It was a terrible winter.
Not that the season is ever great for restaurants, but in 2019 the snowfall was especially heavy, and without enough intrepid customers to dine out in a storm, Tracy Singleton wasn't sure how her Birchwood Cafe was going to make ends meet.
But as a restaurant that works closely with local farmers to source its ingredients, the answer was staring Singleton in the face.
"We thought of the model farmers use," Singleton said of community-supported agriculture, or CSAs. "They like the prepayment upfront in winter. It helps them buy seeds and plan ahead."
If a restaurant could persuade customers to invest in the offseason in the same way, it might just meet its bottom line. "We wanted to let people know what we were going through and invite them to be a part of it," she said.
Singleton launched Birchwood's CSR (community-supported restaurant) program that winter, not imagining how useful it would become the following year as she fought to keep her restaurant afloat during a pandemic. Members pay a fee upfront and in return, get a higher-value gift card to use at their leisure. The concept took off as regulars looked for ways to ensure that their favorite restaurant stayed in business.
Programs mutually beneficial
Membership programs have long been a fixture at wineries and breweries, giving members perks like monthly bottles and exclusive access to new releases. And CSAs, of course, have also been a popular way to buy into a food business and get something in return on a regular basis.
Then came crowdfunding through sites such as Kickstarter, where people could support a restaurant project in its infancy or a specific need — say, a new stove — at tiers that yielded different rewards.