Cracking the problem of paying staff to do nothing in the winter??
I've got ice cream shops that are busy in the summer, and have managers in each shop that we want to keep employed year round. The winters are dead (as you would imagine) and I have spent many hours thinking of ways that we can generate revenue from them.
Does anyone have tips or ideas for generating cash, other than trying to sell our core product? Our problem is that the towns have no footfall. We already make significant effort to market winter based products, but when it rains every day as it has this November, that won't pay the bills.
I've thought of:
-Paid online surveys
-Packaging products from another company
-Buying a winter based business that needs product made/packaging done.
I have five staff paid through the winter (I want to keep them for summer) and there must be someone out there that's solved this or has the problem the other way around- an abundance of work needing fulfilled but not enough staff to fulfil it.
We are based in Cornwall.
In addition to my previous reply, diversifying any business isn’t easy — and while it
can unlock growth, it also carries risk. It’s often one of the most harmful strategic decisions a business owner makes. By chasing revenue a business can lose focus, dilute their brand, overstretch resources, move into areas where they simply don’t have the skills or competitive advantage to succeed, and as a result make their financial worse and staff demoralised.
From your replies it’s clear you want to diversify in a way that still aligns with your brand and creates genuine synergy with what you already do. With this in mind, here are some ideas (food, (or ice-cream) for thought) that have worked for similar businesses:
Make your venue a destination for groups (off-season) : Footfall is low, so can you bring groups
to you. For examples:
- Offer your venue as a free/low-cost meeting space on the condition they buy drinks/desserts etc.
Target:
- Business clubs, networking groups, trade associations, etc
- Local community groups such as meet-ups for parent & toddler groups, hobby and art groups, walkers, charities, etc.
- An offsite meeting space for companies bringing remote workers together — many look for this at this time of the year as they do business planning and also pull teams together for Christmas parties
- Birthday celebrations, staff Christmas get-togethers (cost of living means not everyone wants to spend on traditional options).
You can add value by offering simple hot accompaniments (cake, crumble, brownies), potentially partnered with another local business if production is a barrier.
These events can also be used to create social-media content and help keep your brand visible.
You could compliment this with
themed events such as ice-cream tasting nights, DIY toppings, seasonal flavour launches (mince pie flavour), partner with a local bakery and offer Cornish pasty & ice cream, etc
Christmas or birthday ice-cream cakes - do you offer these? They are becoming more popular and bespoke themed larger cakes should offer good margins. Christmas, New Year, Valentine’s, Easter, birthdays, corporate gifts and events.
Delivery & subscriptions - I understand your reply regarding single delivery but can you offer other delivery programs?
- Bulk delivery
- Monthly subscription boxes
- VIP Club with reward schemes
- Seasonal bundles (mix in winter warmer cakes + ice-dessert kits)
Custom and seasonal ice-cream cakes
These can be offered year-round and shipped/delivered locally. Themes:
Don’t forget email marketing: many great ideas fail simply because nobody knows they exist!
Advertising is expensive and hit & miss.
Email is still one of the highest-return channels, especially for small local brands. If you haven’t built a customer email list, now is perfect time to plan and start. All those customers who come into the store in the summer and love you ice-cream? Are they on your mailing list? If not can you get them to sign up for special offers or offer a free topping / entry into a prize draw.
You can then target them for some of the offers above?
Good luck and keep us all up to date with how you get on, I'm sure many will be interested as it's a problem many businesses face.