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  1. #1

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    Running a Bar in Pattaya




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    Running a bar in Pattaya

    A true story about bar business in Pattaya, Thailand.

    Tuesday, September 05, 2006

    Peoples


    One of the advantages is learning. What do you know about Qatar? Probably nothing.

    Believe it or not, this is a country and there are living some nice people. I met two men from Qatar in my bar yesterday.


    posted by lulu at 3:43 PM 0 comments

    Saturday, August 19, 2006

    Customers



    Now you guess, which is the most important part in bar business?

    Location? – Wrong!

    Ladies? – Wrong!

    Attitude? Music? Design? – Wrong, wrong, wrong!

    The correct answer is: customers!

    Because, everything is built up towards customers, indeed. Like in any business, the main goal is to make profit. And the only source of money is the customers.

    It’s good to chat with customers sometimes. As an owner, you can make new friends; get some news, exchange good ideas etc. On the other hand, not very many customers are interested in chatting with strangers, despite their position. Anyway, getting new friends is a big advantage.

    There are no good or bad customers in general. Even if something bad happens, it turns to good someway. Example?

    One day some months ago a bunch of almost drunk young men came to our bar. Ordering many drinks, they started arguing, perhaps fighting about something and then suddenly were running away! Not paying for the drinks, of course. Our ladies were running to catch them. I was staying in bar alone. After some twenty minutes the ladies were coming back, very satisfied. Thanks to police, everything was solved and the bill was paid.

    After a couple of minutes, two policemen were coming to our bar. Indeed, the same who helped us. What you think? -- Yes, you’re right! They enjoyed free drinks in our bar more than one hour. You bet, they could remember this particular bar for a long time after.


    posted by lulu at 12:15 PM 0 comments

    Thursday, August 17, 2006

    Human resource management



    The staff is the most important, but also the most difficult part in bar business. In Thailand and in beer-bars, the staff almost always means ladies.

    The location, design, music, lights or the cost of the drinks aren't usually arguments for the customer. Almost all customers are coming for the ladies and the ladies only.

    But this doesn’t mean that the customers are only coming to take the lady away for the night; it means they are coming to chat, drink and play games with the ladies, and maybe, just maybe, decide to take a lady away for more intimate activities.

    This also means that the success of the busyness largely depends on the ladies. They shouldn’t be too active towards customers, but neither should they be too quiet. They shouldn’t be too sexy, but neither should they be too casual. Focus on friendly atmosphere rather than hassle. Give time and space for the customers to have good time and make their own choice(s).

    Yet another problem that could possibly arise is regarding loyalty. If the owners are too friendly with the staff, the ladies take it as a sign of weakness and run away; on the other hand if the bosses are too distanced, the ladies feel they are not cared for reasonably well and still run away. Maintaining the balance between distancing yourself from your staff while remaining close and friendly is the key in keeping your ladies together and happy.

    Typically, every bar has a mama-san, an older and more experienced lady who takes care of the ladies and helps arrange things between a lady and a customer. The mama-san is the key person in such bars, since she helps maintain the balance between friendliness and distancing the owners – the mama-san takes care of the ladies, and the owner mainly interacts with the mama-san, making sure everything is working and everyone is happy.

    Unfortunately, our bar has no mama-san. Why?

    The thing is, when we started we had enough trouble trying to get any ladies to work in the bar in the first place; the idea of a mama-san was very distant and vague for us at the time. By the time things started to develop and we had a regular set of ladies working, it was too late to hire a new “boss”. The human relations had already developed by that time and a new boss was considered unacceptable.

    Another thing that we learned was that it’s not good idea to have several ladies from same bar (or, god forbid, all of them) living together in same place. The rationale is simple – the ladies should work together, but not spend too much of their free time together to avoid too much bonding between them. If the ladies bond together too much (which is unavoidable in long-term, but still), when one of them wants to go work in a different bar, all of them would go and that would be a disaster. In short – every lady should live either alone or with other people, but not with ladies from same bar.


    posted by lulu at 2:25 AM 0 comments

    Thursday, August 03, 2006

    Location


    There are three important issues in this kind of business: (1) location, (2) location and (3) location.

    Location in the Walking Street area was the prime reason to buy. The dark side however includes the fact that the cluster of bars is not among the top ends in Walking Street area: poorly lighted, not too attractive for random customers. The whole cluster includes 6 beer bars, plus 2 bars besides the Walking Street itself. Our bar is located in the deep end of the area.

    On the other hand, it is not a dead end. The pathway forwards to the Marine Plaza with a go-go bar, an open air seafood restaurant, hotels and Thai discothèques together with Thai food vendors, marketplaces and bars. These bars there are unfortunately oriented towards Arab people, which means extremely loud music.

    The bars in neighborhood seem relatively friendly. However, we can feel a real competition sometimes.

    Here is the situation:




    posted by lulu at 10:37 AM 0 comments

    Monday, July 17, 2006

    Legal issues


    If you want to buy a bar or whatever business in Thailand, you have to take several specific issues into account.

    First of all, you cannot work without a work permit. Secondly, if you are not able to neither speak nor read in Thai, you need a local partner.

    Typical business for farang involves two persons: the farang himself and his wife/girlfriend. Furthermore, officially all the business has to be made on his spouse’s name.

    So we did. For me personally the guarantee was our marriage. If you are not married with your business partner, the risk is much higher indeed.

    Buying (handling the key money) involved a correct document made by the seller and approved by the land lord.

    The next act was registering our business at local authorities in Banglamung. Required licenses include license for selling alcohol etc. They asked even for insurances for all the staff, but somehow we could ignore that. The paperwork took some month or so. The last license came after four months from starting. The total sum of fees exceeded up to 20 thousand baht.

    As mentioned above, all the documents were in Thai and the authorities spoke only Thai.

    All the licenses are valid for one year. It means we will renew these again and again.

    Actually we started without any licenses. This is Thailand and here is nothing to worry about too much.


    posted by lulu at 10:37 AM 0 comments

    Tuesday, July 11, 2006

    Opening


    Our bar was empty of any staff. The first challenge was to hire ladies to work. What the problem, I thought. Pattaya is full of beautiful girls looking only for a job in bars. But no. Looking around more, we discovered that almost every bar has an ad in Thai: STAFF WANTED.

    Ok, why not look around the Beach Road. Long sea side of this road has always a line of ladies waiting for a job in any bar, seemingly. But no, again. They are not looking for a job, on the contrary, they actually had left from their bar jobs. They are freelancers.

    Actually we had a lady, a good friend of Lord, coming from the same countryside near Korat. Namely, Kai. So we started with a single lady in the bar. Lord was acting as a cashier, which left me with “general management”.

    The first night - and we had a customer! A middle-age Finnish-Swedish. He was sitting in the bar, chatting with Kai and drinking a lot. At last, it was around 4 a.m. we considering about closing. But our dear customer refused to pay the bill. It seemed he was too drunk to understand where he is or what is happening around him.

    We called to the police, watched the customer and waited. After an hour the policeman came. The man opened his wallet, paid the bill and walked away.

    Two days later he came back with a huge bunch of roses. Completely sober, ordering only Coca-cola for himself and drinks for Kai. He becomes to be our first regular customer.


    posted by lulu at 2:59 AM 0 comments

    Sunday, July 02, 2006

    Calculations


    This initial investment 250 thousand is called “key money” in Thailand. Actually, this means you rent the bar from the land lord, but you buy the right to rent (and run) the bar from the previous owner. Naturally, you can sell it the same way.

    Comparing with the same type of bars around us we discovered that the asked price was quite good. The seller was a Thai lady who had been running the bar for some six months. As she told, the key money for her was 400 thousand. Why did she want to sell the bar? Apparently, she was a little bit disappointed about this business, maybe she needed money, who knows. Bar owners in the neighborhood told me, that the lady was just too lazy, nothing else.

    The monthly rent was set on 20 thousand baht and there was an additional charge for one year contract, 100 thousand.

    Additionally, we should pay almost 20 thousand every year for various licences.

    It means, for the first year running we will pay 610 thousand altogether. Ok, if we consider that we can get the key money back if selling the bar in the future, the initial investment is 360 thousand.

    The regular expenses include salary for the staff. If we have six ladies and a cashier in work every day, we have to pay for each people 3000 baht every month. This is the normal salary in beer bars. It means 252 thousand in a year.

    Electricity costs some 2000 baht per month, thus roughly 24’000 baht a year.

    Together with the initial payments it makes 636 thousand. Adding unseen expenses, various improvements etc, we can see something around 700…800 thousand baht expenses for one year i. g. 60 thousand for every month approximately.

    The profit from selling one beer is around 40 baht.In case of liquors the profit may be a little higher, but most of the customers prefer beer.

    If we want to get 800 thousand in one year, we need to get at least 2000 every single day. We can get this amount if we sell 50 beers every day. The bar is open from 5 p.m. until 3 a.m., 10 hours. It means the customers should order minimum of 5 drinks in every hour. It seems to be very reasonable, isn’t it?

    Theoretically, yes, but what about practice? Let’s see.


    posted by lulu at 6:39 AM 1 comments



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  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by dirtydog
    There are three important issues in this kind of business: (1) location, (2) location and (3) location.
    Quote Originally Posted by dirtydog
    The location, design, music, lights or the cost of the drinks aren't usually arguments for the customer
    Quote Originally Posted by dirtydog
    The staff is the most important, but also the most difficult part in bar business.
    Quote Originally Posted by dirtydog
    Now you guess, which is the most important part in bar business? Location? – Wrong! Ladies? – Wrong! Attitude? Music? Design? – Wrong, wrong, wrong! The correct answer is: customers!
    At least he knows what he likes and he lies what he says!

  3. #3
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    how many ppl average 5 beers an hour over time?

    first hour yes - but after that, its gonna slow down.

    40 baht profit per beer,

    i think he's forgotten to mention the bar fine profit......

    and lady drinks...

  4. #4
    Fag an bealac!
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    Looks like he really knows what he is at, count the customers in the first picture.

  5. #5
    ding ding ding
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    looks bleak in there

  6. #6
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    I think he'll be telling us how the atmosphere is the most important thing in a bar next week.

    The week after that, it'll be the toilets....

  7. #7
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    he obviously forgot to put the bottle down when he wrote his blog

    Let's troll his blog for response.

  8. #8
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    My contribution to this great blog.

    I disagree. The most important thing in a bar are not the ladies, or the location, but the toilets. This is where you take the ladies for a quickie and avoid paying the bar fine.

    Nice bar, btw.

  9. #9
    Have you got any cheese Thetyim's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by kingwillyhggtb
    how many ppl average 5 beers an hour over time?
    You read it wrong

    He needs to sell an average of 5 beers per hour during opening hours
    Thats 50 beers a day

  10. #10
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    ^^ i'd give u a greenie for that mate - but gotta spread it around

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by kingwillyhggtb View Post

    how many ppl average 5 beers an hour over time?

    first hour yes - but after that, its gonna slow down.

    Me.

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thetyim View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by kingwillyhggtb
    how many ppl average 5 beers an hour over time?
    You read it wrong

    He needs to sell an average of 5 beers per hour during opening hours
    Thats 50 beers a day
    oops - well i suppose that's more reachable.....

  13. #13
    ding ding ding
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    So this poor sod has to go and sit in an empty bar, staring at rows of unsold beers and miserable bargirl faces.

    Thats living in paradise that is, for sure!

  14. #14
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    ^ the girls in that look pretty enough!

    in fact i dont thik i've ever seen girls in a pattaya bar looking like that.

    do u think he workshop our stole that pic?

  15. #15
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    ^put your glasses back on and look again

  16. #16
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    they all look doable !?

    or have i just become desensitized by reading too many of DD short time bar thread posts ???

  17. #17
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    ^doable, yes, - pretty, not really...

  18. #18
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    Well they are a lot better looking than OUR female staff.

  19. #19
    Have you got any cheese Thetyim's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by kingwillyhggtb
    they all look doable !?
    The one in green looks a bit suspect

    The one on the right is very doable

  20. #20
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    suspect ? how ? she looks like she knows the game already!

  21. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thetyim View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by kingwillyhggtb
    they all look doable !?
    The one in green looks a bit suspect
    You have experiance in these matters sir?

  22. #22
    Have you got any cheese Thetyim's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Little Chuchok
    You have experiance in these matters sir?
    Better safe than sorry

    Difficult to tell from one picture but I would check that one before trying

  23. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thetyim View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Little Chuchok
    You have experiance in these matters sir?
    Better safe than sorry

    Difficult to tell from one picture but I would check that one before trying
    what do you need to find out? i assume you would only having a chat and playing pool with her anyway.

  24. #24
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    Looks like someone made the cut

    Anonymous said...

    I think the most important thing for any bar in Pattaya is to employ girls that take it up the poop chute and don't whinge about it.
    Now, who is this ?

  25. #25
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    Actually I also made the cut. LOL. So much for a moderated blog.

    Running a bar in Pattaya

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