The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Big Dave’s gives back
Owner motivated by charity and cheesesteaks.
Derrick Hayes grew up in Philadelphia, the city of Brotherly Love and the Liberty Bell, and graduated from the same high school as Will Smith and Wilt Chamberlain. Still, he had some rough patches along the way. Today, he believes those challenges helped shape him into a successful entrepreneur and humanitarian.
“I used to sell bean pies and newspapers with this Muslim brother underneath the bridge by my house,” said Hayes, founder and CEO of Big Dave’s Cheesesteaks, a company as devoted to serving the community as it is to making good sandwiches. “That’s the reason why, now, I do a lot of giving back. I see a lot of those kids out there trying to make a way, and I know how hard it is.”
Before he figured out what he wanted to do with his life, Hayes, 33, got into trouble with the law and suffered personal loss and tragedy. ”I had a narcotics case,” he said. “I beat it.”
Later, when his father came down with lung cancer, he promised him he’d start a business and not work “like a slave and still have nothing to show for it.” (Big Dave’s — with two Atlanta locations and a food truck — is a tribute to his father, David Hayes.)
The pandemic, and the social
protests over the police killings of George Floyd in Minneapolis and Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta, provided yet another test for the restaurateur. In May, and again in August, the windows of his Forsyth Street store were knocked out by vandals. Rather than being consumed by anger, Hayes saw the experience as an opportunity to help others.
After Gofundme efforts raised more than $26,000 to cover property damage, he contributed the money to struggling Black-owned businesses. He also teamed up with Slutty Vegan’s Pinky Cole to give Brooks’ widow and four children a new car and life insurance policies, and the two partnered with Clark Atlanta University to provide an all-inclusive college education package, valued at $600,000, for the youngsters. Before the Black Lives Matter protests, Hayes donated sandwiches and face masks to Atlanta medical professionals.
“I love the philanthropy side, and helping people, just as much as I do creating spices and making menus,” he said, “because there’s nothing like helping some- body when they feel like life is over, and you come in like Superman and say, ‘No, it’s not. Here goes your second chance right here. I got you.‘”
Hayes said Big Dave’s sales are up 100 percent over last year, thanks to savvy socialmedia marketing, celebrity endorsements and hustle.
It hasn’t always been this way. Back in 2014, Hayes had trouble finding a landlord willing to rent him a space for his first business. He ended up in a Dunwoody gas station, selling Italian ice, or “water ice,” as it’s called in Philadelphia. “I didn’t have a single customer, because nobody knew what the hell it was,” Hayes recalled. Around that time, his beloved paternal grandfather was dying of emphysema.
But, the patriarch saw in Hayes something that he couldn’t see at the time: The young man could cook.
Noticing Atlanta lacked authentic cheesesteaks, he added sandwiches to his filling station menu. Still, business was slow — until the rapper Eve, also a Philadelphia native, came in and raved about the food on social media. “She gave me the opportunity of a lifetime,” Hayes said. “I haven’t looked back since.” (The downtown store opened in 2019, followed by Doraville in November.)
Hayes said the secret to his cheesesteaks, named one of the 10 best sandwiches at the 2018 World Food Championships, is the steak. He marinates 100 percent grass-fed beef overnight with chopped onions, peppers and seasoning. “So, the love is in it, and that’s the difference between my cheesesteak and everybody else’s.”