A popular San Francisco coffee shop that raised $75 million could be the next Blue Bottle
Philz Coffee is the unofficial beverage of Silicon Valley.
According to Phil, Google, Twitter, Apple, and LinkedIn employees buy the beans wholesale for their offices. Facebook has a standalone location at its Menlo Park campus.
Facebook employees are currently beta-testing an order-ahead mobile app made by a team of engineers at Philz's headquarters in San Francisco's Dogpatch neighborhood.
The app will launch nationwide sometime in 2018.
The venture-backed coffee chain started from humble beginnings. Phil, who was born in Palestine and grew up in the Bay Area, ran a corner bodega in a gritty neighborhood.
He saw a business opportunity in coffee and started experimenting with different beans and brew methods. In 2002, Phil brought a dining table from home and set up a cafe in the store.
Today, the original Philz location on 24th Street still looks like someone's grandma's house.
Couches sink like they've been lived in, and floor-to-ceiling murals spark creativity.
Philz has always been a family business. His son, Jacob, stood on milk crates working the cash register when he was 10 years old. He dropped out of college and became CEO at 18.
Jacob likens the coffee table to the original social network. "Coffee is a very powerful medium for people to connect every day," Jacob, 30, told Business Insider.
Source: Inc.
Unlike coffee chains that offer only light, medium, and dark roasts, Philz boasts more than 20 vibrant blends with names like Canopy of Heaven, Philharmonic, and Sooo Good.
You won't find any lattes or over-the-top blended drinks — like you might find at Starbucks — on the menu. But flavor descriptions like "cardamom, maple, earth" or "toast, berry, vanilla" have customers drooling.
Baristas brew one cup at a time using a pour-over method, which allows them to make each drink exactly how the customer likes it. (Blue Bottle also uses a pour-over method.)
Two to three minutes later, a barista calls the customer by name and invites them to take a sip. Baristas say they're happy to remake the drink until the guest is 100% satisfied.
Tesora, a blend that took Phil seven years to perfect, is a full-bodied roast that tastes of nuts, butter, and caramel. Baristas recommend it "Phil's way" with cream and sugar.
A bundle of mint sits on the counter, and the barista plucks three leaves for every cup of the Philharmonic, a house-favorite blend. The floral brew gets an extra kick from cardamom.
Jacob's Wonderbar, a dark-roast blend that Phil named for his son, is poured from a dramatic height. The stream aerates the coffee and opens up the chocolaty flavor.
According to a Philz employee, the secret ingredient in every cup is "love."
At Philz University, employees learn the brew method and participate in optional training on leadership, business, and design. Many baristas have gone on to fill startup roles at Philz.
The company aims to have more than 50 locations across four major metropolitan markets by early next year. There are shops in Colorado and Boston in the pipeline.
Philz also has a wholesale business. You can find its coffee in select Whole Foods.
Expansion could threaten the brand's ability to make each store feel familiar, without being a cookie-cutter coffee shop. Jacob said he is intent on "doing something different."
"You can't be great at a lot of things," Jacob said. But with scale, he will cling tightly to the company's mission to put people — both its employees and customers — above business.
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