Oh yah, you betcha!
Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com


Scott Lee
www.poolknowledge.com
burns420 said:Everyone there have those cool accents?
burns420 said:Everyone there have those cool accents?
Shaft said:Go Mike, go!
I don't know the liquor laws in Fargo, but if you could segregate the bar somehow in a way that would allow families to enjoy the restaurant and the some of the tables, you could attract a larger clientelle and cultivate future customers.
Like a few others, I am worried that, while this may be a fantastic room for a large city, it may be a lot of pool hall for a small city. (I am not trying to tell you your business, I just hope you succeed!)
I wish I lived in Fargo.
Shaft said:Go Mike, go!
I don't know the liquor laws in Fargo, but if you could segregate the bar somehow in a way that would allow families to enjoy the restaurant and the some of the tables, you could attract a larger clientelle and cultivate future customers.
Like a few others, I am worried that, while this may be a fantastic room for a large city, it may be a lot of pool hall for a small city. (I am not trying to tell you your business, I just hope you succeed!)
I wish I lived in Fargo.
burns420 said:Everyone there have those cool accents?
mikepage said:In this particular case, I helped write the liquor law ;-).
I've spent a lot of time thinking about this.
I think it's a mistake to look at the billiards market like you might look at the fast food market or the fine dining market or the movie theater market.
There are, for instance, a certain number of restaurant dollars spent in a certain population area. The goal of a new restaurant is to attract as big a fraction of those dollars as possible. The restaurant market is kind of like a water balloon that has a fixed volume. If you expand/contract it a bit on one side, it contracts/expands somewhere else to compensate.
A lot of people look at billiards markets the same way. They conceive there are a certain number of "pool players" or league players or casual bangers in an area, and they imagine their job is to provide an environment that attracts those players/customers.
I think this is completely the wrong way to look at billiards. The Billiards market is much more like an AIR balloon rather than a water balloon: it can change shape but also can significantly expand and contract.
You could say Billiards is part of a recreation market or an entertainment market. But I look at it as part of something broader still, social activity or social engagement. If you think broadly about the future of the need for social engagement in a community--something that's really taken a hit in the last decade or two--billiards is poised to play a central role.
Most markets CAN actually support three or four times the number of billiard parlors they now have, imo. I believe we have had a static and limiting view of the market dynamics. The market is what it is because we've let it become what it is. It can be so much more. But we need a paradigm shift to make it so. Nothing wrong with starting that one community at a time.
Look at the maritime provinces of Canada for an eye opening example. While we're looking at markets of a million people and wondering whether they can support a fourth pool hall or lamenting another one biting the dust, those provinces are quietly doing something else. There's a chain of billiard parlors called Doolys. The smallest maritime province is Prince Edward Island (think Anne of Green Gables). PEI has 139,000 people spread over the island. PEI has THREE Doolys pool halls, one with 21 tables and the other two each with 14 or so. Nova Scotia with a population of less than a million has 18 Doolys locations. New Brunswick, with a population of 750,000 has TWENTY TWO Doolys pool halls.
If the state of Florida had pool halls at the same density, it would have 530 pool halls.
My point is the market is something to create, not something that exists outside of us to be responded to.
thebigdog said:I really hope you are right. This country definitely needs more rooms like the one you are planning.
I still think you should reconsider the Golden Tee and Touch screen Trivia games. Pool players need something to do while they wait for their matches.
mikepage said:Things you WON'T find:
-- juke box
-- loud music
-- darts
-- video games
-- smoke
-- dance floor
-- karaoke
YOLO said:I mentioned this in my last post... <--- way back there... Please let me know if FRANCHISING becomes available.
watchez said:The name of his business is Fargo Billiards - so you would franchise Fargo Billiards in Maryland? What would be the draw or benefit of paying franchise fees to be associated with Fargo Billiards? Name recognition?
Exactly. Not just that though... A proven, profitable, successful operation. Financing becomes much easier than doing it all from scratch.watchez said:What would be the draw or benefit of paying franchise fees to be associated with Fargo Billiards? Name recognition?
mikepage said:Here is where I'm at regarding franchising.
On one hand I have no plans in that direction. But on the other hand I believe the best way to develop any small business is to do it with the mindset that you are creating a prototype for a business that will have hundreds more just like it. And that is what I intend to do.
Besides, Fargo Billiards is a great name for a pool hall ANYWHERE ;-)
JoeyA said:You could call the franchise FOREGO BILLIARDS.![]()
JoeyA
Smorgass Bored said:Jimmy Durante (aka 'da Schnoz') said, "Everybody wants to get into da act."
Doug![]()
Smorgass Bored said:Everybody wants to get into da act.
Doug![]()