Living with The Cart – An Update

View from The Cart

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Back when I used to work at KOTO, they fed me most days – it was part of the deal, there never was a more spoiled VSO volunteer than me.

Most of the time that meant delivery to the old Thuy Khue training centre but occasionally I’d be at the restaurant so I’d find a table and order.  I never enjoyed it. I always spent my time wondering how long it’d been since table 12 ordered, or was table 5 not enjoying their dish and that glass of wine table 3 received – I thought they’d ask for a beer etc etc.

Normally everyone was just fine and staff were far more capable of keeping tabs on it all than I was. All I added was an on-edge layer of nervousness.

Substitute KOTO in 2004 – 2007 for The Cart 2009 – now and up till recently I was still a little jumpy. It’s intensified as The Cart Nghi Tam, just two minutes from my house, sometimes feels like an overspill of my living room.  After all it’s often where I go just to spend time with my hardworking wife.

But what’s great is just how the place now feels like it’s matured. Staff recruited in the wake of opening the branch are proving to be stars. None more so than Hung the former Blue Dragon kid manning the front desk and Doan our baker.

Hung (seen here modelling the KeepCup) is a star, an honest as the day is long and with deceptively good English. I wonder sometimes – did he get that? – he did.  Doan, our baker, arrived having worked overseas – the fresh bread he makes has taken the place to a new level.

We’d always envisaged the cafe as a Nghi Tam community place. Too small for a hangout but maybe somewhere to meet up. We’re making new friends as a result of being open – good to see some of our customers doing the same.  They too look more comfortable there and we now know a little more about each other. We’ve become part of each other’s routine.

Loan continues to work seven days a week but gratifyingly not quite as many hours.  Sister Trang is an irreplaceable member of staff and, as she’s holding down two jobs, we keep trying to lure her full time but her other post is public sector and in Vietnam that’s still considered the most solid career going.

My wife has a very Vietnamese anti-marketing stance.  Businesses build. Promotion is expensive. It’s actually suited us and while it may be rooted in a traditional pho-stand sensibility it goes well with modern social media thinking. We’ve tried to avoid any hyperbole on our website. We’ll say it’s fresh – you can decide if you think it’s tasty.  Word of mouth has so far promoted a very sustainable growth. From the very outset there’s been a plan to flyer all the local NGOs but, ultimately, we haven’t needed to.

Staff capacity is building at pretty much the same rate as demand and that’s fantastic.

Oh and The Cart Au Trieu has had a little love too.  At first the new place stole a few of its customers but now they’re both performing consistently.  Although we also know that summer is coming and they’re long and hot and frequently not quite so rewarding. It’s all about spring and autumn in expat land.

Finally it was my 41st birthday yesterday (I was very moved when the flowers below arrived from colleagues) – which is always a good time to reflect.  Post Tet holiday, which seems like years ago now, has been a rather stressful period – for a number of reasons I’ll go into another time.  But it feels like we’re getting a grip on it all.

Investing our thought and time in The Cart will be an ongoing process – but with it settling nicely, happily it’s one less thing to worry about.

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A New Cart: We’re building something here. All the pieces matter.

We’ve long been looking for a site for a second Cart in the Westlake area.

Yesterday, having handed over a cheque for three months rent (ouch), we were able to announce our plans to open in Nghi Tam, the small corner of the Tay Ho area where we live.

The property was so right for us that we had no time to waste.  Financially it probably would have been better to leave it six months but we should just about be okay to get this place up and running.

Why so right?  Well Nghi Tam has a real identity and sense of community and yet doesn’t really have its own cafe.  We had looked at places on Xuan Dieu that were wedged in alongside competing businesses and we would have had to pay for that privilege.

We’d also looked at a couple of empty lobbies in newly built apartments.  Surely a coffee shop would add a little value for the residents.  Better than just leaving it empty, no? But we were always quoted thousands and on two separate occasions we heard “I’m hoping my daughter might like to open a cafe here”.

We’ve asked ourselves what defines The Cart and what we’re really trying to provide is a more homely and wholesome version of fastfood.   It’s never going to be a place where you spend the afternoon with your laptop.  In fact in fitting out the new place we’re asking ourselves whether providing WIFI is a good idea at all.

If online reviews of other outlets are anything to go by then customers elsewhere seem to be put off by tables dominated by laptops and long drunk drinks.

If we could get the balance right then The Cart would be a place better for reading than working.  More of a meeting and eating joint than a hang out. We’d be happy with that.

World domination is not in our plans but it would be remiss of us to open without trying to ensure some kind of consistency.  Not so much with what has gone before – more with what could be in the future.  There’s also a possibility that the original Cart in Au Trieu will one day be remodelled accordingly. But to answer the question that many have already asked us – no there are absolutely no plans to close the original.

In many ways, in taking over the premises from Nghi Tam’s very popular corner shop, the dynamic is already there.  Reliable and friendly service on your doorstep.   A coffee and a bacon sandwich on the way to work.  A lunchtime bowl of soup.  Mid afternoon tea and cake to boost flagging energy levels.  A takeaway pie for a quick snack before going out in the evening.

If everything goes to plan we can open inside a month.  However current issues we are wrestling with include: the heartbreaking price of espresso machines, sourcing quality takeaway coffee cups, finding a decent juicer that could live up to the awesome one we carried back from the UK, finding staff who can learn quickly enough to hit the ground running (any advice or assistance on any of these would be very welcome).

As ever, the most fun job is making the music playlist.  We get a lot of compliments for our choons (a different playlist everyday – you won’t hear the same track twice in one week).

Oh and while we might fit some tables outside – inside will be entirely no smoking.

All in all – these are very exciting times.

 


Making sustainability unsustainable

When I worked at KOTO the boss used to like quoting that rather over-used fishing analogy:

Buy a man a fish and he will be able to eat for a day.

Teach a man to fish and he will be able to eat every day.

The aim obviously is to demonstrate that it’s better to educate than just to give.  Those two lines were repeated so often by NGO workers they became the textbook example of sustainability.

Walking past Westlake today there was a guy fishing with maybe thirty lines.  Each one was unspooled and wedged under a rock as he went up and down the lines reeling in fish.

As ever Vietnam adds its own twist to common wisdom:

Buy a man a fish and he will be able to eat for a day.

Teach a man to fish and he will be able to eat everyday.

If he catches more than one fish he can sell it and buy another line.

Then another line and another line.

Till all the fish are gone.


Westlake swimmers

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Fishing for what in Westlake?

Fishing for what?


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