Ron Silver started working in restaurants at age 13. He washed dishes for five years, ultimately decided to be a chef and moved from Salt Lake City to Atlanta to learn in a prominent restaurant group. In 1987, he moved to New York after an invite to cook at a Guggenheim Museum event and spent time cooking at a high-end hotel.
When Ron decided to start a pie company for wholesale customers, he began baking at night in borrowed space. After building up to 90 clients, like Balducci鈥檚 and Dean & DeLuca, the restaurant evolved from some combination of perseverance and serendipity.
鈥淥n Hudson Street we were baking under cover because the guy who had the lease was trying to sell this business,鈥 Ron told a room full of culinary management students. 鈥淪o we were undercover baking there, but the whole neighborhood smelled like pie. I started pounding this guy to let me open up for one day at Thanksgiving, and he said, 鈥渘o, no, no, no.鈥 It became this running joke after a month of me saying every day, 鈥渏ust let me open for one day,鈥 and three or four days before Thanksgiving, he said I could open for one day to sell pie. So we did, and we sold a bunch of pie, and the next day because the place was cleaned up, we threw a Thanksgiving dinner and decided that since this guy was out of town, we鈥檇 open the next day also. And we did that, and he was gone for three weeks or something, so I basically forgot about him, and then he did walk in in the middle of lunch one day. We went on like that until April when we had a lease, and that鈥檚 really how got started.鈥
Here are seven of Ron鈥檚 tips from opening a pie business-turned-restaurant that鈥檚 expanded to two New York City locations and six outposts in Japan.
On running a restaurant:
For the first year, I spent time literally weighing out salt and tablespoons of flour. I did it in the dumbest possible way because I have zero business experience. It really took years to figure out what costs meant. I thought that I was running at 25% food costs but it was really 25% of my gross sales as opposed to just my food sales, which is an important thing to know 鈥 and labor and all the rules and regulations and the ever-changing environment. There are a lot of moving parts. When you really get the thing open, you have to build a team and that really is a big deal.
On leadership:
As an owner, if you are a problem, you have to be open to hearing that it鈥檚 a problem. Having a mentor is everything. I鈥檝e always had mentors. One thing that I鈥檝e learned is how to look at the thing that I鈥檝e built myself in a less personal and a more objective way, also how to roll with the punches and sort of gracefully lose, which is difficult. The restaurant business can be really good one day and really down the next day.
On 28 years of success:
I make a lot of money on pancakes. Pancakes cover up a lot of mistakes. A lot of people have tried to copy 叠耻产产测鈥檚 and there鈥檚 this illusion that it鈥檚 easy. There鈥檚 this thing that having a busy brunch is like crack, but busy brunch is not a thing to live on. The rest of the week has to be running along well. Dinners are important. Monday through Friday lunch is important. It鈥檚 all important.
On future plans:
叠耻产产测鈥檚 has been around for a long time, and I鈥檝e had a lot of opportunities that I鈥檝e passed on because I didn鈥檛 feel that we were quite ready for growth in a way, and I feel like we are ready for that now. I鈥檓 going to start putting together some sort of C-level management team, find a CEO and try to figure out a sane way to grow.
One of the things about 叠耻产产测鈥檚 is that it can serve a lot of different markets, and one of the things that I鈥檓 sick of is feeding rich people all the time. I have an idea for programs to put lower profit margin restaurants in underserved communities, and I know people who have done that and blown out/died miserably. I think that 叠耻产产测鈥檚 food is really something that everybody will embrace, and I look forward to the opportunity to break into that kind of a market with high-quality footholds in communities that are also creating a positive work environment and learning.
On entrepreneurship:
Know what your strength is and lean into that. If you鈥檙e going to open up a restaurant, try to drive it from your strong point. For me, that鈥檚 the dish room, and the kitchen is where I grew up, so I鈥檝e always driven my restaurant from the kitchen. It鈥檚 important to actually put in the work before you open a place to have the skills to do the thing. Make sure you don鈥檛 suck. Do the thing that you鈥檙e good at, but you have to be good at it, otherwise go work for other people.
On impact:
I look at business as community building, and that means a lot of different stuff besides just putting money in your pocket. It鈥檚 about looking out for people and seeing the community rewards. There are so many lovely things that come out of being part of the community. When there鈥檚 a hurricane or other horrible things, you get to be the community spot. It鈥檚 really important to understand your impact on people鈥檚 lives when you鈥檙e opening a business.
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