👉🏻Register for the ChatGPT & AI workshop for FREE: link.gs.ht/MMB 👉🏻:100% Discount for first 1000 people Reshare this with your friends who will need this 👉🏻:Join the Growthschool’s Top1% AI Community for regular updates: web.growthschool.io/MMBW 🧋7 MILES TEA LAB (Hannah) instagram.com/7milestealab/ 2010 Sawtelle Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90025 🧋ODD ONE OUT TEA (Ron & Pat) instagram.com/oootea.us/ 11301 W Olympic Blvd UNIT 124, Los Angeles, CA 90064 🧋HEY HEY (Chris) instagram.com/heyheydrinks/ 1555 Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90026 🎬 Support Modern MBA: buymeacoffee.com/modernmba ☕ Support Modern MBA on Patreon: patreon.com/modernmba 💬 Join Modern MBA on Reddit: www.reddit.com/r/modernmba/ 🌎 Follow Modern MBA on Facebook: facebook.com/profile.php?id=61570667949655 🕊 Follow Modern MBA on Twitter: x.com/modern_mba
@wynn_explorations25434 ай бұрын
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
@Exilis4 ай бұрын
Why does your shitty sponsorship link lead to a Whatsapp group... ?
@KamBar20204 ай бұрын
Slava 🇹🇼 Heroyam Boba Tea 🍵
@xanderpiz877013 күн бұрын
I think you might be interested to know that Cabramatta in NSW Australia, has a street approximately 200m long that is occupied by no less than 20+ boba tea franchises and independents stores with more on the way.
@FinancialShinanigan4 ай бұрын
Chewing on boba distracts me from thinking how I paid $7 at Gong cha
@EricBoulton264 ай бұрын
True, but better than paying $7 for a generic coffee or pure sugar.
@runknight4 ай бұрын
I feel attacked 😂
@Sunlest4 ай бұрын
Went to NYC, almost $10 for a cup. Insane. About to go make my own boba again
@elDoober4 ай бұрын
@@EricBoulton26 bruh bubble teas often are pure sugar....
@Teampegleg4 ай бұрын
I basically stopped doing Boba Tea once the franchises got involved, it went from a reasonably priced drink to over priced fufu drink.
@hairtohairnetwork25124 ай бұрын
7 Miles lady is the GOAT. She just gave me a crash course about all businesses in general within just a few minutes.
@kenim4 ай бұрын
She is definitely going places!
@bananasmoothie0063 ай бұрын
7 Miles owner is on point. Very smart.
@BillCarrIpswich3 ай бұрын
She's got to ditch that vocal fry, my god.
@SoulReaper-133 ай бұрын
@@BillCarrIpswichshut up, she’s a Chinese immigrant and I bet she works a lot harder than you
@smokeybandit97603 ай бұрын
@@BillCarrIpswichShe's got that LA voice 😂
@jarupongch4 ай бұрын
Hannah needs to hold a lecture on pragmaticism, absolutely refreshing to hear a realistic approach to business.
@LittleMew133Ай бұрын
Taiwanese have the mentality of dogs eat dogs, because they lack creativity to innovate and differentiate themselves. Notice how many "unfortunately"s she uses in that interview.
@fun_gussyАй бұрын
You confuse stoicism with cynical amorality.
@TESkyrimizerАй бұрын
@@fun_gussy wait how is running a boba shop immoral exactly? idk. is entrepreneurship immoral implicitly?
@chanh937319 күн бұрын
Hannah needs to stop fucking vocal frying
@GuillermoMunozOrtiz4 ай бұрын
Hannah is brutally honest. I love it. An update on businesses you featured on the channel would also be a great video idea. (2 - 3 years later)
@ModernMBA4 ай бұрын
Thank you for your support!
@yeetboi2684 ай бұрын
all these businesses have insta, you can check it yourself
@sarahwatts71524 ай бұрын
I'd be interested in that video too
@TwitterasX3 ай бұрын
@@ModernMBA Your prediction for Airbnb was a bit off. An up to date analysis would be a hit since many people are speculating into its stock.
@puertodesuerte4153 ай бұрын
@@ModernMBA when are you planning to repsond to intern applications?
@piercechan3 ай бұрын
I have been in the boba industry for over 20 years and Hannah is spot on with her analysis of the current state of bubble tea as a business. I have never heard of 7 miles but I will go visit a location soon.
@Ziakel4 ай бұрын
Milk tea used to be $4-5 a few years back where I'm at. Now it's pushing $7-8 before tipping. feelsbadman
@sierra_tan4 ай бұрын
Fax it’s a treat once in a blue moon .. for me at least.
@blink182bfsftw4 ай бұрын
Tip? Lol
@bookie-t5p4 ай бұрын
Stopped drinking it myself because it's too expensive now.
@addanashraf4 ай бұрын
"Before tipping"
@wabbasMEpern3 ай бұрын
Don’t tip unless you are sitting down and being waited on. If you are getting free refills and a high class hot cooked meal then you tip.
@BladeRabbit4 ай бұрын
Damn Hannah went from bubbly to modern MBA herself
@cheng88814 ай бұрын
Mainlanders are ruthless when it comes to business
@BenCaesar4 ай бұрын
She was concise 😅
@kenim4 ай бұрын
@@cheng8881it really shows. I have my own business and have traveled around the world to meet small and big suppliers. All these mainlanders are very very savvy businessmen.
@Teampegleg4 ай бұрын
Hannah's Valley Girl Vocal Fry combined with a Chinese accent is something I never expected to hear.
@rue69143 ай бұрын
Came to the comments to say this lol. Diaspora goes cray
@sophiechiewtrakoon2 ай бұрын
Have you ever heard a Chinese accent combined with a deep fried southern accent? It’s similarly unique lol
@Teampegleg2 ай бұрын
@@sophiechiewtrakoon No, but I know a dude second generation Chinese American, looks as Chinese as one can look. But when he opens his mouth he sounds straight out of the mountains of Tennessee where he was raised. First time you hear him speak you do a double take.
@ruthlessluderАй бұрын
Like nail on chalkboard
@LittleMew133Ай бұрын
It's so ugly to hear
@ayushtyagi4534 ай бұрын
It's just insane how the lady from 7 Miles is doin 16k orders per month. What's even more insane is even though odd one out has 12k orders per month. They're both neck and neck at operating level. INSANE.
@codingiswhyicryatnight4 ай бұрын
I love how Chris talked about learning each separate component of the underlying product, and working at other businesses that did what he wanted to do. Often, you hear about people who try to go into a separate industry to build a business but don't understand the underlying mechanisms. Or, they come in with an ego and feel as though learning the details is below them / that they'll figure it out on the job. He put in the time to understand the tea and I hope it pays off for him.
@levijm89025 күн бұрын
I think it paid off!! His business has been thriving for a while now : )
@hockeygrrlmuse4 ай бұрын
I lived in SF for 6 years and there used to be this excellent small chain there called SuperCue. They were right next to the light rail stop. I could be standing there, hearing the train come up the hill and even see its roof, walk into SuperCue, order, pay, grab my drink, and step right onto the train. They were so efficient and they always had fun seasonal drinks. They all shut down when COVID hit.
@liz_violet4 ай бұрын
we had one smack in the middle of a shopping center, here in fremont! next door was a pho place. both of those used to be FULL of people getting their lunches, trying something new, or as a hangout. All died months before covid :(. now its scary even walking through there, due to the lack of crowds letting in day-campers.
@hynnow1826 күн бұрын
And if I remember correctly, SuperCue made their own flavored boba before Mr. Sun and these shops now. I wondered what happened to the owners and if they’d try again at some point
@rayd40815 күн бұрын
There’s a Mr sun in Cupertino but it’s so dead from day one, rarely anyone goes there and it’s right by De Anza college. I wonder how any boba shop survives in the Bay Area. My favorite is Tea Zen Tea right by Ohlone college but it’s pretty quiet.
@Ps5prolite2 күн бұрын
What a shit hole compared to China
@willy21844 ай бұрын
Continue interviewing people in the real world, I love to get to hear their perspective. Awesome video
@BartRovers_4 ай бұрын
I really don’t enjoy this style of video as much as the original style. I hope a mix of both will be offered.
@PickleChillin3 ай бұрын
I wish more places were like Hey Hey. We need a third place these days. Most franchises push you out quickly. I would gladly pay more for a drink if there was a space like this.
@adisucipto53864 ай бұрын
listening to her just make me realise : every business is the same. You don't have the money even though the business is prosperous. The money always goes back to the business, constantly try to upgrading
@pauljones91504 ай бұрын
Holy shit that 7 miles lady knows a lot
@p07a4 ай бұрын
She pretty much wrote 25% of the video 😂
@learnallican36274 ай бұрын
Shes smart! i would invest my money with her
@Glue_Stick984 ай бұрын
I was blown away by her knowledge and her accent
@Kuroiikawa4 ай бұрын
Honestly might be the best interview Modern MBA has conducted thus far because she's so knowledgeable. She was very objective about the industry and her own position within it. She brought perspectives from as a franchisee of a well established entity as well as an independent owner. She was able to concisely explain the opportunities and weaknesses of boba shops with MMBA barely needing to fill in the gaps. Plus I really liked her explaining some terminology from Chinese that English doesn't have a direct analog for. Just a genuinely great interview.
@GyroCannon4 ай бұрын
If the stereotype of a small franchisee is "Naive person who tosses their life savings into a franchise, hoping to strike it rich as a 'small business owner' while riding on the franchisor's brand power, only to find out about the harsh realities of business"... She is the opposite. I can see why she left franchising - she's too smart for that lol. She actually has business acumen.
@asdkotable4 ай бұрын
What I love about modern boba (post powdered flavouring era) is that you can choose the levels of sugar you want. I love sour drinks, and boba is basically my fix for lightly-sweetened, highly acidic drinks. The closest Western alternative would be smoothies or pressed juices, but they're either always served cold (bkended with ice cubes) which I don't always want, or kinda funky tasting because they try so hard to be healthy that they feel the need to blend several fruits and veggies to make a wacky juice mix.
@tonatiuhcortes99684 ай бұрын
Same my favorite drink to get is passion fruit/grapefruit gt w/boba 1/4 sweet. If I want it a lil sweeter I’ll probably get honey/crystal boba instead. My gf HATES it because she has a massive sweet tooth
@dudea33784 ай бұрын
Somebody needs to tell 7 leaves that. It's diabeetus in a cup
@eafortson4 ай бұрын
Your comment perfectly aligns with the developing flavour palette analogy the “odd one out” founder used for alcohol. I often find myself just ordering water when eating out for this very reason. Most drinks offered when out either liquid sugar or the health drinks you described with no subtly or balance.
@KamBar20204 ай бұрын
Slava 🇹🇼 Geroyam Boba Tea 🦾
@ASoundscapeofOurOwn4 ай бұрын
You can make your own boba, there's instant pearls (2-3 minutes in the microwave) and you can brew your own tea, add fruit etc. I love making my own at home now instead of going out and paying so much more
@xcelpast4 ай бұрын
person 1: numbers driven businesswoman person 2: premium product artists and innovators person 3: vibesmaster
@KeenJT4 ай бұрын
Person 3: Already loaded before they started
@sepg50844 ай бұрын
Person 1 is not just numbers driven, if you actually understood what she said. She barely mentioned the numbers side of her business.
@CRYSTALIZ345484 ай бұрын
lol u really need to watch the video again
@MattY-ed1ep4 ай бұрын
Person 2 is doing this as a retirement hobby, he founded FoodPanda, big big food delivery app in Asia and exited to Uber probably at a stupid price.
@MattY-ed1ep4 ай бұрын
Person 2 is doing this as a retirement hobby.
@sugar-rice4 ай бұрын
It’s super cool how Modern MBA has started making videos specifically for me
@mooseboykyle4 ай бұрын
Hannah should teach an entrepreneurship course, she’s fantastic
@joonkira3 ай бұрын
Lol I was at Hey Hey working in the BG while this was being filmed. I even got a solo shot 34:21 🤣 it was super interesting to eaves drop on your interview!
@funy0n58314 күн бұрын
You probably shouldn’t dox yourself like this you are putting a target on your back
@joelcartagena93324 ай бұрын
Crazy how it started as a dollar or two and now I can’t find one for less the 4 bucks
@JK84 ай бұрын
You are surprised prices doubled in the last 25 years?
@samelmudir4 ай бұрын
Starbucksification of boba
@aerpods4 ай бұрын
In Canada it’s usually 7-8 dollars 😢
@uumuu4 ай бұрын
The 1-2 dollar bubble teas were completely different products made with cheap powdered mixes, they were pretty terrible compared to bubble tea now.
@LoCoAde874 ай бұрын
Good luck finding it for less than €6.50 here in Ireland.
@china_elite20644 ай бұрын
The way Modern MBA pronounced Gong cha, makes me immediately think he's canto
@the-scripture4 ай бұрын
hahaha wouldnt be surprised if
@markabbott32154 ай бұрын
I was thinking Taiwanese
@_BASIC_INSTINCT4 ай бұрын
all the asians watching this started point at their TV like the leo meme
@labadaba50884 ай бұрын
He also has the American Chinese accent, IDK if you're able to tell with this example kzbin.info/www/bejne/l3SopWuJpJWbiKM
@yenmano4 ай бұрын
I literally thought the same thing and immediately checked the comments to make sure someone can confirm my bias lol.
@1.e4c52.Nf329 күн бұрын
This was super dope. 3 unique founders demonstrating that there’s no right/wrong way, just leaning into your value proposition and adapting.
@pauljones91504 ай бұрын
I LOVE THAT you show how these businesses add community
@LudosErgoSum2 ай бұрын
Something worth noting here is that a lot of these movers are Asians with contacts off seas which makes a huge difference in ability to acquire skills and prduct at lower prices and higher quality. This is the power of ASYMMETRY in business - your edge, your margin is defined by your unique comparative advantage. In this world, immigrants have huge advantages in the entrepeneurship space hence why Boba Shops are run by Asians that can leverage their first mover spot since they get to see new trends and connect easier with suppliers.
@newbatthis4 ай бұрын
I used to live a few blocks from Sawtelle. You aren't kidding about the competition there. Such a high density of amazing restaurants in a small area. I've also tried 7 Miles during one of my trips back to the area. Was pleasantly surprised how good it was!
@bannarak39494 ай бұрын
So sad to see many plastic cups used everyday.
@tomdebusschere904520 күн бұрын
@@bannarak3949bring your own cup. Most Taiwanese drink shops will allow that.
@vh_monky4 ай бұрын
All three shops and their owners have such incredible stories. Thanks for sharing!
@Marbeary4 ай бұрын
Chris wins for me community shops last longer and can adapt faster if boba starts to lose its luster. In my country boba is no longer that big you can drink on occasion, but the first choice here is now coffee.
@picklesun44403 ай бұрын
Precisely. It's also remarkable that he's so attuned to cultural shifts in society, like when he accurately point out that coffee shops are more used like communal working/library-like places. As a person that's not so into boba, I wouldn't be convinced to pay premium prices just for an artisanal tea-drink, but I would pay premium prices so that I can work and chill with my friends there.
@noob.16825 күн бұрын
@@picklesun4440 Place 1 is the one I would daily for pickup. Place 2 is the one I would get if I'm in the area just to try once. Place 3 is the one I would chill out.
@Ps5prolite2 күн бұрын
China leads all innovation, even including bubble tea. US is just irrelevant these days
@nagasako74 ай бұрын
Intel should hire 7 Miles lady 😅😂
@kenim4 ай бұрын
The scary thing is that as impressive as she is, she’s a dime a dozen in mainland China. Its no wonder they are where they are now.
@kyopan234 ай бұрын
Hey Hey guy is the definition of a true entrepreneur
@picklesun44403 ай бұрын
As soon as he mentioned that he was in consulting for 8 years, it made sense. He probably gained a lot of business knowledge from his time as a consultant
@LittleMew133Ай бұрын
I like him best out of the 3 owners. The others used a bunch of jargons and fluff words to sound knowledgeable. He is down to earth and talks real business.
@Phoca_Vitulina3 ай бұрын
I love the last shop because there's so much heart going into it to feel like an addition to the community (I love when boba places are like cozy coffee shops) and his willingness to do the work to really learn about the business. Hope it continues well for years to come
@Razgriz21184 ай бұрын
I've been a lurker to your channel for a long time. I've really been enjoying these newer videos of interviewing businesses/owners directly. With this video especially though, I'm very impressed with the detail and attention paid to the subject, given that so much of the material is from Taiwan and not the US like other subjects, and that you've included the Chinese characters in the closed captions of the interviews (and that you used traditional instead of simplified characters). Also, the way you pronounced "Gong Cha" sounded like a Taiwanese-Mandarin pronunciation, which was super neat.
@allisterjones3 ай бұрын
he has the asian american accent haha, been suspecting it for a while
@dgp42014 ай бұрын
Me and my family has no history of running a business (I'm actually risk-adverse). I also don't drink boba tea. But I watched this entire video in one sitting. It is extremely informative, engaging, and entertaining! Kudos to Modern MBA! You got a new subscriber here!
@aviaanFGC4 ай бұрын
Went to the original 7 Miles location as my go-to for my time living in the LA area, crazy to see it mentioned on the channel!
@tgo0074 ай бұрын
fascinating video as someone who has never ran a food/drink business. I didn't realize how crucial it is to scale and the "complication" of sourcing ingredients.
@bh44624 ай бұрын
After seeing just about every American fast food company make a mad dash for Asia+Europe and stagnate in the US in the meantime, it's a bit surreal seeing Asian fast food make their own mad dash into the US now.
@artemis6663334 ай бұрын
Happy to benefit though I suppose. I’ve really come to enjoy Jollibee
@wyw8764 ай бұрын
Better ROI when you stand out in a market that views your product/service as "exotic". "Traveling without going anywhere" gives operators an initial float period as customers work their way through your offerings before deciding whether or not there's a longer term match btw your business and their needs.
@bh44624 ай бұрын
@@artemis666333 Man I wish I would get them in my area. They look so good! I've never once tried Filipino food. Kinda surprised it hasn't taken off more considering that USA actually has a lot of immigration from the Philippines, and it's not like we don't have other Asian food.
@princessjello26 күн бұрын
@@bh4462right? Chicken adobo and filipino spaghetti would kill lirerally anywhere
@noob.16825 күн бұрын
@@bh4462 Jollibee is growing in SoCal. And I assume other parts of US as well. Filipino neighborhoods in LA also have a ton of markets and restaurants. Although, they're non-existent outside those areas.
@vverybright4 ай бұрын
Owner of 7 Miles has such an unassuming personality yet impressively knowledgeable and articulate about her industry ❤
@marketalpha54263 ай бұрын
I’m so impressed with your channel. You have really taken the next step. You are showing true Americans here. Immigrants from other countries trying to find their own success story here by contributing to the larger economy and employing others. This is what America is about, not hand outs, but hard work. Thank you for showcasing their stories.
@Hyper_V24 күн бұрын
I love Chris' concept for Hey Hey. not to say the other two aren't great, I just love places where you can hang out and enjoy beverages either solo or with friends/family.
@DrDarp4 ай бұрын
damn Hannah killed it. I need businesses lessons from her
@JoeBidenFanclub994 ай бұрын
I live in San Francisco and walk by a bubble tea shop on every corner here lol.
@eddiew23254 ай бұрын
liar you cant afford to live in SF
@uDaniels4 ай бұрын
what's more common in L.A, coffee shops. chicken resturants, bubble tea, or dispensaries?
@JoeBidenFanclub994 ай бұрын
@@uDanielsI’m at the combo chicken-coffee-bubble-dispensary
@aineedthatdotcom4 ай бұрын
San Jose here. There are 3 boba shops on my block
@wyw8764 ай бұрын
NYC Manhattan Chinatown has a bubble tea shop opening every 6 months now.
@_thisconnected_4 ай бұрын
Holy F'ing shi. First Lady could give Bschool profs a run for their money
@CreoTuna4 ай бұрын
You put a video out 5 months ago about how AI is tech's newest hoax, but now you're pushing sponsored classes on how to use it? Which one is it?
@bigblackppman964815 күн бұрын
Just because it’s somewhat of a hoax doesn’t mean that it’s not an in demand skill
@miaomiaou_7 күн бұрын
They just want a sponsor. Use your judgement
@invisibleloveone4 ай бұрын
My only issue with Bubble tea in CA is the average quality is horrible. Most places have just powered, colored sugar drinks or blend drinks (like Sbucks). It is hard to find tea shops that have quality of HK tea and if they have food or snack is also a plus.
@Ayogenius674 ай бұрын
I really love your videos, but I liked the Hey hey business model he will stay in business for a long time coz he creates memories for his customers and these days nostalgia is a booming business model in this era. And am looking forward to make the same business model in Uganda 🇺🇬
@mastersingleton3 ай бұрын
In Australia there are hundreds of Bubble Tea shops from small boutique local Bubble Tea brands to major Bubble Tea brands expanding into Australia from either Taiwan and China. The Australian market is already saturated; whereby freshness, availability of unique fruits and teas from Asia, great customer service, personalization, and high quality ingredients drives return businesses for Bubble Tea shops in Australia. Tea Spot and Tea & Co are two Australian Boutique Bubble Tea brand that uses espresso machines and cold brew coffee drips to extract unique varieties of Japanese, Taiwanese, and Chinese Green, White, and Black tea leaves fresh every day in smaller single doses rather than in big pre-extracted batches; along with an in-store atmosphere of a high end boutique cafe/coffee bar that has high amounts of return customers and foot traffic of new customers.
@davianoinglesias50304 ай бұрын
Hannah could easily be the Dean of Studies, Business School at my University😅
@benlibodi4 ай бұрын
What I'm hearing is that boba tea is approaching its General Tso moment
@Descentperson42134 ай бұрын
in the Philippines there are boba shops are over saturated that shops does not survive after 3 months. Only those who have established names survive in the market. There are even shops that sells 30 to 50 pesos ($1). Rentals even turned them down as they don't last long.
@hallelion4 ай бұрын
Which is why some mainstream drink shops in the country (like Serenitea, 19 Degrees, and Tealive to name a few) also offer snacks (sadly overpriced IMO). We also can see a more top-down approach with more mainstream adoption, with the bigger food establishments starting to sell these kinds of drinks (Jollibee's Chowking arm sells Milksha milk teas in their Chowking stores, while Shakey's have launched R&B Tea, operating in their own small stalls, and in cloud kitchens it seems)
@Marbeary3 ай бұрын
But it is slowly dying down. The market now is coffee shop that is cheaper than the market leader starbucks. The edge of starbucks though expensive is what is chris is doing using the coffee shop experience I have encountered several barista that remembers my drink because it was near my previous workplace.
@Quark_4334 ай бұрын
What wild timing! I literally was thinking about the boba business yesterday and wondering why it was and how it became so popular here in LA. While not a video about the history of boba (exclusively, anyways), this was a really interesting watch!
@timopint11254 ай бұрын
we had bubble tea shops on every corner for 2 years. all disappeared and never seen again
@chillz90604 ай бұрын
you should do a vid about all you can eat kbbq business
@epoliv3 ай бұрын
The entrepreneurs in this video are top notch! Hannah in particular is incredibly bright. It's scary to see that level of competence if you think about entering the space and having to compete with people like them.
@gucciwrist11334 ай бұрын
as a ucla student, i will be paying a visit to 7 mile today
@agnishom3 ай бұрын
How was it?
@gucciwrist11333 ай бұрын
@@agnishom it was alright. boba was a bit hard but the tea was real good
@agnishom3 ай бұрын
@@gucciwrist1133 will you go back?
@HoangNguyen-rd3wr3 ай бұрын
Are you trying to tell me you are ucla student
@noname-bu3dv23 күн бұрын
@@HoangNguyen-rd3wr😭😭😭😭
@The_Ann0uncer4 ай бұрын
Absolutely fascinating peek behind the curtain. Seriously, great job
@gero44154 ай бұрын
The second store is unlikely to survive given most people wont be able to tell the difference in the "extra quality" they provide. The taiwan awards are good marketing gimmick to attract first time buyers, but people ultimately decide on where to go in the future based on their experience vs price ratio of the previous purchases. In the volume business of boba, sophistication doesn't sell since the real value proposition of boba on a biological level is no different than coffee for most people, just a ton sugar to get their daily fix of mental alertness. On top of everything, if the store already doesn't perform in Taiwan (arguably the culture with the deepest history and customer base to appreciate boba sophistication), how the hell would it be doing any better in the US market. The third store won't scale because the real product is the owner and the community built over the years. The owner of the first store is only one has a good read on the local market, aka a consistent experience for as many people as possible in a high foot traffic place.
@jayschafer17604 ай бұрын
With $72k in annual operating margin in a business that's been open for years, that's gotta be tough for the owner to survive on. After all other expenses, he's probably making less than minimum wage on an hourly basis.
@benjaminjo4 ай бұрын
Great analysis. That's one of the shining gems of America. Anyone can come here and try their hand at success however way it looks for them. If "every" tea shop was like 7 Mile, there wouldn't be a Hey Hey or Odd One Out. Some businesses are meant to scale, others are meant to be Mom n' Pop shops that focus on a more niche market. Some thrive on personality, others thrive on scale, and others thrive on specialty. That's the beauty of it all. They are all successful in their own right. The owner of Hey Hey is happy and successful, because he went for a dream and succeeded. Is he going to be the next Bobba Tea phenom? No. and he knows that. It's not in the cards for him to be, and he learned after his 2nd location the magic is not in scale, it's in atmosphere - it's about the local community...so he's right where he's supposed to be. Point is, Small shops are the backbone of America. It's what makes America great. It's the American Dream. This country is over-franchised to death and we need more Hey Hey's and OOO and less 7 Mile hopefuls (though, I do wish she succeeds and accomplishes her goals).
@2ravioli3924 ай бұрын
@@benjaminjo I get what you're saying, and agree, but if/when Starbucks starts selling boba I'd say 7 miles looks a lot more "communal" for lack of a better word.
@matthewmatthew6384 ай бұрын
Idk about the other partner but they definitely can survive just because the owner is seriously, seriously wealthy (like 2 steps below Bezos wealthy). MFer founded FoodPanda (ubiquitous in Taiwan, HK) and exited to Uber at a market high, this is probably his/their version of a retirement hobby, the question is whether they'd lose interest some time and pull the plug.
@benjaminjo4 ай бұрын
@@2ravioli392 they "could", however, it would be a very different kind of business. They're both drinks, sure, but the same. They would need 2 different kinds of starbucks, one for coffee, and one for bobba tea. That would be like McDonald's going into selling taco's. They could "do it", technically, but it would be half-assed. it would never be on par with what they're good at - hamburgers. Starbucks would need all new, different equipment and additional training on top of all you need to know and do to do coffee well enough, they would now need to do bobba tea well enough. Making great coffee is hard enough, knowing all the different kinds of beans, how to grind it, prepare it, etc. To add in the complexity of boba tea, would be disasterous and greedy. What you need to have and know about tea is so very different from what you need to have and know about coffee.
@thomashartmann56254 ай бұрын
When I was in Taiwan in 2000 I drank so much Boba, they told me Bo Ba means Big Boobs in the local dialect 😂
@CallistaRhian4 ай бұрын
Lol yes "buo-bah"
@thomasweng80474 ай бұрын
no one really calls it boba in taiwan anymore (probably for that reason lol). it's normally called zhenzhu naicha.
@02edward0274333 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@ModernMBA3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the support!
@gang400114 күн бұрын
Hannah is a gem! And the way she articulates herself?!?? Amazing
@thedude492216 күн бұрын
Damn it was so interesting to see and hear the absolute polarity between the 2 Taiwanese guys and the 7 miles lady. You could feel the passion and genuine love for their craft from the Taiwanese guys and they actually spent time talking about the drinks, opposed to the 7mile lady who just spat out business jargon like a soulless robot for several minutes straight while laughing at her own jokes. I can definitely see those Taiwanese guys crushing it for many years to come
@joshuatealeaves4 ай бұрын
I’m a small business owner looking to explore different businesses ideas. You make some of my favorite videos. These are so informative and ignite the flame of interest regarding the subject
@tonatiuhcortes99684 ай бұрын
My family moved to Las Vegas almost 20 years ago. We would consume boba in California back then and everytime we would go visit family we would ALWAYS go get boba cause there weren’t many places around here in Vegas that had it. Only sit down restaurants but they had basics like mango smoothie w/boba or Thai w/boba. There’s were two local shops that I loved going to but Covid permanently closed both. After Covid the boba shops have exponentially expanded here and most of them are chains. Even the local shops here aren’t as good anymore. Most places sell extremely watered down versions or extremely over sweet like to a point where it’s sickly and I feel it’s to bring in the broader public that isn’t used to those flavors and it’s extremely upsetting. My gf and I have been to so many different shops and there’s only two places worth going again imo. Pre Covid there were only two hole in the wall places to go to and they both go shut down. There were more but hard to find since many weren’t on google. Not there’s only two places even worth going because of how the market has been saturated.
@piercechan3 ай бұрын
Have you tried sunright tea studio? They recently opened up couple locations in vegas, they are from socal and the quality is above average for sure
@Von199X4 ай бұрын
DUDE you should interview the Foodpanda former creator.. Foodpanda is huge in Asia
@MensFashionFiles3 күн бұрын
Hannah is a true boss! Opening 3 locations is insanely impressive
@Dutch_chess3 ай бұрын
Speaking of Mocktails from Odd One Out... I think they'd do really well in Utah. I think they have a chance against the hundreds of soda shops we have here.
@StephenRoseDuo4 ай бұрын
The 7 miles entrepreneur is fantastically savvy. Great find
@julianmemento4 ай бұрын
Hearing the 7 miles owner speak is the exact example of why innovation always wins in every business. Reminder to never become stagnant because the market will overtake you if you do 13:04
@gamerkhang03 ай бұрын
That segment at 13:30 about specific ingredients and standing out speaks to me, I had some great peach tea while I was visiting Vietnam and I was really surprised I hadn't found anything like that here
@steingrenadier4 ай бұрын
Seems optimistic that it's supposedly booming. Feels more like a bubble that's about to burst. At least here in South East Asia, when every chain store, franchised or owned, and small businesses try to include boba in their menus to keep up with the trends. In the US, I'd argue the biggest drink competitor isn't other bobas, but chains like Starbucks adopting boba recipes considering that there is an ingredient commonality, a name that can be trusted with an existing customer base, and an existing logistics network.
@jadengrant4 ай бұрын
Except Starbucks was floundering because they aren't focused on making great coffee. Boba seems to me that it would just serve to be another distraction.
@blindsniper1414 ай бұрын
Nah the Starbucks bubble tea doesn’t not compare to other chains or smaller shops. At least to me. Starbucks also doesn’t carry all the other flavors too. Had it once there and have not gone back for it since.
@G3rmanhenry4 ай бұрын
People were saying 10 years ago that the boba bubble is gonna burst but here we are it is still going strong especially with the higher end boba tea shops. Now when people want to spend $6-8 a cup of tea, they want unique and high quality products. Many other places like fast food places and other coffee shops tried to include boba as limited item but boba snobs/connoisseur won’t fall for it.
@fallout5604 ай бұрын
starbucks is muscling into the fruit drink boba space, but the actual tea part is still not entered by them
@OuranNaruBleachClub4 ай бұрын
As someone who works at Starbucks, and can see how other people respond to "popping pearl" drinks in the US, it really is a offshoot that is almost exclusively for children. Nary is there a grown adult that wants juice bubbles in their teas and drinks. Its not a popular at all, and is more of a kitschy concept than anything legitimate (think popping pearls in an IHOP, Sonic's, Chili's drink etc...). Most of the time these pearls are poor quality and a dollar extra or so in a already cheap - overpriced - drink. The beauty of boba tea is that most people have no idea what its made of, and are happy with the novelty, flavor, and experience. The tea shops themselves are unique experiences that special menu items cant offer. I really doubt boba tea shops will decline any time soon.
@markmoreno72953 ай бұрын
I grew up in LA. I plan to return soon to visit family. I will make it a point to re-visit Westwood Village and wander over to Odd One Out because I love bubble tea for the tea- no sugar, no ice, green tea most often, Jasmine if it’s good, with matcha on occasion for a change. Toppings need to be real, real red bean, real milk, real taro. Yes the last dude is right about atmosphere and I will sit at my less favorite bubble tea franchise because of it. The first thing I always do before visiting a city I have never been to before, is map out the locations of every bubble tea shop. Then I pick one and branch out from there. A tea shop that has Asian snacks like steamed pork buns, or potstickers is a plus. Kind of a one stop shop.
@LesageSinging9 күн бұрын
These quick market analysis with real world business examples is really effective for someone like me who is beyond the fluff, but not ready for academic/professional content/education material. Thanks a ton! Excellent video.
@Dangic234 ай бұрын
98% of the US is as clueless about Boba as they are about coffee. Just move the Boba shop to another State and you will be fine.
@princessjello26 күн бұрын
Now im imagining aunt maude choking on a tapioca pearl. And some snotty tweens in suburbia going "ew frog eggs" 😂
@alimfuzzy4 ай бұрын
I remember about 5 years ago, when the boba tea place opened across the road, I drank one every day for almost two weeks, it treated great. I also put on 6kgs... I don't think I've gone back since (maybe once or twice). Since then, there are five new boba tea places that opened up within 100m of each other.
@gravityhypernova2 ай бұрын
Excellent video, well presented, great interviews. It is great that the owners gave you as much info as they did. Not a business owner myself, but I appreciate the education all the same as I have done work with some independent shops.
@Slowcarfastbeans3 ай бұрын
The OG boba nai cha is the best when you can taste the natural bitterness of the tea along with the sweetness of the lightly sweet milk and a surge of sugary starch when you chew the boba. The second best flavour is the red bean milk tea. I also enjoy che, the Vietnamese dessert cup. I’m surprised boba has not started to offer this type of offering.
@julientemplanza28643 ай бұрын
I love the insight for 7 miles! Especially since i didn't know that they had another location away from Artesia. Looking at both their locations, seeing the revenue distributions between them makes sense with what was presented in the video. While I've never been to Sawtelle therefore unable to gage the popularity of that place (though I'd love to visit it based off the stores there), the specific area that the Artesia 7 Miles is located in would be an even more competitive area. Not to mention the Cerritos mall that is not even a block away, but the sheet amount of asian based stores over there would make it hard to establish themselves. It's not a lie that their boba really good and many of my fellow peers agree, so honestly good for them in being able to stand out, especially with giants like Bopomofo right next door. Also the fact the area is not as compact at sawtelle and more impeded with parking lots that would make it a bit harder to get customers (even if that area is always busy) Lovely to see them have more success over in LA!
@arcusg69884 ай бұрын
This was an amazing video! Love your interviews. It was so interesting to hear the different approaches and mentalities of the different business owners
@DARKINBLADE.29 күн бұрын
I love Bubble Tea as a monthly treat. I live very rurally and the nearest city is 20 minutes away, it’s pretty dead now due to online shopping but they’ve just opened 2 new Bubble Tea places in the past year because it’s so popular now. I hope they stay open for a while. It is my guilty pleasure, especially Taro or Wintermelon milk.
@Msnanamac3 ай бұрын
I love Boba. My dog even knows the word "boba". I started an Etsy store dedicated to productivity and bubble milk tea. I got my mom addicted when she visited me from Ohio. I lived my adult life in California and moved to Houston 3 months ago. I've always said I wanted to open a boba franchise. The market may be saturated in California but it is ripe here in Texas. I won't tell anyone when I win the lottery, but there will be signs. Now that I know there are videos about this is a new rabbit hole I can binge.
@127kawaii24 күн бұрын
What an introduction to a channel! I learned so much! Thank you for all the thoughtful insights ❤
@mikeX05X4 ай бұрын
Love your videos! Well done, Hannah from 7miles as well 👏🏼
@helena-oj4fq21 күн бұрын
Whoever did the captions is my fav person rn
@honeybee3473 ай бұрын
Rewatching this after finding out the bobba simu liu controversy really contrast the lack of research that brand did before they went on dragons den.
@MajorlySpicy15 күн бұрын
Chris rocks and I love his community-focused concept on business. That will always be the kind of place I want to be.
@JohnnyFiction4 ай бұрын
Glad other people are appreciating and loving the Sawtelle scene too
@RareAngelz3 ай бұрын
A few years ago, I remember a place near me trying boba tea to see if there were customers for it. I definitely tried it as it was the only place to have it. Now, I can find boba tea in almost any nearby shopping district. It definitely boomed in my area of the US within just a few years.
@mattk16312 ай бұрын
Hannah's business sense is out of this world.
@itzymee18 күн бұрын
literally love hannah i need more of her
@osirisra14764 ай бұрын
Best channel on KZbin 👌🏾
@KeyLloyd3 ай бұрын
this is such a fantastic video. blown away, keep it up!!
@Ksgamer1034 ай бұрын
This was a good video! As a suggestion, when you take a look at these smaller companies, I think it'd be cool to see them compared to whatever the largest company in their sector is.
@shelbyhiromi23 күн бұрын
My favorite sawtelle boba shops are teaspoon for seasonal drinks and 7 leaves for fruit tea blends. They are literally across the street from each other lol
@JulieDeuxFois4 ай бұрын
In my neighborhood we have probably 60+ boba shops all within a 20-min walk area (just a few sq km). At 9CAD per drink, I don't get how all of them are all so busy all the time. Plus, whenever and almost anywhere I go, they never seem to have lactose-free cow milk options, nor do they have theine-free options... I'd sometimes like a popping boba drink in the evening but tea keeps me up all night!
@neverknowingly52912 күн бұрын
7 miles is our family’s favorite boba store in Sawtelle! We loved it right from when it opened. Lovely to see the story and thought behind the store!
@JamesPham-r6b15 күн бұрын
Fantastic production quality, it is very inspiring to see how this channel has grown, beyond large corporate chains and diving into social economic phenomenons.
@alexnguyen80564 ай бұрын
Owning a Bobashop this has been a great way of seeing into the minds of other owners as well! and I have also seen the same paths
@TohirT4 ай бұрын
Dude, do you do your primary research and is this all shot by the team behind Modern MBA? This is impressive!
@jellyacecup3 ай бұрын
the premium boba store's oolong with cheese foam sounds so good. keep making these videos please, the real life stories from the business owners are cool af.
@JeffBilkins17 күн бұрын
This channel and the excellent featured entrepreneurs always make me feel inspired to open a business. Like for the next few hours I could sell a ton of boba to anyone. Later maybe not so much, but at least its more understandable and not completely magic.