I agree, now is the time....Funny thing is, I had been looking at places to lease for about 3 months before I realized why "people" kept renting the good ones. When the real estate person asked me what I was planning on opening I would say, "a pool hall/ arcade." Oops...Can you tell me why?
They thought that I like so many of the other pool halls, would be a front for some mom and pop gambling shop.
Take my advise when talking to the real estate guy don't mention pool hall or arcade games..I missed two good locations because of that.
First off, Jamison, you won't get any farther with the real estate guy if you don't tell him your plans. Believe me they want and need to know what kind of business you're
intending to open. Having owned 2 poolrooms and a couple of pool bars over the years, I've been through all of this myself. Yes, most of the really good real estate will turn
their backs on anyone wanting to open a poolroom. Frankly, from strictly business standpoint, I can't blame them. They do market research and it's no secret that poolrooms
are closing all over the country at an alarming rate. Opening a poolroom is like buying a job, only worse. You'll have long hours and poor pay. Everyone who comes in will
give you their ideas on how to make it better and most of them involve having free pool on certain days or times, free food & drinks and a host of other things that involve
you giving away some of your very limited profits. Anyone who believes the old addage "The customer is always right" hasn't ever tried to make a living in a poolroom. For
the most part, poolplayers are the cheapest group of consumers I've ever encountered. Sure there are some exceptions to that rule, but just watch your customers quit
coming in because you had to raise your table time a quarter an hour and you'll see what I mean!
There are bargains on equipment now for sure, but there's a good reason for that! The last proprietor using the equipment has lost his ass and is trying to salvage whatever
he can! The only way I can see of someone really making a go of it now is if he owned the property outright and had enough cash reserves to weather the storms. The nut in
running a poolroom is very strong. Pool tables take up a lot of space. There are so many other endeavors where someone could use that space for a much higher return on his
investment, that it's a pretty foolhardy gamble to open a poolroom in todays marketplace! I love the sport and don't like stating these facts, but they are facts, not
suppositions. I've owned poolrooms and actually had some success at it but that was before the Poker boom, the internet and before the nintendo craze! I don't think I'd
open a poolroom these days if someone gave me the equipment and free rent! It's just too tough of a business these days! I really hate to throw a wet blanket on anyones
dream of owning a poolroom, but I'm being realistic. 3 out of 4 small businesses that open fail and most of them have a much better shot than a poolroom. I know I'll get
flamed by this post, but if it saves just one person from losing his life savings, it'll be worth it! Been there, done that, and at a time when pool was booming. Now it's really
in the shitter!