INSIDE DISH: Reviving an iconic east-side diner

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Welcome back to IBJ’s video feature “Inside Dish: The Business of Running Restaurants.”

Our subject this week is Indy's Historic Steer-In, the latest in a line of drive-in diners situated at 5130 E. 10th St.,
dating back to 1929. (For a detailed history, see "Notes from the Back of the Napkin" below.) Harold's Steer-In,
owned by Harold Phillips, occupied the spot from 1964 to 2008. The iconic eatery had struggled since 2001, when Phillips stepped
back from the business and leased it to former employees.


Longtime east-side resident Casey Kehrer, 42, saw an opportunity and convinced his parents, Charlie and Barbara Kehrer, to
help revive the landmark eatery. They entered into a lease in 2007 and invested $125,000 in improvements to the property and
interior. Business began to pick up after a slow start, and they decided to buy the restaurant from Phillips in 2008 at a
purchase price of $325,000. They redubbed it "Indy's Historic Steer-In."

"It's been phenomenal. We turned a profit of $2,000 last year, and I was just tickled to death after two years to
show a profit," said Barbara, 60, whose retirement has been hijacked by 45-hour weeks at the restaurant.

Sales leapt from $650,000 in 2008 to $825,000 in 2009, and are on track to pass $1 million this year. Much of that growth
stems from a decision to restart dinner service after it fell by the wayside under previous operators, Barbara said.

"When we first opened, we were doing $300 or $400 a night in sales, and you've got two waitresses, two cooks, a
dishwaser and a cashier," she said. "Now, Tuesday through Thursday is pretty consistent, $1,600 or $1,800 a night,
and Fridays is $2,500 a night. And Saturday has really picked up. It was our slowest night to come around, but a lot of times
Saturday will outdo Friday night."

In the video above, Barbara and Casey, now the general manager, discuss their strategy for rehabilitating
the Steer-In while keeping its nostalgic flavor; how carry-out and delivery orders have contributed to sales; and how they
struggle to find and keep good employees as business grows.

 

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Indy's Historic Steer-In

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5130 E. 10th St.

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(317) 356-0996

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www.steerin.net

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Concept: The east side's iconic drive-in diner,
rehabilitated by new owners in 2008.

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Founded: The site housed a restaurant that opened
in 1929 and eventually came to be called Northway Drive-In. In 1960, members of the Indianapolis-based Laughner family of
restaurant operators opened a new restaurant in a remodeled version of the building: Laughner's Steer-In. Harold Phillips
bought the business in 1964 and rechristened it Harold's Steer-In. Beginning in 2001, Phillips leased the restaurant to
two successive groups of operators. In November 2007, he leased it to Charlie and Barbara Kehrer, who then bought the land
and the business in October 2008 for $325,000.

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Owners: Charlie and Barbara Kehrer

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Start-up costs: $125,000 spent by the Kehrers in 2007
to improve the property, rehab the diner and open for business.

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Sales & profit/loss: $650,000 in sales with a
$50,000 loss (2008); $825,000 in sales with a $2,000 profit (2009). Sales/profit for the first six months of 2010: $500,000/$14,000.

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Employees: 36

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Seating: 116

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Goals: To attract more 30-something patrons with children;
to increase catering business; to reach $1 million in sales for 2010; and to extend evening hours this fall after Scecina
Memorial High School football games to serve fans and players.

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Good to know: Carry-out and delivery orders account
for about one-fourth of the Steer-In's sales.

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