I think that for many of us who 'fantasize' about being in the restaurant industry, the hours are one of the biggest barriers to entry. They are long and brutal -- spent mostly on one's feet -- and many of them fall into parts of the day, week and year when everyone else is with their families. The sacrifices of time required to make it in the industry are normally immense. So, when I see a person like Eddie step into the arena and set some reasonable boundaries for himself -- boundaries that facilitate having a normal family life -- I admire them greatly.
Why not hire a GM? Because it's expensive and even if one can afford the luxury of an extra layer of management (not likely), it requires having someone who can be implicitly trusted. After a few months of being open, could this possibly be someone you didn't know before you opened your doors? Doubtful. I wouldn't hand the keys to my mostly-cash business over to someone I'd known less than a year. Nor would I put my professional reputation in their hands.
A friend of mine owns a restaurant in Phoenix, which opened in July of 2008. He's had like 1 day off since he started. He's not going to take $35-$50k a year out of his investors' pockets to hire someone to be there, so he can take days off. That's just not how it's done at a single-unit, owner-operated restaurant. Maybe after a longer period of time, an employee will step up and prove that they are capable of running the place in his absence. Or not. But beyond that, Edzo's is
all about Eddie. It's his place, his vision, his food. As such, people want to see him when they come to the restaurant. He is part of what draws them there. He is a large part of what makes Edzo's a destination. By limiting his hours, he makes it far more likely that he will be there when customers come in.
Perhaps the 4:00 closing time will someday become problematic. But my hope is that Edzo's becomes the success it seems likely to become and that Eddie gets to be a part of his kids' lives while they grow up. Should wanting to own a restaurant mean you automatically have to sacrifice these things? It shouldn't have to. Nothing makes me happier than seeing someone doing what they love and setting their own parameters in doing it.
=R=
By protecting others, you save yourself. If you only think of yourself, you'll only destroy yourself. --Kambei Shimada
Every human interaction is an opportunity for disappointment --RS
There's a horse loose in a hospital --JM
That don't impress me much --Shania Twain