EVOLVE Business and Professional Magazine May 2020 | Page 25

SPONSORED BY HALIFAX HEALTH Jeremy Craig “The first couple of days it was on our own dime, but then the community really stepped up,” Craig said, with donations of money as well as bottles to put the sanitizer in and extra help. “We had a bunch of volunteers come to help us out,” he said. “It has been great to see, actually.” Craig said the while the company is still selling distilled spirits, the sanitizer is all being donated. “We’re able to do that because of all the donations we are getting,” he said. “We’ve been able to produce a heck of a lot more than if we had to do it on our own.” Craig said Copper Bottom Craft Distillery is in the hand sanitizer business for as long as necessary – and possible. “We’re going to do it as long as there is a need and as long as we possibly can,” he said. NEW BUSINESS MODEL Over at The Bake Shop in Edgewater, the problem owner Heather Harrison faced wasn’t coming up with a new product to solve a new problem. For her it was coming up with a new business model altogether. So the southeast Volusia bakery has become an online business offering safe and secure delivery. “It’s basically a different kind of business,” she said. “So we have to operate on a completely different level.” Instead of visiting the bakery, customers go the store’s website at thebakeshopnsb.com to place on online order. With protocols in place for safe delivery, Harrison said the business is gaining momentum. “Within the first week I was making a quarter of my normal revenue,” she said. By the end of the second week it was up Heather Harrison to half. And Harrison sees that trajectory continuing. “I think by the end of this we’ll be exceeding our normal revenue,” she said. “I’ve got my fingers crossed.” Harrison said she made the decision to change the business model early on, after hearing customers joking about the pandemic. “I could hear clients were not taking it seriously,” she said. “I cannot get sick because if I get sick, there goes my business.” Closing to in-store customers in mid-March, a website was quickly built and a plan for doing online deliveries was set. The idea has worked so well, Harrison said she is going to keep doing it, even after the pandemic threat abates and life returns to whatever the next “normal” will be. “I’ve found you can’t start something and then stop,” she said. “I think this is going to change how we do things in the future dramatically.” For now, Harrison is focused on keeping her business afloat and providing some bright spots for residents riding out the viral storm. “I am very grateful that I have a job to go to and to get out of my house every day,” she said. “I will do what I have to do and hopefully share a little bit of comfort with other people.” Aaron London is a reporter and columnist who has covered business and economics for 27 years. He has worked for newspapers in Ohio and Florida and is also an adjunct professor of journalism at Daytona State College. This content is sponsored by Halifax Health. Halifax Health is on the front lines of care in the fight against COVID-19, and is proud of the way the business community has responded in providing items needed for personal protection. MAY 2020 | 19 |