How to Land a Spot at Smorgasburg and What to Expect
Smorgasburg L.A. Market Manager Zach Brooks advised ICE students how to participate as a food vendor during a guest lecture on Zoom.
As someone who highlighted the unsung food heroes of New York on his blog Midtown Lunch, Zach Brooks sought out a similar community upon relocating to Los Angeles more than a decade ago. When Brooklyn鈥檚 food vendor collective, Smorgasburg, set out to open a market in downtown L.A., Zach was the person tapped to curate the vendors. Now in its fourth year, the West Coast Smorgasburg that Zach cultivated is thriving, with more than 10,000 weekly visitors to the open-air food market at Row DTLA on Sundays.
We met with Zach via Zoom to find out what it takes for chefs and food entrepreneurs to land a coveted spot at Smorgasburg and his advice on how to establish a solid following.
Know Smorgasburg鈥檚 roots.
Smorgasburg stemmed from Jonathan Butler and Eric Denby's popular Brooklyn blog called Brownstoner. The platform spurred an idea for readers to have a place to gather offline, called the Brooklyn Flea, which offered some food in addition to crafts and antiques. 鈥淭he Flea鈥檚 food became so popular that eventually, they spun it off into its own event called Smorgasburg when they were offered a space on the Brooklyn waterfront,鈥 Zach said. The concept was a smorgasbord of food purveyors in Brooklyn鈥檚 Williamsburg neighborhood, hence the name, and it has reportedly grown to become the country's largest weekly open-air food market. In Los Angeles, Smorgasburg is located at Row DTLA, which happens to be the home of the 7th Street Produce Market, an L.A. institution.
Make your food drive-worthy.
Before , the one question to ask yourself, according to Zach: Is my food worthy of a drive through L.A.鈥檚 traffic? More importantly, is it worth someone coming back again and again? As Zach told Restaurant & 国产福利 Management students, 鈥淲hile social media is a big part of our marketing and a really important part of how we get people to come to the market, if the food is not good, if it鈥檚 not delicious, if it鈥檚 not something you want to eat a second or a third time, all the social media in the world is not going to help you.鈥
Mind your business.
Before considering opening at Smorgasburg, establish your business with the proper credentials. 鈥淭here are formal things in the sense that you need to be a real business, you need to have a business license and you need to have insurance,鈥 Zach explained.
Be committed and consistent.
鈥淚f it doesn鈥檛 work out for you, we don鈥檛 force you to stay, but we do ask that vendors vend every single Sunday as long as they want to be at Smorgasburg,鈥 Zach said. 鈥淩unning a successful food business requires consistency 鈥 being in the same place every single week. Whether it鈥檚 a restaurant being opened Monday through Sunday or whether it is Smorgasburg being there every single Sunday, we understand that to build a successful business you have to commit to being open on a consistent basis and so that is one of the big requirements for us.鈥
Don鈥檛 forget about being social.
鈥淚f a vendor does not put a social media handle on their application, chances are we are not going to engage with them,鈥 Zach said. 鈥淵ou would have to have an incredibly special business or an amazing story to be able to leave that Instagram account blank when applying to a market like ours. That鈥檚 not to say our vendors need to have tens of thousands of followers, it just needs to show that you understand the importance of having an account, and that you understand the importance of posting decent-looking photos of your food and caring what your social media looks like.鈥 He added that you do not need to be a social media influencer to get into Smorgasburg.
Do the math.
Smorgasburg is a once-per-week market in Los Angeles, open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 鈥淚f you were applying to Smorgasburg, I would ask you how many people you feel like you needed to sell to every week to be successful,鈥 Zach said. 鈥淪ome people would say they need to sell to 500 every week, and then I say, 鈥榳ell, let鈥檚 walk through that.鈥 We鈥檙e open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., you want to sell to 500 people, and you sell hamburgers. From 10-11 a.m. you鈥檙e probably not going to sell many or from 3-4 p.m., when the market is winding down, unless you鈥檙e one of our most popular vendors. That means you鈥檙e vending from 11 a.m. -3 p.m., that鈥檚 four hours, 500 burgers, 125 per hour, two burgers a minute. Can you make two burgers a minute and sell with your front of house and staff?鈥
Follow your passion, not the paycheck.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e in this to make money, then you鈥檙e probably in the wrong business,鈥 Zach warned. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see that as a negative comment, I just mean it as, if this is what you love, you should do this because this is what you love to do. And if the passion truly comes through and if you鈥檙e lucky, that passionate thing can hit the zeitgeist and also make you money.鈥
Meet two ICE alumni at NYC's Smorgasburg.
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