Fortune | FORTUNE 09月17日
从咖啡小车到千万营收:The Nitro Bar的创业之路
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本文讲述了Audrey Finocchiaro和她的伴侣如何从辞职创业,用信用卡启动资金,仅用废弃木材打造了一个简陋的咖啡小车,开始售卖氮气冷萃咖啡的故事。初期收入微薄,一度濒临放弃,但转机出现在他们将咖啡车带到常春藤盟校布朗大学。学生们的喜爱带来了日均600美元的收入,使他们意识到目标客户群。随后,他们获得了15万美元的投资,建立了生产基地并拓展了批发业务。通过贷款开设第一家实体店后,公司业务迅速增长,年营收达到450万美元,拥有三家门店、生产基地和一个咖啡拖车,产品还覆盖了周边地区的50多个销售点。社交媒体,特别是TikTok,在公司发展中起到了至关重要的作用,尽管积累粉丝花费了七年时间。文章还强调了创业初期,倾听支持性意见、忽略质疑声音的重要性,以及在社交媒体时代,低成本创业的可能性。

💡 **从零开始的创业起点**:Audrey Finocchiaro和伴侣辞去工作,仅用信用卡额度(1500美元)和父母 basement 的废弃木材,打造了一个名为“The Nitro bar”的简陋咖啡小车,开始售卖氮气冷萃咖啡。初期每天的收入仅在20至60美元之间,经营艰难,几乎放弃。

🎯 **精准定位与业务突破**:在濒临绝望之际,他们将咖啡车带到布朗大学,意外地获得了巨大成功,日收入高达600美元,由此发现了大学生的核心消费潜力。这一发现成为他们业务增长的关键转折点,促使他们开始专注于大学校园市场。

🚀 **融资与规模化扩张**:在一次展会上,他们获得了投资者的关注,并成功融资15万美元。这笔资金支持他们建立了生产设施,并迅速拓展了批发业务,以应对冬季的销售淡季。随后,通过一笔高利率贷款,他们开设了第一家实体店,业务开始呈指数级增长。

📈 **社交媒体的助推作用**:The Nitro Bar在TikTok和Instagram等社交媒体平台上积累了大量粉丝(TikTok 50万,Instagram 13万),这成为其持续成功的重要因素。尽管建立社交媒体影响力花费了七年时间,但他们坚持不懈的努力和对平台趋势的把握,最终带来了显著回报。

🧠 **创业心态与策略**:Finocchiaro建议创业者倾听支持性的意见,忽略那些不理解创业风险和思维模式的人的质疑。她强调,在数字时代,拥有零成本的社交媒体账号为创业提供了前所未有的机会,尤其是在“打磨”出有效策略之前,可以进行大量尝试和创新。

But they soon hatched a plan to get out of their 9-to-5 jobs: start a business by building a coffee cart with nitrogen-infused cold brew.  So they started their own company, The Nitro bar, by maxing out a credit card to get things off the ground.

It was 2016 when the couple leveraged a $1,500 credit limit and scrap wood from Audrey’s parents’ basement to create a “glorified box” that would serve as their prototype. The cofounders packed into the back of Finocchiaro’s Subaru Outback and took off to Providence, Rhode Island. Their first makeshift cart had no electricity, only being able to hold the equipment used to make the cold brew.

To start reeling in customers, the couple would park the cart on city streets and at community events—often unsolicited—to sell their nitrogen-infused cold brew. In those early days, the business brought in $20 to $60 as the couple stood out there for eight hours daily. 

Audrey Finocchiaro

At first, they became disheartened, as it was hard to make any profit at all. After weeks of little business, the couple was ready to throw in the towel. 

But then Lancaster had an epiphany: he realized that they hadn’t brought the cart to Brown University yet. That fall, when college students flocked back to campus, they struck gold. They realized their key audience was a gaggle of Ivy League kids. 

“‘Dude, you’ll never believe it!’” Finocchiaro tells Fortune, recalling what she reported to her boyfriend over the phone. “We just had a line of people. There were all these students, and I remember that day, I think we made like, $600 which was life-changing for us at the time.”

From that day forward, the couple popped up at Brown University every day, as coffee-chugging undergraduates huddled around their cold brew business. From then on, The Nitro Cart started gaining a following on social media, amassing 500,000 followers, while continuing to pop up at events.

But everything changed in the spring of 2017. When Finocchiaro and Lancaster were set up at a farmers’ market in Providence, they were approached by a pair of investors asking how much money they needed to grow. Finnochairo hadn’t thought the cart would turn into a business with bigger potential until that day.

The couple and investors created a spreadsheet together and calculated what The Nitro Cart could grow into based on a projected number of stands and accounts for wholesale customers. They crunched the numbers and said they needed about $150,000.

“The next day, we got that money, which was crazy,” says Finocchiaro. 

Jackie Tantimonoco

Until then, they’d been brewing their cold brew coffee every night in Audrey’s uncle’s diner. But once the funding rolled in, they immediately set up a production facility and pivoted into wholesale, figuring it was the only way to survive the slow winter months. The money disappeared quickly—largely spent buying a $1,200 kegerator (a small refrigerator designed or adapted to hold a keg from which the cold brew could be dispensed) for each of the 60 wholesale accounts they got on board during their first year.

But The Nitro Cart got its second wind when a local bike shop in Providence offered them 200 square feet of space for $400 a month. They jumped on it, funding their first storefront by taking a steep 30% interest loan through Square.

Business skyrocketed after the loan, and now the Rhode Island coffee company brings in $4.5 million a year in revenue. It also has 80 employees working at its three brick-and-mortar coffee shops, production facility, and small coffee trailer. The company’s cold brew is available on tap at more than 50 other locations across Rhode Island and Massachusetts. 

How TikTok helped turn a coffee cart into a multimillion-dollar business

With over 500,000 followers on TikTok and 130,000 on Instagram, there’s no question social media has been one of the key factors in The Nitro Bar’s continued success—but it didn’t happen overnight. 

“We just threw a ton of things at a wall and kept going until we found something that stuck,” Finocchiaro says. “And for us, that took I think it was seven years until we really started to gain a significant following online.”

But today, she admits building out a following on social media is more important than ever. Her advice for new creators is simple: make a running list of ideas in your notes app, post multiple times a day, and stick to a routine to build momentum.

“I think it’s an incredible time to start a business, because it can cost $0 to start,” Finnochario says. “ You can have no money and start a TikTok or start an Instagram account. That was monumental for us.”

The Nitro Bar’s posts include trends of trying different coffee combinations, hacks on what to order, and sampling their favorite menu items. “How lucky are we to be alive at the same time as blueberry banana lattes,” one of the videos is captioned. It’s racked up 80,000 likes.

Ignoring boomers and friends helped get the business off the ground.

Finocchiaro learned quickly who she wanted to share her business ideas with. “Ignore the boomers or your friends in sales,” she explained on TikTok. 

“The second you tell someone who isn’t an entrepreneur what you want to do, they start questioning everything—‘Why a coffee shop? There’s already a million of them,’ or ‘If it were that easy, everyone would do it,’” she says. 

Instead of letting doubt creep in from people who don’t understand the risks and mindset required to start something from scratch, she advises limiting those conversations altogether and suggests replying that you’re investing in the business for the long game and betting on yourself gives you a higher return.

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