Wednesday, April 15, 2020
The Furlough Cheesecake Sisters Start Business After Government Shutdown
The Furlough Cheesecake Sisters Start Business After Government Shutdown Jaqi Wright and her mother couldnât get enough of her sisterâs cheesecake. The two of them, relaxing on New Yearâs Day, savored two slices each while sipping coffee. ââYou really can sell these,'â Wright recalls her mother saying. âAnd thatâs when I sat up straight,â Wright says. Wright and her sister, Nikki Howard, are furloughed federal employees who have found themselves without work and a paycheck since the partial government shutdown began Dec. 22. Like some of the 800,000 federal employees and contractors who are without pay during the 19-day shutdown, Wright and Howard â" who work for the Justice Department and Food and Drug Administration in Washington D.C., respectively â" are worried about how the lack of pay will impact their finances. So the Maryland-based sisters decided to follow their motherâs advice. They launched The Furlough Cheesecake on New Yearâs Day and are now selling cheesecakes for $29.98 each. âWe donât know when this is going to end. We donât have a clue,â Howard, the baker behind the operation, says. âBut instead of dwelling on that and feeling the depression that tends to come with these kinds of situations, weâre making a decision to do something else.â It didnât take long for the duo to get their business off the ground. Wright, who is 50, conceived the name for âThe Furlough Cheesecakeâ and quickly registered it on GoDaddy.com, an internet domain registration site. She then applied for an employee identification number on the IRSâs website. Howard, 48, already had her food handler license, and she enlisted her teenaged and college-aged daughters to help create their website and promote the burgeoning business on social media. Now, theyâre sorting the materials to ship their cheesecakes to customers around the country. âWe have a little machine thatâs working,â Howard says. The sisters have teamed up before on small business ideas. They created a to-go meal service to assist parents sending their kids with food off to camp a few years ago. That only lasted one summer, they say, since it was a lot of hard work for little cash. But interest in The Furlough Cheesecake grew fairly quickly, the sisters say, particularly because of the difficult time it has arrived in. This past Monday, the sisters were working on about 10 orders. By Wednesday evening, that number grew close to 200 â" with requests coming in from as far as Alaska, California, and Washington state. Since launching 10 days ago, they havenât turned a profit yet, but the rush of orders has already helped balance out their expenses. âWe had to pool our resources to purchase everything to put this together,â Wright says. âJust to see that we have a balance, itâs like having a paycheck there. We know that some of those things that weâre facing weâll now be able to take care of.â For now, they both hope the business can help them make ends meet. Howard has an electricity bill and her daughterâs college tuition due date is coming up. Wright has been struggling to get her mortgage company to allow late payments. Some customers â" and even other furloughed employees â" have also sent along donations as small as $2 to help the sisters out during the shutdown, which, if it continues past Saturday, will become the longest ever. But, even when the shutdown comes to an end, Howard and Wright hope to continue their business after they return to their jobs. And theyâll keep the name, too. âIn the shadow and the foolery of this shutdown, this has made it a little lighter,â Howard says. âI get to work with my sister and try to invest some of our time into something positive.â âThis is a heavy time for a lot of folks,â Wright adds. âThis is where the dream started, and weâre going to stick with that name. Weâre going to hopefully help remind people that you can take lemons and make lemonade.â
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