Albuquerque Journal

Beating the odds

Some businesses opening, expanding despite pandemic

- BY KELLI KENNEDY

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — First there was taco night, then barbecue sandwiches, followed by meats by the pound — all splashy marketing events to generate buzz leading up to Proof BBQ’s grand opening in the Cleveland suburbs. And then came coronaviru­s.

Michael Griffin already had success with a popular pizza joint in the area and was following it up with Proof BBQ, which was slated to open in March, just as most restaurant­s and much of the nation were shutting down amid the pandemic.

“You’re going, going, going 100 miles an hour. You’re testing out sauces and you’re testing out the meat,” Griffin said. “We just lost all that buzz we had from that February-March push.”

The odds of success with a new business are always precarious. Add the challenges of a devastated economy and constantly changing rules for operating in a pandemic, and survival is even tougher. Despite that, some new businesses like Griffin’s are forging ahead with openings or expansions in 2020, finding ways to make it work amid unpreceden­ted uncertaint­y.

Griffin pivoted to takeout and expanded Proof’s outdoor patio. They limped along for a few months, but as cases spiked in July and the city’s bars were put on a 10 p.m. curfew, he closed up shop. Proof re-opened last month to a steady crowd after eight weeks of being shuttered, serving takeout pizza on one side and barbecue on the other.

Despite the challenges, some analysts say the pandemic has created a climate for businesses to flourish if they can distinguis­h themselves. Interest rates for loans are lower, along with lease prices. There’s less competitio­n to borrow startup capital and, more than ever, there’s a cachet to being the shiny new thing on the block during a humdrum period when people are stuck at home.

“For all the small business that aren’t open, if you can open, that just makes you more powerful,” said Marshal Cohen, a retail analyst for trend group NPD.

And prospectiv­e entreprene­urs are still at least thinking about starting businesses, according to U.S. Census Bureau data. The number of applicatio­ns for business tax identifica­tion numbers was down more than a third at the end of March compared to year-earlier levels; in the week that ended Oct. 3, the most recent data available, they were up nearly 40% over the same week a year earlier.

“The interrupti­on that it created is an extra hurdle that we have to overcome, but it also lends itself to being a business opening up in a period of time when you have very little competitio­n,” Cohen said.

In Florida, as the vast majority of fitness clubs switched to virtual classes, Legacy Fit took the opposite approach. The state was one of the nation’s COVID-19 hot spots in July, but CEO Manning Sumner decided to open new studios in Fort Lauderdale and Pembroke Pines, hosting classes in a ballroom-sized outdoor tent to ensure safety, while allowing clients to exercise in person.

His gamble paid off. The classes are packed, the franchise is flourishin­g and he’s planning to expand in Texas.

“People have missed community. They are anxious to get back to group exercise,” Sumner said. “For the average class-goer, the novelty of isolated, virtual workouts has worn off.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Trainer Legend Tarvers, center, leads a group during a workout at Legacy Fit in Miami on Aug. 31. When Florida became one of the nation’s COVID-19 hot spots in July, Legacy Fit CEO Manning Sumner decided to host classes in a ballroom-sized outdoor tent that would still ensure safety, but allow clients to exercise in-person.
WILFREDO LEE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Trainer Legend Tarvers, center, leads a group during a workout at Legacy Fit in Miami on Aug. 31. When Florida became one of the nation’s COVID-19 hot spots in July, Legacy Fit CEO Manning Sumner decided to host classes in a ballroom-sized outdoor tent that would still ensure safety, but allow clients to exercise in-person.

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