Opening Soon

Alan Li

Opening Soon is the podcast where we go behind the scenes with founders of brick-and-mortar businesses — from pilates studios to coffee shops, boutiques, medspas, and more.  Hosted by Alan Li, co-founder of FotoLab Studio and Signs and Mirrors, each episode explores how real entrepreneurs found their space, designed their store, hired their team, and built something from nothing. 

  1. 12/17/2025

    From Dishwasher to $6MM Dallas Restaurateur: The Unexpected Journey of Stephan Courseau

    Stephan Courseau is the founder of Travis Street Hospitality and some of Dallas’ most beloved French-inspired restaurants including Le Bilboquet Dallas, Knox Bistro and Georgie. Stephan arrived in New York City from Paris in 1987 with $500 and barely knowing english. He started as a dishwasher and talked his way into Le Bilboquet NYC and worked under legends like Jean-Georges Vongerichten.  In 2013 Stephan moved his family to Dallas to open a small 2,000 sq ft restaurant.  Within a few years, Le Bilboquet Dallas grew from a struggling in it’s first winter into a $6M+ annual business that helped establish Dallas as a serious dining city. Today, Stephan oversees a team of long-tenured operators and a hospitality group rooted in the philosophy that “the guest should always feel welcome, but the customer is not always right”. He breaks down how he rebuilt a failed opening, what most restaurateurs get wrong about service and how Dallas became the unlikely home for his success. Stephan also shares the unfiltered side of hospitality and how to survive long enough to get your one big break. In this episode, we talk about: Arriving in NYC with $500, no English and landing a dishwasher jobHow a chance encounter led him to Le Bilboquet and a career in fine diningWorking with Jean-Georges and learning the difference between good and world-class Leaving New York after 20 years and why Dallas became the right next chapterRaising under $1M to open Le Bilboquet Dallas and finding investors who cared about communitySurviving a disastrous first winter and rebuilding a restaurant “one guest at a time”Why “the customer is not always right” and how to uphold integrity without egoAdvice for future restaurateurs: start small, control everything, stay humbleIf you're dreaming about opening a restaurant or not sure where to begin with little to nothing, this episode is for you. Resources & Links Travis Street Hospitality Website: tshdallas.com Travis Street Hospitality Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/travisstreethospitality/?hl=en Sponsored by Signs and Mirrors, the leading sign and furniture shop for events and retail stores. Opening Soon Links & Resources → Signs and furniture for events and retail stores: https://signsandmirrors.com → NYC and Houston’s first self-portrait studio: https://fotolab.studio → Follow us on Instagram: @openingsoonpodcast → More episodes and guest info: https://www.openingsoonpodcast.com → Your Host Alan Li: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-li-711a8629/

    51 min
  2. 12/10/2025

    From Big Tech to a 19-Sq-Ft Photo Booth: Building Memento with Ireland McGill

    Ireland McGill is the founder of New York Memento, a triangular 19-square-foot photo booth in the West Village in New York City. Before launching Memento, Ireland grew up in a small town in southern Oklahoma. She moved to New York with no apartment lined up and built a career in big tech working with some of the world’s largest consumer brands. In late 2024, Ireland started asking the question: ‘Where does real connection fit in a world that’s always online?’ That question turned into the earliest version of Memento, a physical place where people could slow down, be present  and leave with something meaningful in their hands. Within weeks she found a 19-square-foot space on 7th Avenue and West 10th Street, signed a $4,750/month lease and decided to fund the project using her personal savings. The build took seven months that included winter wind tunnels and construction delays and custom camera setups. By June 2025, New York Memento officially opened its doors and almost immediately went viral through organic Instagram and TikTok posts created by customers. Within months, the booth had 100–300 visitors a day and was both breaking even financially and landing brand partnerships with companies like Rent the Runway and Café Arone. Ireland shares how she built a Momento without traditional marketing and how trusting her instinct on a tiny unconventional location became her biggest advantage. She also shares the mental, emotional and financial tolls with taking a risk at 25, working her full-time big tech job while starting her first business In this episode, we talk about: How an existential question sparked the idea for New York MementoFinding a 19-square-foot triangular space and signing a $4,750/month leasePlanning construction with Canva sketchesHow Memento went viral through organic social media contentBreaking even within months and welcoming 100–300 people on peak daysThe Rent the Runway partnershipBalancing a full-time tech job while starting a businessThe importance of an authentic and intentional spaceIf you’re in big tech and building something of your own or dreaming about taking that leap then this episode is for you. Resources & Links New York Memento Website: https://newyorkmemento.com/ New York Memento Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/newyorkmemento Ireland McGill Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ireland.mcgill/ Sponsored by Signs and Mirrors, the leading sign and furniture shop for events and retail stores. Opening Soon Links & Resources → Signs and furniture for events and retail stores: https://signsandmirrors.com → NYC and Houston’s first self-portrait studio: https://fotolab.studio → Follow us on Instagram: @openingsoonpodcast → More episodes and guest info: https://www.openingsoonpodcast.com → Your Host Alan Li: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-li-711a8629/

    48 min
  3. 12/03/2025

    Opening a $100K Fitness Studio in 6 Months - The Forte Vita Story with Marcella Giuffrida

    Marcella Giuffrida is the co-founder of Forte Vita, a heated, weighted workout studio in Brentwood, Los Angeles, and the founder of MGPR, a boutique PR and social media agency specializing in emerging lifestyle and wellness brands. Before opening Forte Vita, Marcella built her career in New York’s luxury fashion PR world, later returning to LA to represent wellness and lifestyle clients, one of which led her to creating monthly puppy yoga events that unexpectedly planted the seed for a fitness studio of her own. In early 2025, after struggling to find a studio she and her co-founder genuinely loved, Marcella spotted an opportunity: combine a luxury workout experience with the built-in community they had already cultivated. Within weeks, the two secured a hidden upstairs space above their favorite coffee shop, signed a $5,500/month lease, invested $100,000 of their own savings and began building Forte Vita from scratch. By October, just six months after the first spark of an idea, they opened their doors with a 20-person team, 5–6 classes a day, and a focus on elevated, stress-free fitness. In its first month, Forte Vita reached 30% class capacity, driven heavily by TikTok and a smart, scrappy PR approach. Marcella shares how she built a cohesive brand before opening, leveraged influencers and brand partnerships for zero-cost amenities, and designed a guest experience that feels calm, intentional and premium in contrast to traditional big-box fitness studios. Marcella breaks down the real costs and realities of launching a boutique fitness studio in LA, the operational challenges of the first 30 days and how to build a brick-and-mortar business that stands out in a saturated market, through authenticity, community and an eye for thoughtful details. In this episode, we talk about: How a puppy yoga event sparked the idea for a boutique fitness studioLaunching Forte Vita in 6 months with a $100K budgetBreaking down the numbers: $5,500 rent, 21-person max classes, 5–6 classes/dayHow TikTok became their #1 customer acquisition channelBuilding a luxury guest experience vs. the traditional fitness chaosWhen to do PR, when not to and how authenticity beats paid pressGrowing to 30% capacity in month one and the surprising class times that workIf you’ve ever thought about opening a fitness studio, creating a wellness brand or building a brick-and-mortar business with strong community and storytelling, this episode is packed with insight. Resources & Links Forte Vita Website: https://www.fortevita.co/ Forte Vita Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fortevita.co/ Marcella Giuffrida Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marcellagiuffrida/ Sponsored by Signs and Mirrors, the leading sign and furniture shop for events and retail stores. Opening Soon Links & Resources → Signs and furniture for events and retail stores: https://signsandmirrors.com → NYC and Houston’s first self-portrait studio: https://fotolab.studio → Follow us on Instagram: @openingsoonpodcast → More episodes and guest info: https://www.openingsoonpodcast.com → Your Host Alan Li: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-li-711a8629/

    48 min
  4. 11/19/2025

    How Brittney Wysong Built a Kids’ Art Studio While Working Full-Time

    Brittney Wysong is the founder of Artsy Studio, a 1,700-square-foot process-based art studio for kids in Trussville, Alabama. Before opening the studio, Brittney spent a decade in healthcare marketing and graphic design, balancing a full-time corporate role with raising two young kids. A single visit to an open art space with her toddler sparked the idea for Artsy, a place where kids could create freely without the limits of traditional classrooms or the distractions of home. Within months, Brittney found an older, character-filled building in the center of town, signed a two-year lease for $2,800 a month, and began transforming the space with hand-painting walls, building custom tables, and renovating late at night while working full-time and caring for a newborn. She tested the concept by tarping her garage, inviting 20 moms and their kids, and letting chaos and creativity run wild. The response confirmed the demand, and Artsy Studio officially opened in March 2025 to a packed, wall-to-wall grand opening crowd. Today, Artsy Studio hosts process-art classes, open studio hours, workshops, lessons, birthday parties, seasonal camps, and even at-home craft kits through its new “Artsy Anywhere” line. Brittney serves 100–125 unique kids a month while steadily growing the business, expanding offerings, and learning how to navigate seasonality, pricing, staffing, and the realities of year-one brick-and-mortar life. In this episode, Brittney breaks down how she launched a neighborhood creative space in under 90 days, why environment changes everything for kids' creativity, and what she’s learned transitioning from corporate marketer to full-time founder. We cover: • The lightbulb moment that inspired Artsy Studio • Testing the idea by turning her garage into a DIY mini-studio • Finding a below-market, character-rich space and negotiating the lease • How she funded the buildout with ~$30K in savings and family support • Her philosophy on environment-based creativity for kids • Why she hand-built most of the studio herself (and what she outsourced) • How process-art classes, open studio hours, and parties drive revenue • Seasonality, homeschool demand, and early business learnings • Going full-time on Artsy just two weeks ago • Trusting your gut as a founder and keeping some ideas close to the chest If you’ve ever dreamed of opening a kids’ space, launching a creative studio, or starting a community-centered retail concept while juggling work and family, this episode is a candid look at how one founder made it happen with speed, scrappiness, and a whole lot of paint. Resources & Links Artsy Studio Website: https://www.artsystudio.co Artsy Studio Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/artsybham Sponsored by Signs and Mirrors, the leading sign and furniture shop for events and retail stores. Opening Soon Links & Resources → Signs and furniture for events and retail stores: https://signsandmirrors.com → NYC and Houston’s first self-portrait studio: https://fotolab.studio → Follow us on Instagram: @openingsoonpodcast → More episodes and guest info: https://www.openingsoonpodcast.com → Your Host Alan Li: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-li-711a8629/

    52 min
  5. 11/12/2025

    $2,500/Month Rent & 300 Sq Ft: How Sam Saverance Built NYC’s First Sloppy Joe Diner

    Sam Saverance is the co-founder of Bunna Cafe in Bushwick and the creator of Farley’s Sloppy Joes in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn. Before opening restaurants, Sam worked as a freelance designer, spent time in finance, and began hosting food pop-ups, one of which evolved into Bunna Cafe, a beloved Ethiopian vegan restaurant that’s been a neighborhood fixture since 2011. In 2024, Sam launched Farley’s, a 300-square-foot diner-style concept dedicated entirely to the sloppy joe, America’s most nostalgic sandwich. Built for just $2,500 a month in rent, Farley’s runs a lean, efficient operation serving sloppy joes, chips, and sodas while keeping prices affordable and margins healthy. Over the past decade, Sam has seen the Brooklyn dining landscape transform, from the early days of Smorgasburg pop-ups to a post-COVID world where consumer habits, rent pressures, and oversaturation have changed the rules of running restaurants. Rather than chasing trends, Sam focuses on neighborhood-first growth, organic marketing, and owner presence, building goodwill the old-fashioned way, one customer at a time. In this episode, Sam breaks down how he opened Farley’s on a shoestring budget, what it takes to survive as a small operator in NYC today, and how to create a concept that feels fresh, fun, and deeply local. We cover: How Bunna Cafe went from pop-up to a Brooklyn institutionLetting the space shape the concept instead of forcing an ideaThe post-COVID reality of NYC dining and consumer behaviorOpening Farley’s for under $2,500/month rent with minimal buildoutHow to price affordably without killing marginsThe operational playbook: warmers over fryers, chips over friesNeighborhood-first growth and building goodwill as an assetCollaborating with local food makers and small brandsWhy Sloppy Joes might be the next big nostalgia food trendHow to test concepts through pop-ups before going permanentIf you’ve ever dreamed of turning a pop-up into a permanent restaurant, opening in a tiny footprint, or experimenting with low-cost, high-creativity food concepts, this episode is a refreshing, first-hand look at how to do it without losing your mind or your money. Resources & Links Farley's Sloppy Joes Website: https://www.farleysnyc.com/ Farley’s Sloppy Joes Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/farleyssloppyjoes Sponsored by Signs and Mirrors, the leading sign and furniture shop for events and retail stores. Opening Soon Links & Resources → Signs and furniture for events and retail stores: https://signsandmirrors.com → NYC and Houston’s first self-portrait studio: https://fotolab.studio → Follow us on Instagram: @openingsoonpodcast → More episodes and guest info: https://www.openingsoonpodcast.com → Your Host Alan Li: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-li-711a8629/

    45 min
  6. 10/29/2025

    How Benjamin Berg Built Houston’s $17M Steakhouse and a 14-Restaurant Empire

    Benjamin Berg is the founder and CEO of Berg Hospitality Group, the team behind B&B Butchers and more than a dozen restaurant concepts across Texas. Ben started out as a bellman at the Lake Placid Lodge, worked his way through fine dining in Las Vegas, Mexico City, and New York, earned his master’s at Cornell’s School of Hotel Administration, and spent over five years at Smith & Wollensky before striking out on his own. In 2015, Ben opened B&B Butchers in Houston with $1.7 million raised and no prior track record as an owner. His first-year revenue hit $9 million, eventually growing to $17 million annually with 28–30% profit margins. That success fueled the growth of Berg Hospitality Group, which now operates 14 restaurants and employs more than 1,400 people. Ben also shares his losses and mistakes. In 2023, Ben opened a modern Chinese concept he believed would take Houston by storm. Instead, it cost $5.5 million to build-out, had six-figure monthly losses, and closed within 14 months. In this episode, Ben breaks down what went wrong, the rules he broke, and how that failure reshaped his playbook for growth. We also dive into the real economics of steakhouses, why private dining drives profit, how he manages margins across concepts, and what it takes to scale a hospitality group without losing touch with the guest experience. We cover: How a bellman became a multi-concept restaurateurLessons from Cornell’s hospitality program and Smith & WollenskyOpening B&B Butchers with $1.7M and hitting $9M in year oneScaling to $17M and 28–30% margins on a single unitThe waterfall effect: how steakhouse economics really workHow Houston’s dining scene evolved and why local ownership mattersThe $5.5M failure why it happened and what he’d never do againHis rules for site selection: parking, access, visibilityWhy 12–14% margins are now considered excellent post-COVIDThe future of Berg Hospitality and why he’s focused on scaling fewer, better brandsIf you’ve ever dreamed of opening a steakhouse or building a hospitality group, this episode is a brutally honest masterclass in restaurant economics, site selection, and scaling smart without losing your shirt. Resources & Links Berg Hospitality Group: https://berghospitality.com B&B Butchers: https://bbbutchers.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/berghospitality Benjamin Berg: https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjamin-berg-5b180976/ Sponsored by Signs and Mirrors, the leading sign and furniture shop for events and retail stores. Opening Soon Links & Resources → Signs and furniture for events and retail stores: https://signsandmirrors.com → NYC and Houston’s first self-portrait studio: https://fotolab.studio → Follow us on Instagram: @openingsoonpodcast → More episodes and guest info: https://www.openingsoonpodcast.com → Your Host Alan Li: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-li-711a8629/

    43 min
  7. 10/22/2025

    $80k in 30 days: Arnold Byun’s Journey Building MAUM Markets

    Arnold Byun is the co-founder of Maum Market and Store.  After nearly a decade managing some of New York’s most acclaimed restaurants including Eleven Madison Park, Bouley, and Atomix, he found himself jobless during the pandemic, sitting in Los Angeles with no plan, no network, and plenty of time to think. What started as a $1,000 experiment with 10 folding tables and 22 Korean American friends selling ceramics, art, and baked goods would soon become MAUM, a growing platform for Asian-owned brands that now spans 70+ markets and three retail stores across New York, San Francisco, and Orange County. Arnold and his co-founder, Kioh Park, built MAUM as a modern hospitality company disguised as a market, one that curates not just products, but people and stories. They run every event themselves, hauling U-Hauls, setting up booths, and designing immersive, community-driven experiences that consistently draw thousands. Today, MAUM operates on a mix of consignment, pop-ups, and percentage-rent retail deals, rethinking what it means to grow a profitable, mission-driven brand without outside capital. In this episode, we unpack how Arnold turned a pandemic layoff into a thriving cultural business, why MAUM’s first 30-day pop-up did $80K in sales with no price tags, and what he’s learned running 70+ markets while raising a family. We also dive into how he negotiates landlord deals most brands can’t, why he believes e-commerce isn’t worth chasing, and what’s next as MAUM becomes a bridge for Asian brands entering the U.S. We cover: How a pandemic layoff sparked MAUM’s $1,000 origin storyLessons from managing Eleven Madison Park and AtomixWhy consignment and pop-ups beat traditional retail leasesTurning cultural storytelling into a business advantageNegotiating percentage-rent and semi-permanent store dealsRunning 70+ markets and working with 2,000+ Asian-owned brandsThe realities (and grind) behind “community-based” entrepreneurshipWhy Arnold says he wouldn’t do it again, but wouldn’t change a thingThe future of MAUM as a bridge for Asian → U.S. brand expansionIf you’ve ever wondered what it takes to build a community-driven retail brand from scratch, this episode is for you. Resources & Links MAUM Website: https://maum.market MAUM Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/maum.market MAUM Store Website: https://maum.store Arnold Byun LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/arnoldbyun/ Sponsored by Signs and Mirrors, the leading sign and furniture shop for events and retail stores. Opening Soon Links & Resources → Signs and furniture for events and retail stores: https://signsandmirrors.com → NYC and Houston’s first self-portrait studio: https://fotolab.studio → Follow us on Instagram: @openingsoonpodcast → More episodes and guest info: https://www.openingsoonpodcast.com → Your Host Alan Li: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-li-711a8629/

    50 min
  8. 10/15/2025

    From Cart to Canal Street: Selling $5K of Coffee a Day at Blue Dove with Amadeo Falce

    Amadeo Falce is the founder of Blue Dove Coffee, a viral coffee brand that started as a cart in Union Square and has since expanded to a brick-and-mortar café on Canal Street. A former Army paramedic turned entrepreneur, Amadeo started Blue Dove Coffee in September 2023 with a welded cart, a disabled-veteran permit, and a relentless work ethic that had him waking up at 2:30 a.m. and getting home at 9 p.m. seven days a week for 6 months straight. In less than a year, his viral “day-in-the-life” videos racked up millions of views, doubling sales and bringing customers from all over the world to his Union Square cart. That momentum led to the opening of Blue Dove’s first brick-and-mortar café at 307 Canal Street in Lower Manhattan, a sleek, Italian-inspired coffee shop built with grit, vision, and a few hundred thousand dollars of self-taught mistakes (his “$75K tuition”). In this episode, we dive into how Amadeo went from roofing to roasting, scaled from a single cart to a storefront, and built a premium coffee brand from the ground up, all without outside capital or prior experience in hospitality. He shares the hard truths about permits, buildouts, content strategy, and what it really takes to go from the street to Soho. We cover: How a disabled-veteran permit unlocked his entry into NYC vendingThe 2:30 a.m. grind that built Blue Dove’s foundationTurning viral TikToks into real-world revenueWhy he calls $75K in mistakes “tuition”Coffee Cart economics: from $1K/day to $2.5K/dayCoffee Store economics: from $2k/day to $6k/dayOpening Canal Street for $8.5K/month rent and a few hundred thousand buildoutHow to choose the right espresso machine (and the ones that fail fast)Expanding to Chelsea and beyond through data and demandWhy he plans to sell Blue Dove within 3–5 years and return to solarThe mindset shift from soldier to CEO to storytellerIf you've ever dreamed of running your own coffee cart or coffee shop, this is a must listen to hear what it takes to build a successful coffee business. Resources & Links Blue Dove Coffee: https://www.bluedovecoffee.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bluedovecoffee TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@bluedovecoffee Amadeo Falce: https://www.instagram.com/amadeofalce Sponsored by Signs and Mirrors, the leading sign and furniture shop for events and retail stores. Opening Soon Links & Resources → Signs and furniture for events and retail stores: https://signsandmirrors.com → NYC and Houston’s first self-portrait studio: https://fotolab.studio → Follow us on Instagram: @openingsoonpodcast → More episodes and guest info: https://www.openingsoonpodcast.com → Your Host Alan Li: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alan-li-711a8629/

    54 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Opening Soon is the podcast where we go behind the scenes with founders of brick-and-mortar businesses — from pilates studios to coffee shops, boutiques, medspas, and more.  Hosted by Alan Li, co-founder of FotoLab Studio and Signs and Mirrors, each episode explores how real entrepreneurs found their space, designed their store, hired their team, and built something from nothing. 

You Might Also Like