Speaker:

- There's a story inside every smoke shop

Speaker:

with every cigar, and with every person,

Speaker:

come be a part of the cigar lifestyle at Boveda.

Speaker:

This is Box Press.

Speaker:

(upbeat music)

Speaker:

Welcome to another episode of Box Press.

Speaker:

I'm your host, Rob Gagner.

Speaker:

I'm at the PCA 2022 show,

Speaker:

and I'm sitting down with Desiree Sylver

Speaker:

from Drunk Chicken Cigars.

Speaker:

Desiree, thank you for joining me.

Speaker:

- Ah, thank you for having me. - Your brand

Speaker:

caught me off guard.

Speaker:

I was following somebody who was smoking a lot of cigars,

Speaker:

and I saw this band, it was actually the Maduro,

Speaker:

which is blue and it has silver and it has a chicken on it,

Speaker:

and I said, "Who would put a chicken on a cigar band?"

Speaker:

(Desiree laughing)

Speaker:

And then on top of it, what's the name of this?

Speaker:

So I quick, you know, Chicken Cigar, Googled,

Speaker:

I don't have, you know, I don't know what it is.

Speaker:

Drunk Chicken came up.

Speaker:

I was like, "Oh my gosh, what kind of like creative mind

Speaker:

(Desiree laughs)

Speaker:

decided to go down this rabbit hole

Speaker:

of naming all the cigars after chickens?

Speaker:

Where did the name even start as an idea?"

Speaker:

- So, I love chickens. (chuckles) I have chickens as pets.

Speaker:

- [Rob] Okay.

Speaker:

- And so I live in the Washington DC area,

Speaker:

only about seven miles out.

Speaker:

And my friends come over, and they see all my chickens,

Speaker:

and "Are you crazy girl?

Speaker:

What are you doing?" - How many chickens

Speaker:

do you have?

Speaker:

- On a good day, 30.

Speaker:

Right now, we're probably about 25.

Speaker:

We have animals that come and take them

Speaker:

because we free range our chickens.

Speaker:

- Awesome. - Yeah, so.

Speaker:

- I mean, not that they come and take them,

Speaker:

but they're free range, right? - Yeah, they're free range.

Speaker:

- Do whatever they want. - They're free, yeah.

Speaker:

And then at night we lock them up,

Speaker:

and at six or seven o'clock in the morning,

Speaker:

whenever I wake up, I let them out,

Speaker:

and they go right back when it gets dusk, and I lock it, so.

Speaker:

But sometimes prey get them. So, we're about 25 right now.

Speaker:

And we named them all. (chuckles)

Speaker:

- [Rob] Yeah.

Speaker:

- And, I mean, I love chicken.

Speaker:

I grew up...

Speaker:

Every summer, my mom's from Jamaica, threw me out there.

Speaker:

Go hang out in the chicken farm and the cow farm

Speaker:

and the goat farm, running around barefooted out there.

Speaker:

- [Rob] So you're a farm girl?

Speaker:

- I wouldn't necessarily say that,

Speaker:

but I think that I love that

Speaker:

more than anything in life, the animals.

Speaker:

They don't talk back. (chuckles)

Speaker:

- You're connected to animals.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] I am.

Speaker:

- My wife is connected to animals as well.

Speaker:

Like that actually is energizing to her.

Speaker:

She always said, "I always have to have a cat or a dog."

Speaker:

Like that's just,

Speaker:

"Before you decide to marry me, that's a stipulation."

Speaker:

And that's just good to know, right?

Speaker:

Because that energizes her. That calms her down.

Speaker:

So it sounds like your chicken hobby

Speaker:

has really just been a passion project from day one.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yes, yes.

Speaker:

- And now, do you do anything special with the chickens

Speaker:

other than raise them?

Speaker:

Because some people bring them to shows and all that,

Speaker:

the state fair and all that?

Speaker:

- No, I just want them to live a good life.

Speaker:

We do collect the eggs.

Speaker:

I love to buy chickens based on the color of the eggs

Speaker:

that they lay.

Speaker:

Blue eggs, green eggs, pink eggs.

Speaker:

- Pink?!

Speaker:

- Pink, yes. I get a lot of pink eggs.

Speaker:

- Interesting.

Speaker:

- I only have-

Speaker:

- You're talking about the shell, right?

Speaker:

- Yes, the shell.

Speaker:

- Not the yolk, right? - Yeah, just the...

Speaker:

- They all the same inside. Just like hair color almost.

Speaker:

I have some ducks,

Speaker:

was trying to get a goat before COVID happened,

Speaker:

and then when COVID happened,

Speaker:

the lady that was selling me the goat said,

Speaker:

"No, we look like we may have a food shortage.

Speaker:

I'm gonna keep my goat," so I didn't get one.

Speaker:

I had a couple dogs,

Speaker:

one passed away. - Why did you want a goat?

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Huh?

Speaker:

- Why did you want a goat?

Speaker:

- Oh, I just like animals.

Speaker:

- You just like animals?

Speaker:

- Yeah! - It wasn't like,

Speaker:

you know, sometimes people are like,

Speaker:

"I need the goat to kind of eat the grass

Speaker:

or to eat this." - No.

Speaker:

No, I just wanted the goat to hang out.

Speaker:

- Cool.

Speaker:

- I think they're cool.

Speaker:

Some of the goats are fainting goats.

Speaker:

I wanted a fainting goat

Speaker:

that you scare them me. - Yeah. (chuckles)

Speaker:

They go like.

Speaker:

- They fall over. - Yeah. (laughs)

Speaker:

- Oh, that's great.

Speaker:

- But, yeah, I just like animals.

Speaker:

They're free. They're, you know, no judgment.

Speaker:

They hang out with you, you pet them. They cuddle with you.

Speaker:

What's better in life?

Speaker:

- [Rob] Right. So, do you have dogs, cats in the house?

Speaker:

- Dogs.

Speaker:

Well, my dog passed away

Speaker:

recently. - Oh, I'm sorry to hear that.

Speaker:

- Yeah, I had that little guy for a long time.

Speaker:

But we are in the process of considering moving,

Speaker:

so we are not buying any new animals right now

Speaker:

until we decide where are we gonna move,

Speaker:

what are we gonna do?

Speaker:

- I wouldn't have thought of that.

Speaker:

But that's like a whole new moving process

Speaker:

because now you have livestock to move.

Speaker:

It's not just furniture and a U-Haul.

Speaker:

It's furniture, U-Haul,

Speaker:

and a livestock truck. - My chickens.

Speaker:

- Yeah, right. (Desiree laughing)

Speaker:

- Yeah. - That's amazing.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so, but as soon as we decide, like, "Are we staying?

Speaker:

Are we moving?" how long we're going,

Speaker:

whatever we're gonna do,

Speaker:

we're just trying to think about our second phase in life.

Speaker:

And a lot of the second phase in life

Speaker:

is because of the cigars right now.

Speaker:

- Really?!

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yeah.

Speaker:

- So you're thinking of moving out of state or in state?

Speaker:

- Out of state. More so Florida, closer to our rollers.

Speaker:

My husband recently retired, so he can move wherever.

Speaker:

I work remote, I can go wherever.

Speaker:

So we're just trying, you know,

Speaker:

figure out our second stage of life right now.

Speaker:

- That's awesome!

Speaker:

- Yeah. And the kids are grown.

Speaker:

- Really? How old are your kids?

Speaker:

- 19 And 17.

Speaker:

The 17-year-old graduates from high school

Speaker:

and gets a AA this year.

Speaker:

- 17, graduating from high school?

Speaker:

- And getting her AA at the same time.

Speaker:

- Smart kid!

Speaker:

- And my 19-year-old did the same thing

Speaker:

when she graduated, so. - Wow!

Speaker:

Okay, so that's like the total opposite

Speaker:

of what technically the culture's doing right now.

Speaker:

Like I feel like most people who are younger

Speaker:

are going through high school

Speaker:

and then onto college or some sort of secondary

Speaker:

and then onto like experiencing their young adult life

Speaker:

and then like slowing down in their 30s to get married.

Speaker:

And then not having kids until they're in their 30s.

Speaker:

And it's like your kids are on the total opposite spectrum

Speaker:

of this like accelerated through school and onto the next.

Speaker:

- Well, they have a mom with a PhD who's,

Speaker:

I used to be a professor as well. (chuckles)

Speaker:

- Really?! - Yeah.

Speaker:

- A professor of what?

Speaker:

- I used to teach at University of Maryland

Speaker:

UMUC, Strayer University.

Speaker:

And I taught any contracting class, any business class,

Speaker:

any finance class.

Speaker:

- Wow. - Yeah,

Speaker:

so I have a Masters of Finance,

Speaker:

a PhD in Organizational Leadership,

Speaker:

a business PhD. - That's awesome.

Speaker:

So, did you homeschool your kids?

Speaker:

Is that why they're on the fast track?

Speaker:

Or like, just happens?

Speaker:

- I didn't homeschool, but education's very important.

Speaker:

So if they wanna do extracurricular activities,

Speaker:

homework came first.

Speaker:

And then mommy homework, they always had mommy homework.

Speaker:

(Rob laughing)

Speaker:

I always bought workbooks, three to four grades advanced.

Speaker:

So I sat down, I taught them.

Speaker:

They knew how to spell their name before they were two,

Speaker:

both of them.

Speaker:

- [Rob] Wow!

Speaker:

- And, to me, it's very important

Speaker:

to sit down with your kids,

Speaker:

figure out where they are in their learning process

Speaker:

and teach them at their pace.

Speaker:

- That is so true because I'm experiencing that

Speaker:

with my small family.

Speaker:

I have a one-and-a half-year-old daughter,

Speaker:

and I just had a son who's three weeks old,

Speaker:

and my daughter was like, sign language, and she's talking.

Speaker:

And it's like, I gotta keep feeding that need to like-

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Get workbooks.

Speaker:

- [Rob] Right.

Speaker:

- And they love it when they're writing and crayoning.

Speaker:

And even if they don't understand it,

Speaker:

just have it in front of them

Speaker:

and then sit down for two seconds

Speaker:

and just go through it with them,

Speaker:

and you'll be surprised how much they pick up.

Speaker:

- That's good advice.

Speaker:

The time spent with the child during that development stage

Speaker:

is so important to their development.

Speaker:

- Yeah. And teaching them their name.

Speaker:

Find a song that they love and sing it with their name.

Speaker:

- We got the "Wheels on the Bus." She'll do that.

Speaker:

She'll do the "Wheels on the Bus" every once in a while.

Speaker:

- Yeah, mine was

Speaker:

♪ S, Y, D, N, E, Y ♪

Speaker:

♪ F, O, U, S, E ♪

Speaker:

(Desiree laughing)

Speaker:

- That's an advanced one. - Yeah, so that's how

Speaker:

I taught her how to spell her name.

Speaker:

So when she went to school, she knew how to spell her name.

Speaker:

She knew her first and her last name.

Speaker:

- [Rob] That is awesome!

Speaker:

- She sang it, but she couldn't do it without singing it,

Speaker:

but she develops it.

Speaker:

So teach them where they are.

Speaker:

- I don't know the word for it,

Speaker:

but when you use a song or something

Speaker:

to help you spell something, there's a term for it.

Speaker:

But that's brilliant.

Speaker:

- Help you spell, help you learn. Do crazy sayings.

Speaker:

When I was teaching kids in college,

Speaker:

"Okay, you can't remember this?"

Speaker:

Come up with the craziest saying

Speaker:

and one letter for each thing

Speaker:

that you're trying- - Yeah, some sort of-

Speaker:

- to remember. - acronym and a phrase.

Speaker:

- It helps.

Speaker:

- Yeah, it does.

Speaker:

- Yeah, I'm that kooky person that believes in education,

Speaker:

believes in bettering yourself.

Speaker:

And education does not necessarily equate to college.

Speaker:

- Right. No, yeah, exactly.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so I never forced my kids to go to college.

Speaker:

I forced them to learn.

Speaker:

- That's smart.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yeah.

Speaker:

- There's a difference there.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

And if they want to go to college,

Speaker:

what are you going to college for?

Speaker:

Figure that out.

Speaker:

And what is it that you're trying to do?

Speaker:

And do you need a degree for that? If so, how long?

Speaker:

- Right. - Yeah.

Speaker:

- That's awesome. Your kids are, they're gonna be set.

Speaker:

They got you guiding them.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] They're amazing kids. I love them.

Speaker:

- I love that.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yeah.

Speaker:

- So, okay, (Desiree laughs)

Speaker:

I didn't even know all the professor stuff.

Speaker:

(Desiree laughs)

Speaker:

So, what made you switch over to this cigar stuff?

Speaker:

- I haven't switched, I just add it in into my life.

Speaker:

- So, you're still a professor?

Speaker:

- I will tell you, I'm taking more of a hiatus.

Speaker:

So, but if I ever wanna be a professor, it is always there.

Speaker:

- Okay, so do you have a full-time job right now?

Speaker:

- I do.

Speaker:

- What is it in?

Speaker:

(Desiree giggles)

Speaker:

- I'm the program manager

Speaker:

for the exchanges at NASA.

Speaker:

- NASA?! I love it!

Speaker:

- Yeah, I never tell anybody that.

Speaker:

So it's really - Really?!

Speaker:

- one of the first times I ever told anybody.

Speaker:

- Do you not want anyone to know about that?

Speaker:

- It's not that.

Speaker:

It's just that always people go, "NASA?"

Speaker:

and they go...

Speaker:

Omar is at NASA.

Speaker:

- Oh, yeah. - And, yes,

Speaker:

so it's just a coincidence

Speaker:

because I didn't even know Omar

Speaker:

when he was at NASA. - Yeah, you don't wanna steal

Speaker:

his thunder.

Speaker:

- No, because that's what he does.

Speaker:

That's how he's advertised.

Speaker:

You know, and I don't want- - Yeah, that's not your story,

Speaker:

right? - Right.

Speaker:

- Okay. - Yeah, so.

Speaker:

But I think Omar does amazing things,

Speaker:

and so I don't wanna steal that away from what he's doing.

Speaker:

- Well, that's really humble of you to say,

Speaker:

so I appreciate that.

Speaker:

That's super nice,

Speaker:

because we are all here based on our own journey.

Speaker:

You're here based on your own journey.

Speaker:

And so, you're absolutely right.

Speaker:

You don't wanna mimic anyone to try to take their story away

Speaker:

and make it less.

Speaker:

- Right. And Omar does amazing things.

Speaker:

He has amazing cigars. And that's his thing, so.

Speaker:

- He actually came to Minnesota and visited me,

Speaker:

and I had a ball hanging out with him.

Speaker:

He's a blast. He knows how to have a good time.

Speaker:

He's a great guy. - Yes, he does.

Speaker:

- But on your side of things,

Speaker:

you decided to launch Drunk Chicken Cigars.

Speaker:

Why? What's the why?

Speaker:

Like what makes somebody wanna just say,

Speaker:

"I wanna make my own cigar?"

Speaker:

- They're crazy.

Speaker:

(both laughing)

Speaker:

- [Rob] It's not easy.

Speaker:

- No, it's not easy.

Speaker:

And I didn't expect to, didn't want to, was never my goal.

Speaker:

Rico, which is my husband,

Speaker:

we decided to make cigars for ourselves

Speaker:

because we both smoke cigars.

Speaker:

And our running joke was, "All right, well,

Speaker:

we can only afford one of us smoking today,

Speaker:

so which one gets to smoke?"

Speaker:

Because we were both smoking cigars.

Speaker:

And cigars can be an expensive habit

Speaker:

when I'm smoking two or three,

Speaker:

he's smoking two or three or four,

Speaker:

or whatever it is that day.

Speaker:

And so that was our joke.

Speaker:

And when we stumbled into,

Speaker:

ran upon the rollers that we work with today,

Speaker:

they were so amazing.

Speaker:

Oh, we can make anything you want.

Speaker:

We were just making a cigar that we liked,

Speaker:

that we could enjoy, there were a variety of them.

Speaker:

And we bought a....

Speaker:

We blended these five with the rollers based on,

Speaker:

he likes the DCO.

Speaker:

It was number one.

Speaker:

The Mother Clucker was great with red wine.

Speaker:

That was number two. Number three was the Fat Hen.

Speaker:

It was like that shorty Nub.

Speaker:

I wanted to smoke it at work 45 minutes.

Speaker:

Number three was Living the Dream because that's like,

Speaker:

it's so smooth, it's so easy, I can smoke it anytime.

Speaker:

And Sweet Dreams was my morning or afternoon delight.

Speaker:

- That's what we're smoking now, Sweet Dream.

Speaker:

- Exactly.

Speaker:

So that's why, and we ordered 100 of them,

Speaker:

and we numbered them one, two, three, four, five,

Speaker:

so we know how to buy them again.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

So you're literally just building out a portfolio

Speaker:

for you to smoke on a regular basis

Speaker:

that wasn't gonna break the bank.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Right.

Speaker:

- Brilliant.

Speaker:

- And when we started going to lounges, our friends were,

Speaker:

"What are you smokin'? What's that number one?"

Speaker:

"Oh, just some cigars we made, here have one."

Speaker:

"Oh, I love this cigar. You should sell it."

Speaker:

And we heard it so much that we started investigating.

Speaker:

We went to our so our lounge-

Speaker:

- You're just answering kind of like, not really the demand,

Speaker:

but like the natural occurrence of people being like,

Speaker:

"Oh, this was good. Where can I get it again?"

Speaker:

- Exactly. "I want one of those, sell me one."

Speaker:

"Sell you one? We made 100. (chuckles)

Speaker:

I mean, here have it."

Speaker:

- I don't have any to sell.

Speaker:

This is my inventory for the month.

Speaker:

- Yes, so we went to our local lounge and said,

Speaker:

"Hey, could you sell this?"

Speaker:

They smoked it and said, "Yeah, we love it,

Speaker:

but what is this band?" - That's powerful right there.

Speaker:

So if you give it to a lounge owner, they smoke it,

Speaker:

and they think it's good enough to go on the shelf.

Speaker:

I mean it's hard to get shelf space.

Speaker:

- Yeah, but we didn't take one lounge owner.

Speaker:

Our friend's lounge owner,

Speaker:

I actually traveled for my job and was in Alabama

Speaker:

and didn't know this lounge owner from anybody else.

Speaker:

And I gave him a cigar.

Speaker:

I said, "I'm thinking about selling these,

Speaker:

what do you think?"

Speaker:

And he absolutely loved it.

Speaker:

He said, "I'll buy them, just you have to change the band."

Speaker:

So I heard the same thing again,

Speaker:

"Love it, but change the band."

Speaker:

- So, what was the band?

Speaker:

- Number one on a white piece of paper.

Speaker:

- Oh, yeah, so super like-

Speaker:

- Super, just so I know what I was smoking.

Speaker:

- Identify this, but there's no formality-

Speaker:

- Nothing.

Speaker:

- to the band.

Speaker:

- Nothing.

Speaker:

White piece of paper with a piece of tape on it

Speaker:

with a number one.

Speaker:

(both laughing)

Speaker:

- Yeah, you need to change the band if I'm gonna sell this,

Speaker:

or it's gonna go on the shelf unbanded.

Speaker:

- Right. So, looked into what the bands would cost.

Speaker:

Boom, bam, here I am. (chuckles)

Speaker:

- Isn't that so cool?

Speaker:

- It is.

Speaker:

But, I mean, if I would've put more thought into it,

Speaker:

because I took it as a hobby at first.

Speaker:

- [Rob] Right.

Speaker:

- And I went from a hobby into a full-blown business

Speaker:

that the two people that said that they would buy,

Speaker:

absolutely bought.

Speaker:

Flew to St. Thomas.

Speaker:

That same next day flew to St. Thomas

Speaker:

after I delivered the two,

Speaker:

got my third order in St. Thomas

Speaker:

and been rolling ever since.

Speaker:

And never put us a real business structure together.

Speaker:

- [Rob] What's hard about that?

Speaker:

- Now that I'm in full production,

Speaker:

trying to go back with ambassadors,

Speaker:

business structure together, thinking of it as a business

Speaker:

and getting people to change as you change.

Speaker:

And change, people don't like change.

Speaker:

Yeah, and then it's a lot,

Speaker:

it's hard when you don't have that structure

Speaker:

already in place.

Speaker:

Getting my bookkeeper, when I first got them on board,

Speaker:

he was just like, "What is this?"

Speaker:

(Rob chuckles)

Speaker:

- Wait, you have a degree in finance.

Speaker:

You taught finance, right?

Speaker:

- People that do hair always have the worst hair.

Speaker:

People that do nails have the worst (chuckles) nails.

Speaker:

People that know that...

Speaker:

But a lot of bookkeepers tell they have the worst book,

Speaker:

the worst tax situation.

Speaker:

Because when you do it yourself,

Speaker:

you don't wanna do it for yourself.

Speaker:

- Right.

Speaker:

Yeah, it's not like something that fulfills you.

Speaker:

You're like, "Okay, I gotta do the..."

Speaker:

It's like work.

Speaker:

I gotta work! - Right, it's your work, yeah.

Speaker:

And then on top of that, I remember I was selling by myself.

Speaker:

I was shipping, I was packaging, I was marketing,

Speaker:

I was, you know, on and on and on,

Speaker:

and by the time it got down to structure and finance,

Speaker:

it was just like, it'll get there eventually.

Speaker:

- Wow. - To catch up.

Speaker:

- So total opposite

Speaker:

of what all the business books teach us to do.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Not even a business plan.

Speaker:

- Yeah! - Whose playing what?

Speaker:

- You didn't even have a business plan.

Speaker:

(Desiree laughing)

Speaker:

It was,

Speaker:

"Do you like this cigar? - Still don't.

Speaker:

- Could you sell it?" (Desiree laughing)

Speaker:

"Okay, I guess." That's interesting.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yeah.

Speaker:

- Wow.

Speaker:

- Business plan up here.

Speaker:

- So you're backing up (Desiree chuckling)

Speaker:

trying to take a bigger look at everything

Speaker:

and cleaning up the rough edges

Speaker:

of your entire hobby/business now.

Speaker:

- Yes. And it's been a big undertaking.

Speaker:

As of November last year,

Speaker:

that's all I've been really focusing on

Speaker:

because I have a great sales team,

Speaker:

"And you guys sell, I have a distributor,

Speaker:

you guys ship and receive,

Speaker:

and let me put the structure together."

Speaker:

And it's not easy.

Speaker:

- No,

Speaker:

- Because now You've gotta- - It's not easy.

Speaker:

- put on that like project manager/business

Speaker:

entrepreneurial hat.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yes.

Speaker:

- And stretch your brain in your mind.

Speaker:

So, what is the biggest thing right now

Speaker:

that you're stretching to learn

Speaker:

so that you can keep up with the growth of your business?

Speaker:

- So I look at my business and not where I am now,

Speaker:

about where I want to go.

Speaker:

So now it is always not current thought, it's future thought

Speaker:

and trying to make sure that I have accounted for that

Speaker:

with whatever structure I put in place.

Speaker:

- Sure.

Speaker:

So really what you're stretching yourself to do is pre-plan.

Speaker:

- Yes.

Speaker:

- Pre-plan what I wanna be in in the next...

Speaker:

And how far out are you looking? A year?

Speaker:

Two years?

Speaker:

- No, no, no.

Speaker:

I have 1-year, 5-year, 10-year,

Speaker:

20-year, and a 30-year plan.

Speaker:

- Sweet!

Speaker:

- Because I'm always- - So you're building out

Speaker:

that business plan as you go.

Speaker:

- Yes.

Speaker:

- Smart. - And I hope

Speaker:

that one of my kids, or if not both,

Speaker:

decide that they want to take over.

Speaker:

I have two girls, but both of them know every cigar,

Speaker:

every vitola.

Speaker:

Both of them know all the blends

Speaker:

because when I had shipping and receiving,

Speaker:

guess who was doing it? (laughing)

Speaker:

I would give them an invoice and say,

Speaker:

"Go package it up and ship it."

Speaker:

- It's a family business.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yeah.

Speaker:

- Do they enjoy it, or is it more of like,

Speaker:

"Oh, mom is sucking us in to her passion, and gosh,

Speaker:

when she asks us, 'Are you done with your homework?'

Speaker:

You're like, 'Ah, I don't know if I wanna tell you

Speaker:

if I'm done with my homework.'"

Speaker:

- That's my youngest. (chuckles)

Speaker:

- Yeah, really?

Speaker:

- It's a chore. She doesn't like the chores.

Speaker:

My oldest is like, "Okay."

Speaker:

Because I do give them payment, just like any other job.

Speaker:

I pay them. - Right.

Speaker:

Compensation. - Yeah, but my oldest

Speaker:

is like, roll up her sleeve, she's into it.

Speaker:

She asks me lots of questions.

Speaker:

- She sees the reward. - Have you thought about it?

Speaker:

Yeah. And I can see her taking over.

Speaker:

And, actually, um

Speaker:

I think that my youngest eventually will come around.

Speaker:

If she does, she does. If she doesn't, that's okay.

Speaker:

She has her own life. - No big deal, right?

Speaker:

- Yeah. - Yeah.

Speaker:

- You appreciate the help now.

Speaker:

- Yep.

Speaker:

- And she probably appreciates the money. (chuckles)

Speaker:

- Um, that, and I do...

Speaker:

It's value and hard work.

Speaker:

There's value in that because she's not gonna get,

Speaker:

no one's gonna get anything easy.

Speaker:

And I want that they see what I do,

Speaker:

they see how much effort I put into it.

Speaker:

So whatever they say, they not gonna say,

Speaker:

"Oh, my mom didn't show me how much work it's gonna be

Speaker:

when they get out there," because I did.

Speaker:

- You know what I think is funny, is like,

Speaker:

if you take the aspect of hard work,

Speaker:

it's hard work to get something,

Speaker:

you have to work hard for it to get the return,

Speaker:

I think it's also hard work to basically be lazy

Speaker:

or to try to get a handout.

Speaker:

If you actually took that energy that it would take

Speaker:

to try to make ends meet, or to try to just not,

Speaker:

to try to coast,

Speaker:

you would actually be doing something more productive.

Speaker:

- Absolutely.

Speaker:

- You know?

Speaker:

- Yes. - So no matter what it is,

Speaker:

it's hard work.

Speaker:

No matter what, as people, we want to work,

Speaker:

we wanna produce something.

Speaker:

- Actually, even I take that a step further

Speaker:

because if you're asking me, "Well, how did you do that?"

Speaker:

Well, I can tell you how,

Speaker:

and it's probably gonna stick in your brain

Speaker:

for about two minutes.

Speaker:

But if you go research how,

Speaker:

it's gonna stick in your brain a lot more

Speaker:

because you found more value in it, you've found more

Speaker:

than what I probably could tell you about it.

Speaker:

- Yeah, and then if you do it,

Speaker:

it's even more stuck in your brain

Speaker:

because it's like, "Now I have to do it."

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yes.

Speaker:

- That's the way I always had to study.

Speaker:

It was like I had to get a partner sometimes,

Speaker:

and then I had to be like,

Speaker:

"Okay, this is this, and this is why it's this way,

Speaker:

and this is what this means."

Speaker:

Because then it was like,

Speaker:

"Oh, I'm teaching myself while I speak it out to you."

Speaker:

- Now you know why I love to teach, because as I teach,

Speaker:

I grow and learn because before I can stand up there,

Speaker:

I have to understand it.

Speaker:

I have to grow it, I have to know it.

Speaker:

And so when people ask me the question,

Speaker:

I'm able to answer it.

Speaker:

And I really don't have a problem with,

Speaker:

"You know what, it's a great question.

Speaker:

I don't know. Let's all look it up together."

Speaker:

- Right.

Speaker:

- Anybody here know?

Speaker:

- Start the journey. - Okay, yeah.

Speaker:

(Rob chuckles)

Speaker:

- Start the journey.

Speaker:

Learning is so amazing to me.

Speaker:

- Okay, so people who are passionate about learning,

Speaker:

what's the Desiree rule book?

Speaker:

Where are you starting to help you learn better?

Speaker:

- For me, I'm an early morning person,

Speaker:

so you have to actually know yourself, right?

Speaker:

If you're an early morning person like myself, you get up,

Speaker:

have your cup of coffee, and I've already,

Speaker:

by the end of the day, this is what I'm gonna do tomorrow.

Speaker:

So I'm looking what my yesterday told me I'm gonna do today.

Speaker:

- You're planning for tomorrow already.

Speaker:

- Every day.

Speaker:

- That's interesting.

Speaker:

- Every day.

Speaker:

- That's cool. - So before I go to bed,

Speaker:

I have a list of things that I didn't get accomplished.

Speaker:

- A list?! - Yeah.

Speaker:

- A written out list.

Speaker:

How many things would end up on the list?

Speaker:

Is it like a five-point list? Does it depend on the day?

Speaker:

- Sometimes it's a...

Speaker:

So, in the beginning of the month,

Speaker:

I'll start with a growing list.

Speaker:

It just grows.

Speaker:

Every day I try to list out five things I want,

Speaker:

5 or 10 things I wanna accomplish,

Speaker:

or whatever I feel like is accomplishable for that day.

Speaker:

Some things are crossed off,

Speaker:

sometimes nothing's crossed off,

Speaker:

but it goes on to the next day.

Speaker:

So whatever's not crossed off goes on to the next day.

Speaker:

If I have two or three things that are easy,

Speaker:

I'll go to my running list, my big list for that month,

Speaker:

and I'll put something else on there, I cross those off.

Speaker:

So by the end of the month, I can go back and say,

Speaker:

"Look what I've accomplished."

Speaker:

- That's awesome.

Speaker:

- It gives me great joy to say, "Oh my gosh,

Speaker:

I made great progress." - Yeah!

Speaker:

- Without that, I'm always feel like I'm just doing,

Speaker:

I'm never accomplishing. - That's where I'm stuck.

Speaker:

I'm just doing, I'm doing, I'm doing.

Speaker:

I'm not seeing

Speaker:

all this stuff I've done- - Accomplishment, yeah.

Speaker:

- to feel good and not,

Speaker:

it's almost like you gotta get rid of that anxiety

Speaker:

because there's always something new to be done.

Speaker:

So the anxiety of always having to do something

Speaker:

is always there.

Speaker:

- It's a small thing.

Speaker:

Take 10 or 15 minutes out your day.

Speaker:

The first day is gonna be the hardest

Speaker:

because you're gonna write down everything

Speaker:

that you think you need to do.

Speaker:

And then you're going to continue

Speaker:

by adding on to that list.

Speaker:

Every time you think something, add on to that month list.

Speaker:

And then you just every day add on,

Speaker:

and at the end of the month, you reward yourself

Speaker:

by looking at it and saying, "Look what I've done."

Speaker:

It's almost like somebody patted you on the back.

Speaker:

- Yeah, you did yourself.

Speaker:

You're like,

Speaker:

"Oh, look what I did." - You need that in life

Speaker:

because I used to feel like,

Speaker:

"Oh my gosh, I'm just not doing anything.

Speaker:

I don't even know why. This is just endless, pointless."

Speaker:

And then until I started to really...

Speaker:

I started doing this in small portions

Speaker:

until I started to implement it regular in my life,

Speaker:

it's just so much more fulfilling for me now.

Speaker:

- It's part of what you do now, but,

Speaker:

so how long have you been doing this?

Speaker:

Or when did it kind of start for you?

Speaker:

- Um, probably about two years now.

Speaker:

- Okay.

Speaker:

Was it because of Drunk Chicken Cigars

Speaker:

that you needed to start doing this,

Speaker:

or was it just personal?

Speaker:

- Oh, I did it on a smaller scale.

Speaker:

I didn't do it every single day.

Speaker:

I did a running list for the month.

Speaker:

I always did that to keep up with working full-time,

Speaker:

being a teacher full-time, and, you know,

Speaker:

with my kids

Speaker:

and their schedules. - Keep yourself organized,

Speaker:

so you got stuff to do. - Yeah, so I always did

Speaker:

a running list, the household thing.

Speaker:

But now, I take 15 minutes outta my day before my day ends,

Speaker:

whether it's workday or go to bed,

Speaker:

and try to write down those things.

Speaker:

And if I forget it, that's okay.

Speaker:

But right first thing in the morning,

Speaker:

okay, now let's start my day.

Speaker:

Don't hurt yourself, punish yourself for not doing it.

Speaker:

Just, okay, didn't get it done yesterday.

Speaker:

What am I gonna do today?

Speaker:

- Yeah, don't give up on getting it done

Speaker:

just because you didn't do it during the time period

Speaker:

that you thought you would.

Speaker:

- Exactly.

Speaker:

And then sometimes things get a little bit more complicated

Speaker:

than you think, it just moves from one day to the next.

Speaker:

- Right. Brilliant advice.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

I mean, time management is important

Speaker:

when you are juggling so many things.

Speaker:

- Yeah. And you got a lot of things to juggle.

Speaker:

(Desiree chuckles)

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- A lot of things.

Speaker:

- So, okay, with everything that's going on,

Speaker:

how the hobby has progressed, looking back on it,

Speaker:

you've already said you wished

Speaker:

you would've had more structure in the beginning.

Speaker:

But looking forward,

Speaker:

you're talking about planning one, three, five,

Speaker:

and so many years ahead.

Speaker:

What are the things or what is the thing

Speaker:

that you wanna be doing

Speaker:

to make sure that you're setting up the future?

Speaker:

So, we're looking retrospective.

Speaker:

We wish we would've set a good foundation.

Speaker:

What's gonna help you

Speaker:

or Drunk Chicken Cigars grow for the future?

Speaker:

What are we looking at doing? What's our one thing?

Speaker:

- I'm looking at...

Speaker:

So, I'm kind of doing some market research and seeing like,

Speaker:

you know, what are, you know, some common things with,

Speaker:

I'm looking at JC Newman, I'm looking at Rocky Patel,

Speaker:

I'm looking at AJ, I'm looking at the big guys,

Speaker:

and what are some of the common things that they're doing

Speaker:

that are making them successful.

Speaker:

And I'm trying to bookmark, gauge those things,

Speaker:

and seeing where I feel like I can fit that aspect of it

Speaker:

into my business.

Speaker:

I know it's not necessarily a now thing,

Speaker:

but is it a five-year thing?

Speaker:

Is it a 10-year thing? Is it a 20-year thing?

Speaker:

And so those are the things

Speaker:

that I'm working into my future plan.

Speaker:

But, you know, you have to start looking at

Speaker:

who is successful, why are they successful,

Speaker:

what's making them successful?

Speaker:

And yeah, I know I'm not gonna go out there

Speaker:

and do full page ads and giving away a million cigars

Speaker:

and do a party like Drew Estate right at this point.

Speaker:

But there are some commonalities that I can actually gauge,

Speaker:

and then say, "This is where I would like to fit them

Speaker:

into my business plan."

Speaker:

- So, you're doing market research. I love that.

Speaker:

To get ready for the future.

Speaker:

And you're learning from people who have already done it.

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yes.

Speaker:

- So much of what we do is learn behavior from each other,

Speaker:

learn techniques from each other.

Speaker:

Can anyone really ever say that they've pioneered

Speaker:

or done something 100% original?

Speaker:

- Albert Einstein? (laughing)

Speaker:

- Really?

Speaker:

- Maybe Albert Einstein. (laughing)

Speaker:

- It's very few and far between, right?

Speaker:

- Um, originality, it has a perspective.

Speaker:

So it's very subjective. - Yeah, that's a good way

Speaker:

to say it.

Speaker:

It has a perspective.

Speaker:

It might be original for you,

Speaker:

but it's probably not the first time

Speaker:

someone's ever done that.

Speaker:

- And I will tell you, most things is not the first time.

Speaker:

Anybody do it,

Speaker:

it might be the first time somebody's done it that way,

Speaker:

first times anybody's seen it that way,

Speaker:

first time anybody's presented it that way,

Speaker:

or presented it to you that way.

Speaker:

So, it is you...

Speaker:

You learn, and you don't necessarily just,

Speaker:

"Oh, I'm going to copy-paste."

Speaker:

You copy, you add, you subtract.

Speaker:

- That's where the originality comes in.

Speaker:

You add your thing. - Right, yes.

Speaker:

- And then

Speaker:

you move forward with that. - You do it your way.

Speaker:

- And then be true to yourself.

Speaker:

Because if I'm gonna try to be AJ,

Speaker:

I'm gonna fail because I'm not AJ.

Speaker:

I'm not JC Newman, so I'm going to fail.

Speaker:

I'm setting myself up for failure.

Speaker:

So I'm going to fail. I'm setting myself up for failure.

Speaker:

and what your beliefs are.

Speaker:

- Very well said.

Speaker:

When do you think it's visible

Speaker:

when someone's not being true to themselves?

Speaker:

How can you sniff that out and recognize it?

Speaker:

Because we all can kind of,

Speaker:

but what do you think is the tell, the giveaway?

Speaker:

- So, I don't wanna say that I'm, you know,

Speaker:

the judge of that,

Speaker:

or anybody else should be the judge of that.

Speaker:

I would tell you that from a person,

Speaker:

you need to look within yourself

Speaker:

and make that determination,

Speaker:

like if you are true to yourself or not,

Speaker:

and what that means to you.

Speaker:

to yourself or not. And what that means to you.

Speaker:

"You know what?

Speaker:

That tie does not really fit your personality,"

Speaker:

but you look at it and go, "Yeah, this absolutely is me!"

Speaker:

You know?

Speaker:

And so people are going to judge,

Speaker:

people are going to have a thought about who you are,

Speaker:

what you are,

Speaker:

because of what you present to the world, right?

Speaker:

But only you can make that determination

Speaker:

if you are what you are, how you are, and why you are, so.

Speaker:

- Yeah, that's really well said.

Speaker:

You're absolutely right. There is judgment.

Speaker:

And I suppose I kind of framed it that way,

Speaker:

but it's just every once in a while,

Speaker:

you do see that person who you don't think is living

Speaker:

that 100% authentic person that they are.

Speaker:

Like they might have just grabbed onto that idea,

Speaker:

pulled it in, but they really truly don't fit that.

Speaker:

- If they're not speaking it,

Speaker:

then that's where you start going, ask the questions then.

Speaker:

And so, okay, from that perspective,

Speaker:

if you are talking to somebody,

Speaker:

and they're presenting something to you,

Speaker:

and they're unable to present it

Speaker:

in a manner that feels authentic

Speaker:

or feels like they're presenting something

Speaker:

that they're passionate about, keep asking questions.

Speaker:

And at some point, you're gonna go,

Speaker:

"Uh, I'm not exactly sure,"

Speaker:

that you even believe in yourself.

Speaker:

- Right.

Speaker:

- So.

Speaker:

- Well said.

Speaker:

I'm a huge "go with the flow," and my wife isn't,

Speaker:

and it was sometimes, we would butt heads,

Speaker:

so I've learned how to deal with it.

Speaker:

Is your husband a go with the flow kind of guy

Speaker:

or is that always been something

Speaker:

that you guys have had to work on?

Speaker:

- No, he's structured. I'm not.

Speaker:

And I'm a little OCD on things that he's not OCD,

Speaker:

so we kind of balance each other in that way.

Speaker:

That's so great. That's the way I feel about my wife.

Speaker:

It's not like we butt heads and then that's the end.

Speaker:

It's like, okay, conflict, but let's figure this out,

Speaker:

so we balance each other out.

Speaker:

And it's super good. Super good.

Speaker:

I do have to ask you, in the beginning,

Speaker:

was there a moment that you thought,

Speaker:

"This whole thing is probably gonna fail.

Speaker:

I should just go back to it being a hobby"?

Speaker:

- Oh, every day. (laughing)

Speaker:

- Every day.

Speaker:

- Every day. - What specifically

Speaker:

about that though?

Speaker:

Like why?

Speaker:

- It takes a lot.

Speaker:

I mean, when you talking about future growth,

Speaker:

there's a lot of juggling that you have to do

Speaker:

to make that happen.

Speaker:

And there's a lot of people that are asking questions

Speaker:

that are relying on you that wanna have answers.

Speaker:

And I don't know if I always have the answer,

Speaker:

or the right answer.

Speaker:

So there's times that, a lot of times I go,

Speaker:

(Desiree sighs)

Speaker:

"Yeah, I could just smoke cigars."

Speaker:

And I tell people, you know, when they go,

Speaker:

when I get negativity, let me tell you something,

Speaker:

I will smoke every single one of these cigars by myself

Speaker:

and be a happy camper

Speaker:

before I let you make this negative impact on me.

Speaker:

So I am not going to take that negativity and own it.

Speaker:

I just, I will smoke them all and have be happy.

Speaker:

- Sure. (Desiree laughing)

Speaker:

Yeah, because that's how you started, right?

Speaker:

Like, "Ah, these are all cigars I like."

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Yeah. (chuckles)

Speaker:

- Okay, well, then, that's a great segue into,

Speaker:

do you try to apply customer suggestions to your brand

Speaker:

or is it a select vetted few that you rely on?

Speaker:

- No, even going from the hobby to business structure,

Speaker:

one of the first thing I did was grab people from all over,

Speaker:

focus groups, and say, "Hey, would you smoke this cigar?"

Speaker:

"Yeah, sure."

Speaker:

"But you have to come on the Zoom with me

Speaker:

if you're going to do that.

Speaker:

And when you're smoking it,

Speaker:

all I want you to do is tell me about the cigar.

Speaker:

What the notes are, what are you feeling,

Speaker:

what are you learning?

Speaker:

Tell me."

Speaker:

And I took those notes and used those for my descriptions.

Speaker:

- Oh great.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so, those descriptions aren't just my thoughts.

Speaker:

Those are, it wasn't select few, people I met,

Speaker:

people I was introduced to from New York,

Speaker:

California, Florida.

Speaker:

There were people all over the...

Speaker:

We were in quarantine.

Speaker:

And so I took that as,

Speaker:

"We're home. Let's smoke a cigar and let's talk about it."

Speaker:

So I gave away some cigars to people.

Speaker:

"I'll mail you this,

Speaker:

only thing I'm asking you is to show up on the Zoom."

Speaker:

And 90% of the people did it.

Speaker:

- That's so cool.

Speaker:

- And so, did I take their suggestions? Absolutely.

Speaker:

And I still do.

Speaker:

When I did the Homicidal Hen, people kept saying,

Speaker:

"Oh, it's not full body enough. It's not full body enough."

Speaker:

So I try to give, make something that was fuller.

Speaker:

That's why I made the Homicidal Hen.

Speaker:

And I went out and started asking people.

Speaker:

I went through about 30 iterations of that

Speaker:

before I got people's going, "I love that.

Speaker:

I love that. Repeat it.

Speaker:

I love that. I love that.

Speaker:

I love that. - 30 iterations?

Speaker:

- Or more. I just kept changing it, kept adding.

Speaker:

And then I realized something through the process.

Speaker:

People confuse body with strength.

Speaker:

So, I'm hearing- - Always.

Speaker:

- I want something full body,

Speaker:

and I'm trying to make something stronger in strength,

Speaker:

but what they're telling me

Speaker:

is they want more of a spice that's stronger.

Speaker:

And I like smooth cigars,

Speaker:

so I'm making cigars smooth but fuller in strength.

Speaker:

So that's something, it was a learning process for me.

Speaker:

Hearing my customers say one thing

Speaker:

and interpreting different.

Speaker:

So the next time I make a cigar,

Speaker:

I hope it's going to be fuller in body.

Speaker:

It may be a milder, it may be a medium cigar,

Speaker:

it may be in strength, it may be full in strength.

Speaker:

But I'm understanding now from what, you know,

Speaker:

when they're smoking it,

Speaker:

"Well, I love this, you know, strength or the body,"

Speaker:

but we're not always speaking the same term.

Speaker:

- That's so true.

Speaker:

And we get that question all the time,

Speaker:

and I even get it confused.

Speaker:

It's like, "Is this strength or is this body?"

Speaker:

Because strength can be hidden

Speaker:

inside a very well blended cigar.

Speaker:

So people are like, "Hey, is that a strong cigar?"

Speaker:

I'm like, "I am the wrong person to ask"

Speaker:

because I actually do not know if it's strong.

Speaker:

What I know is, is it blended well

Speaker:

to the point where I'm liking it?

Speaker:

Yeah, I like it.

Speaker:

Or "Well, was it strength or body that threw you off,

Speaker:

like that you didn't like it?"

Speaker:

I go, "I don't know, it like,

Speaker:

you know, it was like boom,

Speaker:

and it was like, 'I don't really like that.'"

Speaker:

- Right.

Speaker:

So that's one of the things

Speaker:

that I've learned through this process

Speaker:

that when listening to my customers,

Speaker:

I'm learning to ask different questions now.

Speaker:

- Okay.

Speaker:

So, you kind of have like a little playbook of questions.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so when you tell me, "Oh, I want a full body cigar."

Speaker:

"Okay, so what is it about the cigar

Speaker:

that makes it full body to you?

Speaker:

Is it more spicy? Is it like heavy when you smoke it?

Speaker:

Or is it that you get more of a nicotine kind of rush

Speaker:

in your head?"

Speaker:

Because there is a difference.

Speaker:

- Okay, so if somebody says they like the flavor, that's

Speaker:

"I want a stronger cigar, I want more flavor,"

Speaker:

that's body. - That's body.

Speaker:

- If they say, "I want a stronger cigar,

Speaker:

I'm not getting the nicotine buzz,"

Speaker:

that's strength. - Strength, yes.

Speaker:

- That's a good way to put it.

Speaker:

- Yes.

Speaker:

- Thank you for clarifying that

Speaker:

because it's always difficult to put those two together.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so I say, "Oh, my Mother Clucker,"

Speaker:

I used to say, "it's spicy."

Speaker:

People go, "That's not spicy ."

Speaker:

To me, it's spicy, but they're looking for a spicy,

Speaker:

harsh harshness that I call harshness,

Speaker:

they call body.

Speaker:

So it's just different terminology,

Speaker:

different way to describe it.

Speaker:

But I'm learning.

Speaker:

- That's so great.

Speaker:

So as you've developed your palate,

Speaker:

what's the like Desiree top three

Speaker:

to get it better and better every day?

Speaker:

What are the top three exercises or tips or tricks

Speaker:

that you're using to get a better palate for cigars?

Speaker:

- You know what?

Speaker:

- Or maybe it's just one.

Speaker:

- One thing for me is I'm not always gonna rely

Speaker:

on my palate anymore.

Speaker:

I relied on my palate because I was smoking the cigar,

Speaker:

making the cigars for me.

Speaker:

Now, I'm in a different position,

Speaker:

I'm making cigars for customers,

Speaker:

so I'm not going to rely on my palate.

Speaker:

So developing my palate is a great thing,

Speaker:

but making sure I listen to my customers,

Speaker:

getting customer feedback,

Speaker:

understanding what I'm hearing when I'm talking to people

Speaker:

at different events and things like that.

Speaker:

And seeing what's new out there

Speaker:

and why it's so new and sexy,

Speaker:

and seeing if that's something I should

Speaker:

or should not incorporate.

Speaker:

So I'm trying to keep my eye and ear and palate

Speaker:

on the market.

Speaker:

- That's perfect.

Speaker:

What things, though...

Speaker:

Okay, so as much as we ask customers what they want,

Speaker:

how they want it, sometimes there's a saying

Speaker:

that the customer doesn't know what they want.

Speaker:

And then there's also this aspect

Speaker:

of trying to go above and beyond

Speaker:

the customer's expectations.

Speaker:

So, how are you trying to go above and beyond

Speaker:

or deliver something possibly that's far superior

Speaker:

than what the customer's even asking for?

Speaker:

- So, for me, again, being true to myself.

Speaker:

I am making cigars that are high quality, well-constructed.

Speaker:

What these cigars are made, smooth cigars, consistency.

Speaker:

So that's what I'm trying to deliver now.

Speaker:

Consistency, quality is something that when you pick up

Speaker:

a Drunk Chicken Cigar, you're gonna go,

Speaker:

"This is what I picked up the last time."

Speaker:

So, that's why I'm trying

Speaker:

to meet my- - Did you struggle

Speaker:

with that before, like early on?

Speaker:

- I did, yes.

Speaker:

Because, you know, we bought from...

Speaker:

We source our tobacco.

Speaker:

So not every pallet that we buy is gonna be the same.

Speaker:

So I learned that I have to,

Speaker:

anytime we do new pallets

Speaker:

making sure that we may have to tweak it a little bit.

Speaker:

So, we learned that.

Speaker:

So consistency, quality-

Speaker:

- Because it's not like a recipe where you can say,

Speaker:

"Add a cup of sugar, add two cups of flour,

Speaker:

and boom, you're gonna get this magical cigar."

Speaker:

- [Desiree] Exactly.

Speaker:

- It might be that you need to cut some of that one out.

Speaker:

It's not a cup of that anymore. It's only 3/4 of a cup.

Speaker:

And you gotta add this one.

Speaker:

And then actually we have to add a little bit of this one

Speaker:

to mellow this all out.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so we definitely, anytime we get new pallets

Speaker:

test it against some older ones that we've had,

Speaker:

making sure that the consistency is there.

Speaker:

So, yeah, and then I've learned

Speaker:

that I can't roll my darker leaves

Speaker:

at the same time I do my lighter leaves.

Speaker:

The darker leaves shrink up a little bit tighter

Speaker:

than the lighter leaves.

Speaker:

And when you get on a roll, and you doing the lighter leave,

Speaker:

and you start rolling the dark ones at the same time,

Speaker:

well, they're gonna shrink up harder.

Speaker:

And so (chuckles) it cause a problem sometimes

Speaker:

with the pull and the draw.

Speaker:

- Sure. That's interesting.

Speaker:

So you're changing up the density of the cigar

Speaker:

based on the way it's going to perform.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so now we roll one blend a day,

Speaker:

or one size a day, so that we're not-

Speaker:

- Yeah, because it's like muscle memory, right?

Speaker:

- Yes.

Speaker:

- You can't go from one to the other

Speaker:

without having some failures

Speaker:

with trying to figure out how to change.

Speaker:

- Well, we did that, and we learned the hard way. (chuckles)

Speaker:

- Really? - Yeah.

Speaker:

- So learning the hard way,

Speaker:

does that mean you had to buy back product, comp it,

Speaker:

take the responsibility?

Speaker:

- Yep, all of that.

Speaker:

- How does that affect you and your business?

Speaker:

- I affect the bottom line.

Speaker:

I mean, it costs me money, but at the end of the day,

Speaker:

it's a learning process.

Speaker:

And if you're in business,

Speaker:

you need to be able to take it on the chin sometime.

Speaker:

You need to be able to apologize.

Speaker:

You need to be able to say,

Speaker:

"Hey, this happened and here you go."

Speaker:

You know, these are 100% hand rolled.

Speaker:

There are absolutely no machines involved.

Speaker:

People have bad days.

Speaker:

You're gonna have a bad stick every once in a while.

Speaker:

But, you know, we are here

Speaker:

to hopefully make your smoking experience better.

Speaker:

- Right. And have as minimal amount of hiccups as possible.

Speaker:

- Minimum, minimum, minimum.

Speaker:

- Do you have any cigars that you thought,

Speaker:

"This is gonna just be a massive hit,

Speaker:

and it just turned out to be a flop,

Speaker:

and you had to scrap it?

Speaker:

- So, I made a cigar for a shop out in Texas,

Speaker:

and we called it The Extreme.

Speaker:

And we launched it.

Speaker:

We had more problems with The Extreme, getting it launched,

Speaker:

trying to get that band made.

Speaker:

Well, we had problems. - So not even the cigar,

Speaker:

it was like all the other ancillary things alongside of it.

Speaker:

- And then we sat back and looked at everything and said,

Speaker:

"Look, we have 14 or 15 different vitolas right now."

Speaker:

- Whoa!

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- Wow.

Speaker:

- Well we only have, at the time we had seven blends.

Speaker:

- Seven blends, but 14 different vitolas. Gotcha.

Speaker:

- Yeah, it was 15 or 16 at the time.

Speaker:

And we were like, you know,

Speaker:

"We need to be good at this group here

Speaker:

and consistent with this group.

Speaker:

And maybe we're moving faster than we should.

Speaker:

- [Rob] Sure.

Speaker:

- So not that The Extreme wasn't good,

Speaker:

but The Extreme was the last.

Speaker:

Extreme we were having problems with.

Speaker:

Bye-bye Extreme right now.

Speaker:

- You gotta pull that energy elsewhere.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so we pulled it back. - That's so smart

Speaker:

as a business owner and just as a person in general,

Speaker:

why keep dumping energy into something

Speaker:

that's not gonna produce?

Speaker:

- Right, and it may produce later,

Speaker:

but right now, I'm enjoying the boxes I made. (laughs)

Speaker:

- Exactly.

Speaker:

- And they're great smokes,

Speaker:

but I just can't put the energy

Speaker:

in trying to launch it for sale right now.

Speaker:

I need to establish my brand, and that's the most important.

Speaker:

And then once the brand is established,

Speaker:

then we'll start adding more in.

Speaker:

But I don't see in our next three-year plan any new cigars

Speaker:

until we are a little bit

Speaker:

more established. - That's awesome.

Speaker:

The next three years you're just gonna dedicate

Speaker:

to making what you got going just that much better.

Speaker:

The consistency and the reliability that is gonna come

Speaker:

from Drunk Chicken Cigars is just gonna be on point.

Speaker:

So we know every time we pick one up,

Speaker:

it's always going to be similar.

Speaker:

Not the same,

Speaker:

but it's gonna be that cigar we expect it to be.

Speaker:

- Yeah. It's gonna be, yeah.

Speaker:

So, we're focusing on our brand right now.

Speaker:

- I love that. So smart.

Speaker:

Love it. Okay, give me the Desiree top three cigars.

Speaker:

I'm going morning, afternoon, and night.

Speaker:

What cigars am I joining you with for morning,

Speaker:

noon, and night?

Speaker:

- Morning? I'm definitely doing a Sweet Dream.

Speaker:

- Sweet Dream in the morning goes great with coffee.

Speaker:

It's got that nice sweet tip,

Speaker:

but not oversweetened to the point where it's an infusion.

Speaker:

It's just a nice sweetness right on the mouth.

Speaker:

Do you sweeten the rest of the cigar

Speaker:

or is it just the mouthpiece

Speaker:

that you sweeten? - Just the mouthpiece.

Speaker:

- Got it.

Speaker:

- I'm a big thing on infused cigars.

Speaker:

I'm concerned about how the infused process,

Speaker:

not all infused is the same infused,

Speaker:

and when you're burning it, what are you burning?

Speaker:

So you're typically not burning past there.

Speaker:

So you're not burning anything when you do that.

Speaker:

So my perspective, my perspective only,

Speaker:

and I haven't done enough research on it

Speaker:

to give it any more thought than that.

Speaker:

- Got it. So what's my afternoon cigar?

Speaker:

- So, in the afternoon, I typically like a medium cigar.

Speaker:

So I either go with a Fat Hen, Mother Clucker,

Speaker:

or Living the Dream, no, more Fat Hen, Mother Clucker

Speaker:

because I want a little bit more body.

Speaker:

I'm into my groove.

Speaker:

I'm like the top speed, (chuckles)

Speaker:

so I can burn off a little bit more.

Speaker:

The afternoon?

Speaker:

Depending on how many other cigars I smoked that day.

Speaker:

If I smoked a lot- - You mean in the evening?

Speaker:

- In the evening?

Speaker:

- In the evening, okay.

Speaker:

- Yeah, evening, I'm sorry.

Speaker:

If I smoked a lot of cigars,

Speaker:

I'm going with something light again

Speaker:

because I've already smoked a lot of cigars.

Speaker:

- So, yes, some people will go light, medium, full.

Speaker:

And you're going light, medium, light.

Speaker:

- Yeah.

Speaker:

- Let your palate cool down.

Speaker:

Still enjoy that great cigar, but not overpower your palate.

Speaker:

- Yeah, I wanna cool down, chill out, relax.

Speaker:

Sometimes I get- - So, which one

Speaker:

- a little more buzz- - are we smoking?

Speaker:

with the fuller cigars.

Speaker:

And I don't really like that for myself.

Speaker:

But if I'm gonna do it, I'm drinking whiskey,

Speaker:

and I will have a full cigar,

Speaker:

but I'm not leaving my house either.

Speaker:

- Yeah, so, what's that evening cigar on the light side

Speaker:

that you're grabbing for?

Speaker:

You going back to the Sweet Dream

Speaker:

that we started the day with?

Speaker:

- Either Living the Dream or Sweet Dream.

Speaker:

Sweet Dream sometimes can be a little bit much

Speaker:

on the sweetness.

Speaker:

When I'm doing whiskey or something like that,

Speaker:

I don't really want that, the competing flavors,

Speaker:

so I'll go with the Living the Dream that's really smooth

Speaker:

and doesn't compete with anything.

Speaker:

- Nice. - Compliments.

Speaker:

- Wonderful!

Speaker:

Thank you so much for sitting down with us,

Speaker:

running through how you ended up starting

Speaker:

this amazing brand.

Speaker:

Check it out everyone at drunkchickencigars.com.

Speaker:

It's phenomenal artwork.

Speaker:

The naming and the whole convention behind it

Speaker:

is just a blast.

Speaker:

Desiree, thank you for joining me.

Speaker:

- Oh, thank you.

Speaker:

I really appreciate you having me,

Speaker:

and I look forward to hanging out with you

Speaker:

for the rest of this weekend.

Speaker:

- Absolutely. I can't wait. (Desiree chuckling)

Speaker:

That's another episode of Box Press.

Speaker:

We're wrapping it up here at PCA.

Speaker:

We got more interviews coming.

Speaker:

And as always, protect those cigars with Boveda.

Speaker:

Have a blessed day.