It seems that everyone has a theme for their bakery business. That’s right!

So why do many businesses fail?

Well, let’s see what’s going on here.

First of all, many people say, “I want to start a bakery,” then go on to say that our bakery will be this or that. In some cases, it is the aggregate company that is actually the main business structure and the bakery products are secondary.

While a music store may sell a music business’s instruments, they may also offer sheet music and instructions on how to play that particular instrument, in many cases that is.

In order to showcase music as a talent, the building must be built to deliver sound quality that enhances the sound of music that will give perfect pitch to the ear that hears that sound.

Having a bakery is almost the same. You need the bakery business to offer the best possible display of the bakery products it offers.

In other words, where is your main avenue of profit?

Having a bakery is a great way to build a business. People are looking for quality baked goods that offer great visual appeal as well as a taste that says “that was good” even before they actually taste it.

There are three things to consider in a baked product.

1. Does the bakery product look good?
2. How much does that bakery item cost?
3. What does that bakery product taste like?

People buy baked goods first for the look of that product, then they look at the price, and if that price is within their ability to pay, they’ve made a sale.

Now the third aspect comes into play and everything changes from that moment on.

1. Did that bakery item taste as good as it looked?
2. Was it worth the cost to buy that bakery item?
3. If one and two were right, then number two above is irrelevant. Price doesn’t matter and chances are you’ve made another sale.

You can offer a beverage such as cold drinks or tea and coffee to your customers in a bakery and they will accept it as a complimentary item within your bakery business.

But try to include something that a lot of people consider noise and I don’t mean to be rude by calling music noise, but a lot of older people won’t venture into that business for fear of exploding eardrums from something they don’t like.

It has been studied over and over again, and music does have a place in the purchasing strategy. The next time you walk into a supermarket you will see what I mean.

Do they have background music or is it blaring in your ears?

I guarantee if it’s later, ringing in your ears it’s the last half hour of their day to get you out of the store as quickly as possible without telling you to leave. Or is it your electronics department trying to impress a young customer with how loud the speaker can go.

Otherwise, the music is like a lullaby, nuzzling you into stopping, hypnotizing you into buying more of their products. Because they know that the more time you spend in their store, the more money you will deposit in their cash registers.

Now; I know of a coffee shop that offers a variety of coffees and a menu of food items, like wraps for breakfast and soup and sandwiches for lunch, that has music.

I say a music track, but they do NOT have both companies running at the same time. The main business is coffee, tea and sandwiches from six in the morning until six in the evening, seven days a week, but then on Friday and Saturday nights the music starts once or twice a month .

The first owner of this business made a real attempt to combine the two, but failed. A restaurant that he used to use also offered piano music on Friday and Saturday nights and that too flopped.

People have their own taste in music. People who enjoy the Beatles may not like a full harmonic orchestra. Some people like Beethoven but they may hate Brahms and it’s exactly the same with rock and roll, jazz and country music.

If the two business structures are operating at different times of the day, week, or month, then they are really two businesses tied together by building space, so it becomes a question of how much space each part can be allowed to use. from those. business

A bakery’s equipment is going to be extremely difficult to remove whenever you want to accommodate the music business.

Today’s pub owners offer big screen television and light entertainment on certain days of the week. But it’s mostly the atmosphere or the food that draws customers regularly, not the TV or the beer.

So before you embed two businesses in one space, take a look at how those two businesses complement each other.

Donuts and coffee, tea and scones, fruit and ice cream, bread and butter, music and cabaret.