1. Market Research, Location Selection, and Preparation
Market research before opening a café
Before moving on to design, equipment, or even thinking about takeaway coffee branding, everything must start with the foundation — market research.
Opening a café is an exciting dream, but it is also a highly competitive market with many variables. If we want a real chance of success, we must understand who we want sitting at our tables, what the audience is looking for, and where our opportunity truly lies.
At this stage we ask questions such as:
- Who are the people we want to attract?
- When do they typically visit cafés?
- What do they usually drink?
- What type of atmosphere speaks to them?
This investigation includes observations, conversations with nearby businesses, competitor analysis, and real on-the-ground insights.
This is also the stage where organization and professional perspective can make a significant difference. A skilled project manager can identify red flags early and prevent costly mistakes later in the process.
Choosing the right café location
Selecting a location for a café involves far more than simply pointing to a spot on the map.
We examine factors such as:
- daily foot traffic
- parking availability
- street visibility
- proximity to other businesses
- pricing levels in the area
…and many more considerations.
Sometimes the location that looks perfect from the outside turns out to be a budget trap, while an unexpected place becomes a hidden gem.
We must think not only about where we want to be, but also where our customers already are.
For example:
- office districts
- residential neighborhoods
- areas near central bus or train stations
- locations near colleges or universities
Each environment creates a completely different type of café.
When we also examine lease conditions, municipal requirements, and future expansion possibilities, we gain a much clearer picture. This is where professional project management helps see the bigger picture and guide a smart, informed decision.
Coordination and preparation for opening a café
Once the location is secured, the real work begins.
This includes:
- coordinating with professionals
- architectural planning
- municipal approvals
- business licensing
- infrastructure installations
Every detail matters. Café construction requires attention to small technical elements that can delay an entire project if not addressed early.
If we want to stay within budget and on schedule, someone must understand how all the pieces connect — from the kitchen layout to the installation of the exterior signage.
This is where project management plays its role:
maintaining organization, prioritizing tasks correctly, and maintaining a clear overview of the entire process.
You don’t have to do everything alone. In many cases, a project manager acts like a captain on the bridge of a ship — not making the coffee themselves, but ensuring every part of the operation is activated at the right moment so the opening happens on time.
2. Recruiting the Right Professionals at the Right Stage
Which professionals are needed when opening a café?
When we begin thinking about opening a café, our minds often jump immediately to the design, the menu, or the shiny espresso machine that will sit behind the counter.
In reality, reaching that stage requires a diverse team of professionals, and not all of them enter the process at the same time.
You don’t need a list of 20 professionals from the first week — you need to know when each person should join the journey.
Some professionals are involved during the planning stage, such as:
- architects
- sanitation consultants
- designers
Others join during the construction stage, including:
- contractors
- electricians
- equipment suppliers
- licensing consultants
The key is understanding the logical order of things. When the right professional joins at the right time, everything runs more smoothly — fewer corrections, fewer surprises, and much less stress.
Coordinating professionals during the café project
There are countless architects, contractors, and consultants. But only some of them truly fit what we want to build.
One may specialize in small urban cafés, while another focuses on large restaurant kitchens.
Before rushing to hire someone simply because they are cheaper or available, it is worth pausing for a moment.
The right professional is someone who:
- understands your vision
- listens to your needs
- has real experience in the field
That person can save you money, time, and unnecessary headaches.
With experience, we also learn to recognize the right fit:
Someone who responds quickly, arrives prepared to meetings, offers creative solutions, and asks questions about the concept is usually worth their weight in gold.
Someone who simply throws out numbers without understanding the project may not be the right partner.
Having an experienced eye guiding the process can help ensure that all professionals actually work together effectively.
Synchronizing the professionals
Once several professionals are involved, a new and complex stage begins: coordination.
The architect must communicate with the contractor.
The contractor must coordinate with suppliers.
The suppliers must align with the electricians.
And everything must still fit the budget.
Many project pitfalls occur here.
For example:
- the design includes unique lighting fixtures but no electrical preparation
- the kitchen was designed for specific equipment but the supplier delivers something different
To prevent this, everyone must understand their role, timing, and responsibilities.
You can manage this yourself using spreadsheets and shared documents — and that can absolutely work.
But proper coordination requires time, patience, and experience.
Having someone who holds the big picture can help enormously — not to replace you, but to allow you to focus on the decisions that truly matter.
Choosing the right professionals
Selecting professionals is not like ordering coffee at a kiosk.
It requires:
- conversations
- price proposals
- reviewing portfolios
- checking references
Spending an extra day or two choosing the right people is far better than getting stuck with the wrong professional later.
And it is not only about professional skills — chemistry matters too.
You will often feel this already in the first conversation.
It helps to keep things organized:
Write down who you spoke with, what they proposed, their availability, and your impression of them. Sometimes a simple spreadsheet makes everything much clearer.
Again, having someone nearby who has gone through this process before can help guide the right questions and identify potential issues early.
Slow, precise — and ultimately faster
Recruiting professionals is a process.
You cannot throw everyone into one group and expect magic to happen.
Opening a café is like building an orchestra: every musician matters, but if each one starts playing at a different time, harmony will be impossible.
When the right team is in the right place at the right time, the project begins to flow naturally.
3. Managing a Dynamic Budget Based on Real Progress
The importance of budgeting when opening a café
At the beginning of a café project there is excitement, inspiration, and many temptations to spend the entire budget at once.
Sometimes it’s on dream designs.
Sometimes on advanced equipment.
Sometimes on a space that looks incredible but strains the rest of the project.
The truth is simple:
Your budget is a marathon, not a sprint.
If we run too fast at the beginning, we will run out of air halfway through.
Smart budgeting starts with understanding that not everything must happen on day one.
Some expenses can be postponed, others can be adjusted along the way, and some will change naturally as the project progresses.
The more flexibility we maintain, the better decisions we can make when we see what actually happens in the field.
Planning the budget
We divide the budget into stages.
Each stage includes a range, not just a fixed number.
This allows us to react to reality instead of panicking about it.
For example, if the flooring we originally planned becomes unavailable, we don’t need to destroy the budget to stay with the same supplier.
Instead, we leave small reserves in each stage.
This is not a luxury — it is security.
A dynamic budget does not mean spending more; it means spending smarter.
The budget should also include:
- the first operational month
- the soft opening period
- initial marketing
- unexpected expenses
Having someone who looks at the entire picture from the outside can make decision-making far easier.
Investing in what truly matters
At some point we must ask:
What will actually influence the success of the business?
Sometimes it is wiser to invest more in excellent coffee and less in Instagram-friendly chairs.
Sometimes a marble bar is less important than a system that makes operations efficient.
We evaluate expenses not only by price but by long-term value.
Does it help the business grow?
Does it improve operational efficiency?
Does it enhance the customer experience?
Precise project management helps place emphasis where it truly matters.
Budget discipline
Opening a café naturally creates the urge to give everything.
But sometimes the real wisdom lies in knowing when to say “not right now.”
This may happen when:
- a proposal looks perfect but exceeds the budget
- a supplier pressures us to close a deal immediately
Instead, we pause, ask questions, review the numbers, and decide carefully.
Dynamic budget management is not only about knowing how much money you have — it is about knowing how to preserve it throughout the process.
Continuous review
Most importantly, the budget is not a document that sits in a drawer.
It is a living tool.
We review it every few days, update it according to real progress, compare supplier offers, and understand how each small change affects the overall project.
It may sound like extra work, but once it becomes a habit it feels natural — and it allows us to move forward confidently without financial surprises.
4. Continuous Monitoring of Progress
Why project supervision matters
So the project has begun.
There is a location, plans, and a contractor — everything seems to be moving.
But the truth is that no matter how well we plan, things change on site.
Materials arrive late.
Suppliers forget to update us.
Suddenly a critical electrical point is missing.
Without ongoing monitoring, these issues are discovered too late.
Continuous supervision simply means regularly checking that work is progressing according to plan — including schedule, budget, technical compatibility, and many small details that can accumulate into large problems.
Opening a café without proper supervision is like driving at night without headlights.
Organization and monitoring
One of the most useful things we can do is pause occasionally to review progress.
This might sound counterintuitive, but it allows us to respond quickly instead of chasing problems later.
Monitoring does not have to be complicated:
- weekly meetings
- organized spreadsheets
- calendar reminders
- simple site photos
The goal is simply to confirm that everything is progressing as planned.
The project manager’s role in schedule control
When several parties are involved — contractors, suppliers, architects — it is easy for everyone to assume the project is at a different stage.
This is where clear and documented communication becomes essential.
Progress reports, shared updates, or a simple Gantt chart can help everyone understand where the project stands compared to the original plan.
Someone who maintains the overall picture and ensures everyone moves at the same pace can make the entire process much smoother.
Monitoring means control without stress
The goal is not to apply pressure — it is to maintain awareness.
We want to avoid discovering that:
- the coffee bar is ready but there is no water connection
- the refrigerator arrived but the counter opening is too small
Continuous monitoring prevents these situations.
Changes will always happen. The question is whether we respond early and calmly, or late and dramatically.
Opening with precision
Opening a café is a journey.
We want it to be exciting, precise, and free of last-minute chaos.
When we monitor, document, and communicate, every step moves us closer to the opening we imagined — on time, within budget, and at the quality we wanted.
Sometimes having someone quietly managing this process in the background makes the difference between a project that drifts and a project that succeeds.
External reference
Here is another article from Calcalist that provides a good overview of the process of opening a restaurant or café. However, it’s important to remember that since it was published in 2019, many aspects of the market and costs have changed.
Conclusion
When we combine the four stages — market research, recruiting professionals, budget management, and ongoing supervision — we understand that opening a café is not only a dream with the aroma of espresso.
It is a complex project that requires systems thinking, smart decision-making, and coordination between many different professionals.
This is where the value of an experienced project manager becomes clear.
Someone who can see the entire picture, anticipate problems, and maintain a process that is precise, professional, and calm.
When we have someone beside us who understands the field, speaks the language, and knows how to combine creativity with execution — we simply sleep better at night.
Ready to move forward with your café project?
Contact us and let’s think together about how to do it the right way.