This evening I invited David Warner from City Feed and Supply to join me for a coversation about the economics their business. I was inspired to do so after seeing many statements by members about "how pricey" City Feed is in the dialogue concurrently happening about Whole Foods coming to Jamaica Plain.
My intentions, having had many conversations with David about this in the past, is to share what I've learned about what it takes to operate their business, and secondly, propose that we take into account the community benefits when considering individual costs of the purchase we make at local business like City Feed. For highlights see below the video.
Economics:
Benefits:
Questions:
Comment
A newsletter that we did last March "The Value of City Feed and City Feed's Values" also talks about what goes into the price of an item and what that price reflects.
We are a neighborhood cafe/deli and grocery that has been serving the neighborhood for 10 years and we are proud to be part of the J.P. community!
Thanks for interviewing David Joseph. You both looked marvelous. Keep up the good work.
& Shop Local First when you can!
Peace -Kristine
the basic gist of the discussion is, there are two costs, the apparent cost, and the real cost, or rather, the real value.
An $8 sandwich appears to be a costly meal in terms of it's apparent cost (the cost you see when the register goes *ching*), however, due to the reality of the ingredients being sourced from smaller local vendors, and the labor being provided by employees from the neighborhood, the real cost/value tends to out-weight the real cost, or it least tilt the scale in favor of the overall value proposition.
I do believe that there are enough conscientious folks in JP who will continue to patronize City Feed even if Whole Foods moves into the neighborhood, because they recognize the overall value in having a smaller vendor in the neighborhood. That might not work in other areas of the city, but that's the strength of JP.
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