7 Minutes to Better Selling Podcast - S2 - Ep. 8
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Oct 30, 2023
7 Minutes to Better Selling Podcast - S2 - Ep. 8
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0:00
Hey, welcome everybody to season two of the seven minutes to better selling podcast. I'm your host
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Colin Lake. So with that in mind, I'm going to welcome Dom Fabiano on the show with us
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Dom is an investor. He's a restaurateur. He's an entrepreneur and an all around really
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really good guy. So Dom, welcome and thanks for joining us. Thanks for having me, Colin. Good morning
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How do you get from that guy doing what he was doing to this amazing restaurateur
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entrepreneur, and a really interesting guy? Well, my entrepreneurial venture started really young
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I considered myself a hustler. So I was driven by making money. My parents were immigrants that
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came from Italy in the 50s. They didn't speak a word of English, didn't have much money
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came to Boston for opportunity. And, you know, if I wanted new shoes or clothes or what have you in
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school, my dad's like, well, you're going to have to work for it. You know, you're not, we're not
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just going to buy you the things that you want. And so that might've been detailing cars that
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might've been going down to the convenience store and buying candy and then selling it out of my
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locker at school for a profit. It was just kind of the mentality I had at a young age, and that
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stuck with me. Dom, let me ask you this. This is slightly off topic, but you have a couple bucks
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in your pocket, thank God, due to the wonderful culture and businesses you've created. How do you
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do that same thing for your kids? You got a few bucks. How do you make them go earn their own way
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and not give them what they want and what they're asking for you all the time in this day and age
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where everyone has to have what everyone else has? Sure. So I'm lucky that my wife, we have two
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children two boys five and nine Dylan and Bryce And you know luckily we both come from a great work ethic background The two of us share that in common and it something that we really want to drive home to our children
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So making them work for what they have is a really important concept that we're continually driving home
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So, for example, at home, it might be, you know, something as simple as, hey, if you're getting all these chores done, then you can get, you know, $5 in V-Bucks
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You know, or fortunately, I have a restaurant and my oldest, who's nine, can help out at the restaurant doing small tasks
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We have a really robust curbside takeout business, which means that folks drive up to the front doors and they give us an order number
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We give them their takeout food. And Bryce has helped with with that, even just bringing the food from inside the restaurant out to the guest with a smile and earning some gratuities as a result
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So that's great. Great point. I'm going to I'm going to ask you this question
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It's a single question, but I'm going to break it into two parts, see if you can answer it in two parts
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So I said a couple of times in promotion of this podcast, you took what was a what I would call an average business
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I would even call it a below average business in a town with a few restaurants
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and you've taken it to this behemoth restaurant where everyone wants to go
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where it's always mobbed. It's terribly difficult to get a table. People want to eat your food so bad that they'll get curbside takeout, like I said
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because people just want your food. It's so consistent. The staff is so good
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I could go on and on about this restaurant. So very early on in this process, how did you sell yourself to build that culture
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to build the restaurant the way you want it? And now that it's here
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how do you continue to sell yourself every day to continue to make that culture so welcoming
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and so consistently exceeding people expectations Like how do you sell yourself to build that business early parts and then today Okay Well thank you First of all a lot to unpack there I start with it takes a dream
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right? And, you know, whatever your dream is. I mean, my, my nine-year-old has a dream of becoming
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an NHL hockey player, whether or not that comes to fruition, time will tell, but I am driving home
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the fact that it's going to take hard work to get noticed, to be part of a team and compete at the
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highest level, right? NHL, you make it into the pros in any sport that is the highest level, right
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So I would say that I started with a dream. I wanted to own my own business
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really passionate about food. I grew up working for my family's restaurant and it's just something
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that's in my blood. And being an Italian American, I think you grow up with hospitality as being a
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part of your blood. I love taking care of people genuinely. In fact, I never went to culinary arts
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school. And, you know, I went to Northeastern University and I have a degree in supply chain
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management. But a lot of what I learned at Northeastern in supply chain, I applied directly
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to my day-to-day operations here at Arturo's. So hard work, dedication, and then to get to the part about selling yourself
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Well, you know, I think the perception of, you know, who you are in the community is really important
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Your presentation, confidence in when you speak and making connections with people
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is absolutely crucial to having you state the things that you said at the beginning of this conversation, you know, um, that, you know
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we're, we're, we're, we're a great restaurant, but the idea is we're also in the relationship
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business. You know, you could come here and have a bad steak or a bad meal. And, you know
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we hope we get the opportunity to make it right And our goal is to get it right every single time Um But it about the relationships that we build We in a great suburban community and we have regulars but we also have new
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customers that come in every single week. And it's up to myself to engage with my customers
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and my entire team to build relationships daily. But I genuinely enjoy what I do. I genuinely enjoy
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seeing people smile and stopping me and saying, oh my gosh, that was the best chicken parm I've had
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or that was the best cocktail I've had in a long time, or things like that are very rewarding
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and give me the drive to continue to do what I do. I think it's really important to tell a story
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in sales, right? And I never personally view it this way, being a restaurant owner
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But when you think about it organically, you know, you have to tell a story
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I think it was Simon Sinek said it in a TED Talk. I don't know when, but he said people don't buy what you do
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They buy why you do it. And, you know, for example, in the restaurant, that could be when I'm chatting with guests at the table
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I never tell people, oh, we have the best food. Oh, we have the best wine list
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Rather, I share stories and see where the conversation goes. So it might be, hey, this guy, Mike, started an organic, all organic winery
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And we came in and we tasted seven organic wines and they were amazing
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And that might be a segue into a discussion about wine and some of the wines that we're offering at Arturo's
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Yeah, that's great. That's great. Okay, so if you want amazing food, amazing drinks and exceptional service, Arturo's is a place
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This isn't a food blog, but I will say that. And then one of the great hacks in life is just as Dom suggested is when you have a dream
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and you have passion about executing on that dream, everything else seems really easy in
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order to execute on that dream. So Dom, thanks so much for sharing and good selling everyone
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