$400,000 in renovations, such as adding epoxy to the floors and repainting the walls
Robin Garr wrote:I can't help noticing ...$400,000 in renovations, such as adding epoxy to the floors and repainting the walls
Maybe it's just me, but that seems like one expensive paint job.
Will Crawford wrote:Robin Garr wrote:I can't help noticing ...$400,000 in renovations, such as adding epoxy to the floors and repainting the walls
Maybe it's just me, but that seems like one expensive paint job.
Right? Maybe she used the same contractors that built the Affordable Care Website.
So hard to believe anything coming out of that camp.
Robin Garr wrote:I can't help noticing ...$400,000 in renovations, such as adding epoxy to the floors and repainting the walls
Maybe it's just me, but that seems like one expensive paint job.
The restaurant closed nearly a year ago and has undergone $400,000 in renovations
Doug Davis wrote:Small business owners just dont realize that the business they started and spent years, blood and tears nurturing isnt worth spit..
Adam C
Foodie
761
Fri Jun 20, 2008 9:43 pm
Camp Taylor aka Louisville's food desert
Steve P wrote:Doug Davis wrote:Small business owners just dont realize that the business they started and spent years, blood and tears nurturing isnt worth spit..
Bingo.
Adam C wrote:Don't really agree with this assessment. I suppose it depends on the business.
Adam C wrote:Steve P wrote:Doug Davis wrote:Small business owners just dont realize that the business they started and spent years, blood and tears nurturing isnt worth spit..
Bingo.
Don't really agree with this assessment. I suppose it depends on the business.
Adam C
Foodie
761
Fri Jun 20, 2008 9:43 pm
Camp Taylor aka Louisville's food desert
Steve P wrote:Adam,
Were I looking to buy an existing small business I would not put one ounce of emphasis on the previous owners profitability or community cache. When they hand you the keys it's a whole new ball game and previous clientele, no matter how loyal, should not be factored in to the selling price. Lynn's joint is worth what the real estate market says it's worth and nothing more. She (or anyone else for that matter) can price the place at whatever she/they want to but if a buyer is only willing to pay half of that...then that's what the place is worth. Then again there is a fool born every minute, so who knows....maybe she'll hook a sucker.
Steve P wrote:Adam,
Were I looking to buy an existing small business I would not put one ounce of emphasis on the previous owners profitability or community cache. When they hand you the keys it's a whole new ball game and previous clientele, no matter how loyal, should not be factored in to the selling price. Lynn's joint is worth what the real estate market says it's worth and nothing more. She (or anyone else for that matter) can price the place at whatever she/they want to but if a buyer is only willing to pay half of that...then that's what the place is worth. Then again there is a fool born every minute, so who knows....maybe she'll hook a sucker.
Users browsing this forum: Claudebot, Facebook, Majestic-12 [Bot] and 1 guest