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Boston University Ultimate Frisbee Team - Alumni Website
Bill Jacobs, BU Ultimate Alum,
receives prestigious "2011
Independent Pizzeria of the Year" award

Bill Jacobs
Owner, Piece Brewery & Pizzeria. Chicago, IL
(www.PIECECHICAGO.com)
STORY BY Mandy Detwiler PHOTOS BY Rick Daugherty
“The love I feel can only be surpassed by the pizza I ate.”
Those are the words etched in blue ballpoint pen in a bathroom at Piece Brewery
& Pizzeria. If the restaurant’s sales –– $6 million-plus in 2010 –– are any
indication, it’s the sentiment of more than just one graffiti artist. Piece, it
seems, has won the hearts of its entire city, an amazing feat for a New
Haven-style pizzeria in a town built on deep-dish. Piece and its owners are
smart, savvy and successful –– a winning trifecta that has earned it Pizza
Today’s 2011 Independent Pizzeria of the Year designation.
“You should have told me you were going to Piece pizzeria,” said our cab driver
as we pulled up to the restaurant, which opened in 2001. “It’s very famous in
Chicago. Everybody goes there.” Located in Wicker Park, the restaurant was built
out of a garage that housed trucks, affording it a high ceiling but a dirt floor
and raw walls before construction. “I targeted this market because it was a
growing entertainment district,” Owner Bill Jacobs says. “It was hip, it was
trendy, and since 2000, when I signed that lease, it has just grown by leaps and
bounds. It is one of the great entertainment centers of the city.
“When I was doing my market research, there was no brew pub and no pizza place
in this market, which was a sizable, substantial market even in 2000.”
A decade later, the company has seen steady, impressive annual sales growth.
Sales were up five percent last year but are already up nine percent in the
first half of 2011. Jacobs attributes much of that to Piece Out, a
1,000-square-foot ancillary takeout and delivery store that opened in 2007 in a
former boutique next door. “We never had the capacity to do delivery,” Jacobs
says. “We would do takeout, of course, but it would create a bottleneck at the
front.”
Jacobs was confident it would succeed when he opened Piece Out four years ago,
and last year, delivery and carryout accounted for $1.6 million in sales.
Drivers use their own insurance and their own car and undergo a training
program, so that limits liability. His top concern: delivering a quality
product. Jacobs even takes pizzas home and has them delivered to his house to
ensure consistency and quality. “It starts with being a great product,” he says.
“When it’s delivered, it’s a very good product.” (During Pizza Today’s visit, a
customer picking up a pizza at the takeout counter was quick to interject his
admiration for the company. “This is the best pizza in the neighborhood. We
never have a piece left!”)
Part of that appeal is that it offers a New Haven-style pizza, an homage to
Jacobs’ youth. “Our dad told us when we were very little (that) the best pizza
in the world was Sally’s on Wooster Street, so we grew up on it. … We knew the
pizza was the best and we hadn’t experienced much outside of New Haven. … Having
lived in Chicago since 1983, I was never able to find a great thin-crust pizza.
It was obviously known for its deep-dish pizza.”
Jacobs’ initial business plan, forged as he was winding down a thriving bagel
company he later sold to Big Apple Bagels, included a brewery concept from the
start. Jacobs credits his friend, brewmaster Matt Brynildson, who worked for
Goose Island Beer Company, for the addition of beer to his concept, a move “that
was a critical component to our success.” (See the sidebar on page 63 for more
on the company’s brewery.) That well-developed business plan included a logo,
marketing plans, menu development and a location –– all of which allowed Jacobs
to raise more than $1.1 million from investors (including guitarist Rick Nielsen
of rock band Cheap Trick) during a time when technology was a less risky venture
than restaurants.
The multi-level restaurant seats 245 people –– 22 of those at the bar that
nearly spans the length of one wall. “The Pit,” a sunken area commonly used for
private parties, seats 40 and is often booked months in advance. The Chicago
neighborhood, no longer as edgy as it once was, also draws a mixed demographics
of young people as well as families. “It was obvious that this was a very good
market,” Jacobs says. “There’re lots of businesses. It’s a great shopping area.”
There are a couple of competing pizza places nearby, but “we’re secure in what
we do and we know we do a great job,” Jacobs says, adding that he welcomes the
addition of businesses to the area, which he says “bolsters
the market.”
The company employs about 125 people, and “we have very little turnover,” Jacobs
adds, crediting that to a good working environment –– one in which employees
make money and are promoted from within. “My managers are all on bonus plans,
and I’m happy to say that they always make their bonuses and they always do very
well. We’re always looking at challenges and goals and meeting them head-on.”
There’s an operational meeting held every Monday, where we’ll review our
numbers. We’ll look at our food costs. We’ll talk about marketing. We’re pretty
religious about it.”
Jacobs attributes much of the company’s success to that operational vigilance
and its focus on quality, right down to grinding its own cheese (more than 2,400
pounds a week), making dough and frying bacon. “We do everything. We make our
own salsa. We make our own guacamole,” Jacobs says. Why not outsource? “We’re
able to control the quality of it and get a good food cost out of it,” he adds.
Like most pizzerias in Chicago, sausage is Piece’s top seller. “It’s so focused
on pizza. We’re not trying to do everything. We’re trying to be a great pizzeria
and brewery first,” Jacobs emphasizes. “They go hand-in-hand, pizza and beer.”
Dinner is the restaurant’s busiest day part, “with the exception of weekends and
holidays, when we’re jam-packed. … We do a big sports business.”
Sixty percent of the company’s sales comes from food, with beer accounting for
32 percent. Liquor and merchandise –– including carryout growlers, t-shirts,
hoodies and hats –– makes up eight percent of sales.
“Branding has always been a big part of Piece, and we keep the tone of what we
do consistent,” Jacobs says. “There’s a smart humor to it. It’s never in your
face –– it makes you think, and we do it in different applications” including at
the point-of-purchase, table signs, merchandising, on the company’s Web site and
in social media like Facebook and Twitter. (Jacobs will co-host a branding
workshop at International Pizza Expo in March, 2012). The focus on branding is
“smart in its simplicity,” and Jacobs gets help from a friend who is a local
advertising agent who has helped Piece create an identity not just on the
Chicago food scene but as a business in general. They do very little print
outside of some alternative print publications, and even that is waning in favor
of social media and store-level marketing.
Although food costs have fluctuated in the past 10 years and the country’s
economy soured, Jacobs says Piece has honed its operations, and that has
encouraged its yearly sales increases. “We’re clearly in a segment of the
restaurant business that is affordable and we’ve continued to thrive,
fortunately. … We’ve become very good operators … and I always say that we never
remain content with what we’re doing. We’re always pushing the envelope and
working to be a better operation. We know we’re good, but we know that they’re
always room for improvement. We don’t rest on our laurels. We’re not arrogant
about how we’ve done. … We’re always looking to be better.”
Does that include growth beyond a one-store operation? Jacobs has been
approached to sell and to franchise, but has always declined. After all, there
are challenges to opening a second unit. “There’s clearly a reason why I haven’t
jumped at these opportunities,” he says. “Our sales are up and we’re doing well
because we’ve stayed focused. It’s not about how much money you make. It’s about
doing something that is satisfying.”
Instead, Piece focuses its efforts on quality and community. Jacobs rarely turns
down an offer for help, either financially or through donations –– including pet
charities, local film festivals, public radio and schools.
“An important part our image is to give back,” Jacobs says. “It’s what we do to
operate in good conscience.”
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