Naturally, if you're looking to start a do-it-yourself meal
preparation business, you'll need to have control in your own
hands first-by investigating your desired market and making sure
you have the makings of a successful enterprise. "You might
have a good product, but do you have the basis for a company?"
asks Seltzer. "One good lasagna doesn't mean you have
enough [inspiration] for 50 recipes."
It's questions like these that Duffy pondered endlessly in
the startup stages. "I literally couldn't sleep at
night," she says. "I would run numbers and marketing
strategies through my head 24/7. I just knew that it couldn't
fail."
That kind of passion will go a long way in any entrepreneurial
venture--but particularly one like this, where you need to be more
than a little inspired by food. "I enjoy cooking and
entertaining," says Duffy. "Additionally, I came from a
corporate working environment where my clients bemoaned the fact
that they couldn't get dinner on the table--and when they did,
it was often takeout or a less 'feel good' option. I knew
there was a niche."
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Keri Willenborg, 34, knew it, too--as did her husband, Brett,
34. It was at a Super Bowl game that the Nebraska couple stumbled
upon the concept after chatting with some fellow game-goers.
"They told me they had a niece who did once-a-month cooking
somewhere around Seattle," says Keri. "I thought,
'What a neat idea.' I came home and did a bunch of
research, and I could not find anything like that [in my
area]."
Teaming up with their friends Cher and Jim Stenger, now both 38,
as well as a friend who owned a diner, the Willenborgs tested the
concept on a small scale with friends and family. "It was a
logistical nightmare," admits Keri. "We tried to keep
[ingredients] cold in tubs, and that didn't work."
Ultimately, the testers loved the concept and the recipes, she
says, but getting things to flow smoothly--and keeping the food at
the proper temperature--was a different story.
That didn't stop them from plowing forward, however. They
took out second mortgages, borrowed from savings and mutual funds
and bought a facility to open Omaha, Nebraska-based Supper Thyme
USA in 2003. "We put everything on the line," says Keri.
The payoff was a lot of free local PR upon opening the
facility--and within a few months, people were asking when they
were going to franchise. "That's when we took our second
leap of faith," she says. Now they have 20 franchises, with 40
more planned this year. The company brought in $3 million last
year, and they project $7.5 million in revenue for 2006.
Starting on Your Own
Franchising has turned out to be a viable option for a number of
do-it-yourself services that have cropped up in recent years--as
well as for the franchisees who buy them. "Franchises have the
brand recognition, and franchisees get ongoing support and
training," says Keri Willenborg of this option's
appeal.
However, both Duffy and Willenborg--along with Dinners By the
Dozen founder Tracy Elceser--are evidence enough that starting your
own meal preparation service is doable, as long as you are prepared
for tasks like finding a facility, purchasing equipment and
inventory, creating a website, hiring a chef and coming up with
recipes. "Finding a spot was a hurdle, not to mention getting
construction done and finding all the recipes," says Elceser,
39, who started her Davenport, Iowa, company in May 2005. "It
meant freezing a lot of meals, tasting them and seeing if they
retained their flavor."
Elceser, a busy mom who is also a registered nurse, prepared for
these hurdles by carefully researching simi-lar companies and
earmarking $60,000 in savings and business credit to finance the
venture. "I looked at some facilities doing this kind of
business to see what I liked and didn't like, and I researched
other businesses online," says Elceser, who projects 2006
sales of $400,000. She, too, has a few people interested in
franchising, so she's considering that growth strategy.
Most important to your startup success, these entrepreneurs
agree, is your willingness to roll up your sleeves and commit huge
amounts of time to your new business. "The food industry is a
lot of work-it's not a princess job. There's a lot of
standing on your feet and getting dirty," says Dinner By
Design's Duffy. "But the flip side is that this is hot.
The concept is hard to explain, but once you develop your client
base, they come back again and again."
Heading for Greatness
Whether you choose to purchase a franchise or strike out on your
own, the do-it-yourself meal concept is one that's bound to
succeed in coming years. "In most cases, it's a healthier
way to eat," says Morgan, who is also a home chef, cooking
instructor and author of several cooking and entertaining books.
"It's a great way to bring busy, time-constrained people
back to the idea of having dinner at home."
Indeed, the opportunities are seemingly endless for
entrepreneurs who have the right mixture of passion for cooking and
passion for entrepreneurship. "I see this trend expanding and
segmenting very quickly," says Seltzer. "This concept of
trying to provide additional [meal] solutions to [busy] people is
limited only by your own creativity."
For more information on franchises that offer do-it-yourself
meal preparation services, visit the websites of Dinner By
Design, Dream Dinners Inc., My Girlfriend's Kitchen, Super
Suppers.
Karen E. Spaeder is a freelance writer in
Southern California specializing in small business and
education.
Originally published in the March 2006 issue of Entrepreneur's StartUps

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