Just over a year ago, Empada Ranch was little more than a lunch
truck selling snacks in Sao Paulo. Today, the truck is retired, the
business has become a franchise and the chain has eight stores across
the city. Behind this transformation is Rodrigo Reed Rocha, 26, a son of
one of the partners, who saw the potential of selling more of the
traditional meat- and cheese-filled pastries. "By the end of the
year we'll have 10 stores," says Rocha, now the chain's
administrator.
Franchises cost US$80,000; Empada Ranch's managers now talk of
conquering foreign shores. We've already received proposals from
Miami, San Francisco and New York. Americans don't know what
empadas are and it's really cool to be able to bring a product so
typically Brazilian overseas," says Rocha.
The company has seen proposals from Italy and Portugal, too, but
plans to build the business in Brazil first. "Franchising is an
opportunity to expand the business, but you need to have the capacity to
support the franchisees," says Patricia Mayana, a consultant for
Sebrae, a government-funded entity that supports small businesses in
Brazil.
The culture of the empada goes back a long way in Brazil, but it
was until recently something you only did at home in your kitchen. Now
the company sells 8,000 empadas a day for $1 apiece. Customers flood the
flagship shop in Sao Paulo's Vila Mariana neighborhood. "The
empada is really good and the service is fast," says businessman
Estevao Bottini, once a lunch-truck regular.
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