Cocina 1999 Feasability Study 2001 Break Ground 2005 Doors Open to First Businesses 2007 First 2 Businesses Graduate • First Food Business Incubator Conference

  4. The Businesses of La Cocina • Over 30 businesses share kitchen space at La Cocina, of which 22 have been accepted into La Cocina’s incubator program. • Program Participants must submit a finished business plan, personal and business financial information and sit with an advisory committee for an interview before being accepted to the program. • Three years into the program we have had 2 graduates businesses, and we expect 2—4 graduates per year going forward.

  5. Micro-Enterprise • In the United States, a microenterprise is usually defined as a business with five or fewer employees, small enough to require initial capital of $35,000 or less.  • AEO estimates there are more than 24 million microenterprises in the U.S., representing 18% of all private employment and 87% of all businesses. • Historically, microenterprises have been considered the  backbone of the U.S. economy. Most microenterprises are sole proprietorships, which create employment for the owner and, often, other family members; they are commonly called "mom and pop" businesses.

  6. Case Study 1: Peas of Mind • Peas of Mind began at La Cocina in January of 2005. • Began with a recipe, a business plan and zero customers. • Initially, focused entirely on scaling recipe, packaging and initial focus groups.

  7. Case Study 1: Peas of Cake! • Sales within 5 months • Rapid growth company • Technical assistance in scaling, distribution and co-packing. • Found co-packer, graduated, went national • Recently featured in Specialty Food Magazine Press Release • Poised for continued growth in expanding industry.

  8. Case Study 2: El Huarache Loco • Veronica Salazar began her business cooking authentic food from Mexico City out of her home in San Francisco’s Tenderloin District. • At her home restaurant, she would sell about $200-$300 every day on the weekends. • Through a partnership with a business planning organization in SF, Veronica wrote a business plan and applied to La Cocina in late 2005.

  9. Veronica began with catering and as she moved through the program began looking for low-capital launching pads for her food. • La Cocina created relationships with local farmers markets, and El Huarache Loco was the first La Cocina business to launch in this manner. • 2 years later, Veronica is averaging a little over $3,500/week in sales and employees 4 full-time staff. Just look at the picture above to see Vero and her staff!

  10. La Cocina Core Values • We support high-quality artisan food products. We prioritize and search for regionally authentic products and ‘hidden entrepreneurs’. • We embrace community outreach and participation • We cultivate and encourage good business practices (green business, local buying, organic, sustainable, fair trade, etc.). • We strive for economic self-sufficiency and empowerment through small business.

  11. Money, Money, Money! • La Cocina’s annual budget is between $600 and $700,000 for the facility, all programs and all staff. We currently have 3 full-time staff and 2 part-time staff. • Of that money, roughly 60% comes from grants and foundations, 10% from city funds and individual donors and about 30% from internal program revenues. • Program participants pay an average of $13/hour to use the kitchen space and commercial users pay a minimum of $40/hour. • We expect to see our revenues rise over the next 2-5 years, though we are not aiming for self-sufficiency through kitchen revenue.

  12. Press and The Future of La Cocina

  13. The Power of the Press • Build awareness not only of your organization but also of the businesses that you support. • Connect your businesses to the press and media opportunities that they will need to grow. • Work with your businesses to make sure that they tie back in to you. They are our greatest asset.

More Related