How the pandemic threw these businesses the curveball of a lifetime - Action News
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How the pandemic threw these businesses the curveball of a lifetime

Two St. Johns businesses have had to change how they serve their customers, and to keep everyone safe.

Old Dublin Bakery, Lesters Farm Market say theyre busier than before but pulling in same amount of cash

Kevin Massey owns the Old Dublin Bakery. (The Old Dublin Bakery/Facebook)

It was March 21 the first Saturday after COVID-19 had shut down the province's schools. The province had already told residents to stay inside, and some businesses to shut their doors.

Kevin Massey, the owner of the Old Dublin Bakery, had set up his food truck, named Cinny, on King's BridgeRoad in St. John's.

When he opened the hatch that morning, he couldn't believe his eyes.

"There must have been 60 or 70 people there," Massey said.

"I actually had to close down again and just ask people to [physically] distance themselves."

Massey said there was an uneasiness in the crowd he could feel that the stress and uncertainty of the pandemic were wearing on them.

"I suffered through that day," he said. "And then after that, I said, 'I can't do it like this anymore.'"

A sudden and unexpected spike in orders

Massey said he didn't have any control over the situation the distance between his customers and he was worried about keeping everyone safe.

So he decided to try doing contactless deliveries instead.

Massey now uses his truck, Cinny, to deliver his orders of baked goods. (The Old Dublin Bakery/Facebook)

Massey said he was shocked to see asharp spike in orders.

"I went from about a dozen emails a week to, like, 1,500," he said.

"It's like a perfect storm people are home, people are on the computers, they're seeing all my posts [on social media]."

Despite the demand, Massey said he's working longer hours and not getting any further ahead. The effort of getting food to hungry customers is time-consuming.

"Sales-wise, I'm not doing much better than I was previously," he said.

"When I'm doing deliveries, I'm working 15-, 16-hour days, and I'm trying to balance everything."

Learning curve

The changes that he made to his business have brought on this stress but they have also allowed him to keep working, and ensures that he and his customers stay safe.

Massey had a couple of part-time employees, who would help with baking, cleaning, and sales in the truck. But he said he had to reduce staff down to just himself, because he can't afford to get sick.

"Doing deliveries, I mean, I could be doing five times the business of what I'm physically doing now but I physically just can't manage," he said.

"I'm delivering to 40-50 people a day so I have to make sure to stay healthy."

Massey said he's also learning to cope with the stress of running his own business, while dealing with the challenges of the pandemic on a personal front.

"To be honest, I had a bit of a breakdown [last] weekend," he said.

"I was high-strung and I was tense. I had just done 65 deliveries that day, and while on delivery, people [would] message me constantly, like, 'Where are you? What time are you coming?'"

The Old Dublin Bakery delivered these orders to Mount Pearl on March 24. (The Old Dublin Bakery/Facebook)

Massey said he buckled under the pressure.

"I'm trying to run a business, while the kids aren't in school. It's hard to juggle," he said. "I've got a lot going on, the same as everybody else. And at the same time I just want to be able to make a living."

Massey has now decided on a schedule that's more manageable for him: he will do deliveries three times, every two weeks.

"It's [been] challenging, for sure, but for the most part, I think it's going really well," he said.

"The plan is just to try to get through this, like everybody else, and then looking forward to the future."

Massey said once the pandemic is over, he's hoping to get his own shop. If thedemand is still there, he hopes to continue with the deliveries.

New way of doing things

Like the Old Dublin Bakery, Lester's Farm Market also had to figure out how to adapt to the new normal.

But market manager Susan Lester said they're used to change.

"Being a farm we have a lot of things always thrown at us that are out of our control the weather being a huge factor," she said.

"[This] virus has definitely put a new twist and turn into our plans for the year, but unfortunately there's nothing really that you can do other than learn how to adapt. So it's just a new way of having to think and having to change what we're doing."

Lester's Farm Market has made some changes to its store, including installing Plexiglas to protect its employees and customers from the spread of COVID-19. (Submitted by Susan Lester)

Instead of having shoppers browse the store, Lester said they started taking orders through the market's Facebook page, and customers then go in to pick them up.

They're also taking drop-in customers, who give their shopping list. Staff pick up the items for them.

"Instead of everyone walking, having full range of our entire market, they just come into an area," Lester said.

"We have about five to six people that we allow in at a time, and then we have barriers up for our staff, little Plexiglas barriers, and then we have a one-way traffic flow to help cut down the amount of crossing over."

Lester said the market is busier on the back-end of things, but not in terms of sales.

"It does require us to use more staff. Our labour versus what we're taking in, that ratio was a little bit different than it would be this time of the year," she said.

"We checked our records from last year [and] we're getting the same number of customers come in, our transactions per day."

Keeping its regular schedule

The market will be open on Saturday, but will then close for a few weeks as it does every year.

"We need to start planting now for things that we'll need five to six months down the road. So we can't really hold off," said Lester.

Susan Lester, the market manager of Lester's Farm Market, said the business is busier in the back end, with more staff needed to prepare customers' orders. (Submitted by Susan Lester)

"Some of the staff that weren't comfortable being with customers [due to the pandemic] now will be able to go into our greenhouses and do our planting."

Lester said they'll also take this time to look at what they can do to streamline the shopping processfor when they reopen on May 6.

"[We'll] try to look at our current structure and then figure out what we can do best for our customers and our staff," she said.

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