FortyDaysCoffeeCo


1. Executive summary

  • Business name: Forty Days Coffee Co.
  • Website / brand domain: fortydayscco.com
  • Business model: Dropshipping of specialty coffee.
  • Target customers (who you sell to, briefly): Selling to the public with emphasis on faith-based people and organizations.
  • Unique value (what makes this different from other online coffee stores):  Access to premium, short-rich, freshly roasted coffee, crafting the best coffee with a short shipping turnaround, and having an ethical nature, which is paramount
  • Revenue model: one-time orders, subscriptions, bundles, etc.
  • Funding needed (if any) and how it will be used: Funding will be done privately.
  • Key 12‑month goals (revenue, customer count, email list size, etc.): Looking to have 15 – 25 recurring customers along with 50 or more one-time customers and projecting to have over 100 emails for our email list.

2. Company overview

  • Mission statement (1–2 sentences about why this coffee brand exists):
  • Vision (what the brand should look like in 3–5 years):
  • Legal structure (sole prop, LLC, corporation) and state:
  • Owner(s) and roles:
  • Location of management (home office, co-working, etc.):
  • Dropship suppliers (names, locations, what they provide):
  • E‑commerce platform and key tools (Shopify/WooCommerce, email platform, ad platforms, etc.):

3. Market analysis

Industry & trends

  • Size and growth of online coffee / specialty coffee market (1–3 key stats).
  • Relevant trends you plan to tap (e.g., specialty roast, flavored coffee, eco-packaging, low-acid, functional coffee with mushrooms, etc.):

Target customer

Describe main customer segment(s):

  • Demographics (age, income, location):
  • Psychographics (values, interests, lifestyles: e.g., coffee nerds, busy professionals, fitness-oriented, etc.):
  • Needs/pain points (e.g., wants better tasting coffee than grocery store, wants convenient subscriptions, wants ethical sourcing):

Competitor analysis

For 3–5 main competitors (other online coffee or coffee dropship brands):

  • Competitor name & URL:
  • Products and price range:
  • Strengths:
  • Weaknesses or gaps:
  • Your advantage vs this competitor (brand story, niche, bundles, pricing, content, etc.):

4. Products and services

  • Product categories (e.g., whole bean, ground, pods, instant, ready-to-drink, accessories):
  • Coffee positioning (specialty, gourmet, organic, flavored, single-origin, private label):
  • SKUs at launch (list key products, roast profiles, bag sizes, flavor notes):
  • Packaging / branding (bag design, eco claims, labels, custom branding from supplier, etc.):
  • Add‑ons & upsells (mugs, grinders, samplers, gift boxes, subscriptions, bundles):
  • Service level (shipping speeds, return policy, satisfaction guarantee):

5. Operations and suppliers

Dropship model

  • Fulfillment flow (customer orders on your site → order routing to supplier → picking, roasting, packing → shipment to customer):
  • Average production / handling times from supplier:
  • Shipping methods and carriers used:
  • Countries/regions served at launch:

Supplier details

For each key supplier:

  • Name and location:
  • Products they fulfill:
  • Branding options (white label, private label, your custom bags vs their brand):
  • Pricing terms, MOQ (if any), and payment terms:
  • Quality controls (cupping standards, certifications like Fair Trade, organic, etc.):

Internal operations

  • Who handles: product listing, pricing, marketing, customer support, supplier relationship, bookkeeping.
  • Tools/automation: order routing app, inventory sync, tracking updates, email automation, subscription app, review app.
  • Key processes: order processing SOP, customer service SOP (refunds, damaged goods, subscription changes), supplier performance review schedule.

6. Marketing and sales strategy

Brand positioning

  • Brand story (short):
  • Brand voice (serious, playful, premium, scientific, etc.):
  • Core message/tagline:

Customer acquisition

Channels you will use:

  • Organic:
    • SEO content (brew guides, coffee education, recipes, origin stories).
    • Social media (TikTok, Instagram, YouTube Shorts, etc.).
    • Email list building (lead magnet: brew guide, discount, quiz).
  • Paid:
    • Meta/Instagram ads (what offers: sampler kits, first-bag discount, subscription trial).
    • Google Shopping / search ads for specific keywords (e.g., “low acid coffee,” “flavored coffee gift box”).
  • Partnerships:
    • Influencers / creators in coffee, cooking, fitness, productivity.
    • Corporate gifting, offices, co‑working spaces.

Conversion and retention

  • Website experience (product pages, reviews, bundles, FAQ, trust badges).
  • Offers (free shipping threshold, bundles, first‑order discount, sampler pack).
  • Retention:
    • Subscription program (discount, free shipping, members-only blends).
    • Email/SMS flows (welcome series, abandoned cart, post‑purchase education, reorder reminders).
    • Loyalty / referral program.

7. Business model and pricing

  • Pricing strategy (premium vs value, margin targets by product type).
  • Wholesale or B2B options (offices, gift shops, gyms, etc.):
  • Subscription model (options for frequency, bag size, grind type, flavors; discount vs one‑time orders).
  • Key revenue streams:
    • One‑time online sales
    • Subscriptions
    • Gift bundles / seasonal drops
    • Wholesale / corporate orders

Include a simple unit economics section for a typical bag:

  • Supplier cost per unit:
  • Shipping & packaging cost (average):
  • Platform/processing fees (%):
  • Your selling price:
  • Gross profit per unit and % margin:

8. Financial plan

Startup costs

List one-time startup and first‑month costs:

  • Branding and design (logo, labels, site theme):
  • Website and apps:
  • Initial marketing budget (ads, content, influencer seeding):
  • Legal, licenses, accounting setup:
  • Sample products and test orders:

Monthly operating expenses

  • Apps and software (e‑commerce platform, email/SMS, etc.):
  • Advertising budget:
  • Contractor or staff costs (VAs, designers, etc.):
  • Professional services (bookkeeper, accountant):
  • Miscellaneous (domains, SaaS, insurance):

Projections (12–24 months)

Create a simple forecast:

  • Assumed traffic per month and growth rate.
  • Conversion rate (storewide).
  • Average order value (AOV).
  • Monthly order volume.
  • Revenue by month.
  • Cost of goods sold (COGS), ad spend, and operating expenses.
  • Net profit or loss each month and break‑even point.

9. Risk analysis

  • Key risks (supplier reliability, shipping delays, ad costs rising, competition, chargebacks).
  • Mitigations (multiple suppliers, clear shipping promises, strong QC and refund policies, diversification of traffic sources, email list focus).
  • Legal/compliance considerations (terms of service, privacy policy, tax collection, food labeling handled by supplier, etc.):

10. Implementation roadmap

Lay out a simple 90‑day plan:

  • Days 1–30:
    • Finalize niche and positioning.
    • Lock in suppliers and sample products.
    • Set up brand, domain, logo, and basic store.
  • Days 31–60:
    • Build product catalog, bundles, and subscriptions.
    • Create core email flows and basic content.
    • Soft launch with friends, family, and small ad tests.
  • Days 61–90:
    • Optimize based on data (pricing, offers, creatives).
    • Launch ongoing content strategy and scale winning ad sets.
    • Start building partnerships and B2B angles (office coffee, gift boxes).