Friday, March 23, 2012

Working Bibliography

To be perfectly honest I'm basing the majority of my research on the interviews I conduct. That being said there are some additional sources that have influenced either my understanding or approach to this project. There are some academic sources, but a lot that are not. The bottom line is that in specific regards to running a restaurant all of the most valuable lessons I've learned have come from individuals and not academic journals. The following are a list of sources that I'm hoping contribute to this project:

-Don Cox

-Mike Nelson

-Carson Coatney

-Angela (Proper)

-Pony & Eya Morell

-Sam (Our Daily Bread)

-Owner of Red Onion?

-Bill Norman

-Carl (Wolfie's)

-Brandon Chavannes

-Steven Goff

-Jessica Norman

-Tom Will

-Jacob Goff

-Kristina Karavitis

-Darren Ma

-Blaise Morell

-Rick Ward

-Dan Hunt

-Carlo Petrini

-Alice Waters

-Eric Schlosser

-Michael Pollan

-Jose Andres

-Boone Chamber of Commerce

-Understanding Entrepreneurship (textbook for Entrepreneurship class)

-Roxaneh Charkchi, et al. "A Classification of Qualitative Research Methods." Research Journal of International Studies 20. (2011): 106-123.

-Busby, Ruth Stewart. "Learning Through Doing: Preservice Teacher Training in Historical Inquiry Through Oral History Projects." Oral History Review 38.1 (2011): 175-184

-Siddique, Salma. "Being In-Between: The Relevance of Ethnography and Auto-Ethnography For Psychotherapy Research." Counseling & Psychotherapy Research 11.4 (2011): 310-316


-Baraban, R. S., & Durocher, J. F. (2010). Successful restaurant design. Hoboken, N.J: John
    Wiley & Sons.
Baskette, M. (2007). The chef manager. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall.
-Csikszentmihalyi, M. (1996). Creativity: Flow and the psychology of discovery and invention.  New York: HarperCollinsPublishers.
Hallam, E., & Ingold, T. (2007). Creativity and cultural improvisation. A.S.A. monographs, 44. Oxford: Berg.
 -Joachim, D., Schloss, A., & Handel, A. P. (2008). The science of good food: The ultimate             reference on how cooking works. Toronto: Robert Rose.
Kotschevar, L. H., & Luciani, V. (2007). Presenting service: The ultimate guide for the             foodservice professional. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.
 -Mill, R. C. (1998). Restaurant management: Customers, operations, and employees. Upper Saddle River, N.J: Prentice Hall.
 -Motokawa, Tatsuo. “Sushi Science and Hamburger Science.” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 32, 4.  489-504
 -Musashi, Miyamoto. 1974. A book of five rings. Translated by Victor Harris. Woodstock,             N.Y., Overlook Press
Peat, F. D. (2000). The blackwinged night: Creativity in nature and mind. Cambridge, Mass: Perseus Pub.
Walker, J. R. (2008). The restaurant: From concept to operation. Hoboken, N.J: John Wiley.

First interview a great success

Just got done talking with Don over at Bald Guy Brew and the interview went great. He may be the nicest guy in the world. The man truly cares about the community he's become a part of and it shows. That, and he makes an awesome cup of coffee!

Going through the interview process helped me refine my questions a little bit. I ended up scrapping certain ones, changing others, and adding things I never even thought about (I threw an * next to the new questions). The following is more or less the questions I'll be using in the coming interviews:

-Have you always known you wanted to start your own business or did something prompt it?

*-What's your educational background?

-How did you get into business?

-Do you enjoy it? Why?

-What were some of the biggest challenges?

-Biggest surprises?

-Mistakes or regrets?

-Best decision you ever made?

-Would you have done anything differently?

*-Do you think corporate businesses pose a threat to local businesses like yours?

*-What do you think of Boone as a place to open a small business?

*-Outside of business, what do you care about?

-Any advice for someone in my shoes?

-Anyone else I should talk to?



Having completed the first interview I feel very good about putting together a paper. I imagine there will be recurring themes as the interviews continue. It will also be interesting to compare differences.

Another thing I should note is that I was unable to record the interview as there was a good bit of noise and running around and such. I managed to get down some really good notes and feel good about putting together a nice summary. I suppose the one question I have for anyone that feels compelled to answer is do you think it'd be better to document the interview in the format of stating each question followed by the answer or as a free-flowing more story-like format? By stating each question followed by the response there's less room to accidentally put my own spin on it. That being said, there was a lot of overlap and the natural progression of the conversation didn't exactly follow along with each question in a particular order. This makes me lean in the direction putting it together in a form that more resembled the actual conversation that took place. I haven't decided yet so if anyone wants to weigh in I'd appreciate it :)

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

I figured out how to post!

Hey there! There's been a lot going on in the development of my project that I haven't done a great job sharing so I figured I'd get everyone up to date. A lot of this is stuff I've already brought up in class but it never hurts to get it down on paper (or the electronic equivalent).

So, a quick recap: I want to find out everything I can from people who have made it for themselves. To do this I'm conducting a series of interviews with people that I assume know more about what I'm trying to do than I do. These are people that not only had ideas, but followed through on them. While I initially was going to focus solely on restaurateurs (since that's the direction I seem to be heading) I've decided to open things up just a little bit to include others that have made it for themselves. That being said the majority of people I'm interviewing are involved with food service on some level. The following is a list of people I have already or would like to interview(ed):

-Mike Nelson- Owner/founder of Hob Nob Farm Cafe/Tupelos World Cafe, Moonshine Cafe, Angelica's, and Coyote Kitchen. I've been working with Mike for nearly four years now and in a lot of ways he is living a life very similar to what I'm going for.

Don Cox- Owner/founder of Bald Guy Brew. Don is simply one of the nicest guys you'll ever meet and he's been doing a lot of neat things with his business.

Sam- Owner of Our Daily Bread. I've only met him a few times but he seems like a nice guy and he's been running a very successful food establishment for a while now.

Bill Norman- Co-Founder of Longhorn Steakhouse, current owner/founder of Norman's Landing. Bill has been a family friend for a while now and has been involved with more projects than I've listed here. He's an incredibly nice guy and knows just about all there is to know about running a restaurant.

Carl- Owner/founder of Wolfie's and the two ASU fan supply stores on king st. I've only met him a couple times but on top of being a friendly guy he seems to be in a unique position of owning businesses both in the food service industry as well as retail. I'm hoping he might have some interesting insights for me on how food service is unique.

Brandon Chavannes- Executive Chef at Five Ninth (NYC). Brandon has been my best friend for over ten years and is probably one of the few people I know that I can honestly say is more passionate about food than I am. He has come a long way in a short time and will undoubtedly have some wisdom to share from his experience.

Pony/Eya Morrell- Owners/founders of the Pasta Wench. I've been friends with them for nearly four years and have worked on and off with them in that time. On top of building a wildly successful business in a very short time, they have been involved with an assortment of other projects ranging from restaurants to hotels.

Angela (I think...)- Owner/operator of Proper. I have never met her but I'm fairly certain she's been a part of a couple other projects (i.e. Reed's Cafe) around town and might have some interesting insights.

Carson Coatney- Owner/operator of Stick Boy Bread/Melanie's. This is an interesting one because while Carson and his wife Mindy purchased Melanie's I'm not sure they actually play much of a role in the day to day operations. Regardless they certainly play a role at Stick Boy and as owners of more than one business they certainly have to know what they're doing... Rumor has it that a former IDS grad is currently running Melanie's so I'm hoping to get to sit down with him as well...

?????- Owners of Red Onion Cafe. I have never met them and don't know much about them. I've been to the restaurant before and honestly was very much underwhelmed. That being said they've been open and successful for longer than I've been alive so they must be doing something right....







These are the individuals I've selected that I think will provide the basis for my project. However, as I've mentioned in class, I do not expect to be able to get interviews with all these people. As business owners they are very busy, but if I can get at least five I'll be pretty happy. Before I get into what I aim to do with the interview material, let me share some of the questions I plan on asking:

-What drew you to the restaurant industry?/What made you want to run your own business?
-How did you get to where you are? What's your story?
-What have been some of the biggest challenges?
-What has surprised you the most?
-If you could do it all over again what would you do differently?
-*Redundancy Alert* Do you have any regrets?
-What do you love/hate about it?
-On that note, do you even like it that much?
-What advice would you give to someone that was interested in a similar career path?
-What was the best decision you ever made?
-What was the worst decision you ever made?
-Is there anyone else you think I should talk to?




Although I'm trying to be somewhat flexible with the interviews, I'll more than likely be asking most of these questions in one way or another. The whole idea is I want to learn as much as I can from other people's experience (mistakes, successes, and everything in between) before I embark on my own journey. This seems to be a good idea for anyone no matter what they're trying to do, but I feel for me it is particularly worthwhile since the industry I'm attempting to get into has one of the highest failure rates of any type of business.

All in all, I'd like my project to take the form of (I can't believe Derek tricked me into this....) a paper. I'd probably start with an introduction talking about how risky the restaurant industry is and outlining what I'm aiming to accomplish with the paper. I'll then give rough transcripts of the interviews followed by an analysis. I'm not sure whether I'll analyze each individual one and do a general analysis or if I'll just stick to a general analysis that draws from each interview. Either way the idea is that I'll have a platform to discuss what I've learned from each person as well as how what I learned from each individual might come together to help support some more universal ideas/principles.