Kompany Car
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 19 Sep 2015
- Messages
- 4,231
You're kind of right, this only works if you are a freehouse, or even better a free hold, the problem is most are tied to breweries who control the price. Only 50% of pubs are free houses.I'm sure the pub snob group will hate this but simply follow the Wetherspoons model.
Provide reasonable prices for beer and grub and the punters will come.
My local charges £1.99 for Abbot Ale - £1.79 Mon-Wed. Cheaper than Tesco!
It's always got a good crowd in whilst the craft beer pubs around here charging a fiver a pint are dead.
It's not rocket science.
Forcing the corporate owners when they shut them, if they are not sold within 6 months, to sell to local resident groups at a market price for the building alone and not as a business might help. If more of the pubs were owned and run by communities it might help a bit with social cohesion. The government would need to prevent the pub chains imposing restrictive covenants on reopening as a pub following its sale, which they do to limit local competition.
You obviously have to play to your local market so the Spoons model might not be appropriate everywhere, but providing value for money whether thats at the more upmarket end or the lower end remains key. So no charging top notch prices for food I could make at home for a few quid.
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