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MEAL PREP

May 9, 2008

Overview of Meal Prep (Meal Assembly) Kitchen Franchise Segment by Kelly

Unhappy Meal Prep Franchisees:

Kelly Digby – Supper Thyme USA

In the early 2000’s Franchisor’s with the names like “Dream Dinners,” “Super Suppers,” and smaller companies like “Let’s Dish, Supper Thyme USA and My Girlfriends Kitchen,” exploded onto the meal scene by being heralded as the next big “food service trend.” The Meal Assembly Industry had come to town.  You may know it by different names like Meal Prep Centers or Meal Assembly Kitchens,…but the concept is the same.  Dream Dinners & Super Suppers quickly found themselves in the forefront of the sprint to sell franchises to hungry franchisees, ready to invest in a heavily advertised as a fast-growing business trend.

The Meal Assembly concept was designed to appeal to harried working Moms by solving their dinnertime dilemma. Busy, working Moms also seemed to be the target market of Franchisors in search for owners for their new Meal Assembly concept. Women who desired to own a viable business reasoned that it seemed like the perfect solution to their most pressing workday problem, getting a healthy and fast meal on the table for their families. They saw their need and figured why not fill the need. Families’ gathering around the table for dinnertime became the Meal Assembly industries battle cry.

In 2002, the Meal Assembly industry concept was in its infancy.  Meal Assembly industry seemed to validly take up where Personal Chefs’ left off twenty years after bursting onto the culinary scene. For families who couldn’t afford their own Personal Chef the Meal Assembly industry was supposed to be the next evolutionary leap to answer the age-old question of “What’s for Dinner?” Meal Assembly industry experts predicted that they had found the answer and it was affordable, nutritional, home-cooked meals that were assembled by Moms in storefront kitchens while socializing with friends.  The interesting twist was Mom and friends didn’t have to shop, chop, slice & dice!

The concept seemed simple enough busy, harried, hurried, hassled Moms needed fast dinners every night for hungry families. The Meal Assembly Kitchens provided all the ingredients and prepping of things was pre-done by store staff. All Moms had to do was choose from a monthly menu, make an appointment for a “session”, show up, put on an apron and assemble 12 meals in 2 hours for her family. Simple and affordable (unlike most Personal Chefs) the dinner problem was finally solved for every mom in America. The conventional Meal Assembly industry reasoning for consumers was, why not make the mess in my friendly neighborhood Meal Assembly kitchen where all the work is done and not make a mess in my kitchen at home?  It should have appealed to the masses; it was a nifty idea on paper, it even achieved limited success in some places for a while; but for some reason it never truly caught on to the public at large. Now we find ourselves in 2008 with an industry in meltdown…

To Cuppy’s Coffee and Elite Manufacturing…

May 6, 2008


On April 21st, 2008, Lina & Lee wrote:

Cuppy’s Coffee and Elite Manufacturing we want our $35,900.00 deposit back!

On Oct. 9, 06 my wife sent the deposit of $35,900.00 to Elite Manufacturing.

We did not receive the Uniform Franchisee Offering Circular before the deposit was made. That was in clear violation of FTC rules! Had Cuppy’s sent the UFOC we would have not pursued this franchise opportunity because of the non refundable deposit.

I found out that I could not get a loan in Aug. 07. Cuppy’s knew in Apr. 07 that I could not qualify and never wrote or called us regarding the manner. I received an email from Steve Wesolowski of Medina Management on Dec. 17, 07 showing that the SBA broker could not get us a loan and stated that we should not have been approved for a franchise.

I wrote a letter to Doug Hibbing the president of Cuppy’s. He did not respond nor was he available everytime I called. I called Danny Jones of Elite, and asked why he could not return my deposit in full, his response was “It’s impossible and not in the budget”. I tried to work out an amicable agreement but it was to Elite’s advantage. Mr. Jones was all talk but no action. I gave him an ultimatum of Jan. 15, 08 to deliver something to me so both sides would be happy, he did not respond. I put my story out there by putting it on ripoffreport.com.
Cuppy’s and Elite has found a loophole to victimize innocent people. We are struggling to pay back the 2nd loan on our house. Cuppy’s and Elite has our money interest free. Its sad when the Florida State Attorney General’s office Florida Dept. of Consumer Affairs and the FTC can’t or won’t do anything.

Other unhappy Cuppy’s Coffee franchisees:

Criston Menz – Cuppy’s Coffee

Robyn & Corey Rivera – Java Jo’z / Cuppy’s Coffee

If You’ve Got a Voice, You’ve Got the Power

May 6, 2008

Trusting the untrustworthy cannot make you powerless.

Making a bad business deal cannot make you powerless.

Losing years of savings cannot make you powerless.

As long as you’ve got a voice, you’ve got the power.

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They can take your business.

They can take your car.

They can take your house.

But they can’t take your spirit,

Repo your voice,

Garnishee your will.

Or seize your power.

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Some things can only be given, not taken.

I think you’ve given enough,

Don’t you?

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Share your story.

Cold Stone Creamery Franchise Assets Seized, to be Auctioned

May 4, 2008

 

cospringsext(UnhappyFranchisee.com)    It doesn’t get more sadly ironic than this:  to not only have the assets of your failed Cold Stone Creamery franchise seized for unpaid taxes, but to have them publicly auctioned by a company named SchurSuccess.

Franchise owner Ralph Pittman’s Chocolate Fantasy is now item COS 066

His empty table and chairs are COS 001

His Cold Stone display case is COS 003

And his Atlas Metal WF-5 marble slab coolers, including COS 048 slabs, seem like decor befitting a morgue, only not as festive.

A story on FranchisePick.Com reports that the third Colorado Springs Cold Stone Creamery to fail within a year "was seized after owner Pittman Investments LLC, failed to pay $23,985 in state sales tax, according to a sign posted on the door… The city also has a tax lien against Pittman Investments. Company owner Ralph S. Pittman Jr. could not be reached for comment.

cospringslab cospringcase cospringint cospringtable

The Colorado Springs Gazette reports that Cold Stone Creamery is eager to resell the failed franchise:

Company spokeswoman Anne Christenson said Cold Stone hopes to reopen the Southgate location under new ownership in a few months, despite the failure of two franchisees.
   "We believe this location is a strong store with a lot of potential especially because of its proximity to the military base," Christenson wrote in an e-mail. "We believe that under the right ownership of a franchisee that is involved and dedicated to the business, the store will thrive."

 Auction Info:

Cold Stone Creamery – Colorado Springs – Dept. of Revenue** New Date**

SchurSuccess Auctions

Related Story:

Cold Stone Creamery Franchise: 50%+ Failure Rate in Colorado Springs

Cooling business

Share your story:

Are You an Unhappy Franchisee? Tell us why.

Photo source:  SchurSuccess Auctions

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