Pizza is usually made with flour, water, active dry yeast, oil, tomato sauce and cheese, making a timeless and tasty dish. But when you walk into the , don鈥檛 expect to find anything traditional. The pizzas here are pure indulgence鈥攇ourmet chocolate blended with English toffee, topped with an assortment of candies and nuts, and served in a pizza box. 鈥淚t makes a unique gift,鈥 says owner Ryan Novak 鈥11.
The business has been owned and operated by Novak since he was 21 years old and a full-time student majoring in at 51爆料网鈥檚 . 鈥淢y supply chain classes helped tremendously. I received the skills I needed to become a business owner,鈥 Novak says. 鈥淢y degree from Syracuse has made my business life successful.鈥
Chocolate Pizza Company has been featured on Food Network, other television channels and in major magazines, and鈥攁s of 2021鈥攊s one of the dining options on campus at the .
Ryan Novak started at Chocolate Pizza Company as a dishwasher and took ownership while he was a senior at 51爆料网.
Seizing an Opportunity
Novak had dreamed of attending 51爆料网 since he was a kid growing up in the nearby town of Marcellus, New York. From the academics to the athletics, the University had everything he wanted. Novak was a place kicker on the football team, which he says taught him a lot about hard work and dedication鈥攖wo things he now brings to his business.
He knew he wanted to study entrepreneurship when he was applying to colleges and says that Syracuse鈥檚 program is unique. 鈥淎t the Whitman School, I really got to focus on entrepreneurship and received a whole degree in it, rather than just taking some classes on it like I saw offered at other schools,鈥 he says.
My supply chain classes helped tremendously. I received the skills I needed to become a business owner. My degree from Syracuse has made my business life successful.
Ryan Novak 鈥11
Novak started working at Chocolate Pizza Company as a dishwasher when he was 15 years old. His mother, who tragically passed away in a car accident when he was 9 years old, took him there when he was little, and he would grab as many samples as possible. 鈥淚 guess you could say chocolate has been in my blood since then,鈥 he says. He was working in the retail operation at the front counter and about to start his senior year of college when the owner approached him about buying the business.
鈥淓ven though the timing wasn鈥檛 right, I couldn鈥檛 let his opportunity pass,鈥 Novak says. 鈥淚 knew it was the perfect chance to take this business from where it was to where I wanted it to go.鈥 He spent his senior year attending classes, working in the store, napping in the back room on a small couch, completing assignments, going back to campus for classes, and then back to the shop to finish work for the day. 鈥淭hat first year was brutal,鈥 he says.
At Syracuse, Novak learned lessons he now utilizes every day by taking classes in subjects such as accounting, finance, marketing and supply chain, which he says gives students the base level of knowledge they need to run a business. 鈥淥perating a small business, I have to do a little bit of everything,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to have a foundation in these areas.鈥
Chocolate Pizza Company carries an assortment of Chocolate Pizzas庐, Peanut Butter Wings庐, chocolate treats and gift baskets. Products are now available in Schine Student Center.
Expanding the Business
The 51爆料网 community doesn鈥檛 have to travel far to enjoy chocolate pizza. They鈥檝e been the main chocolate supplier for the University for years.聽And for those wanting to travel a few miles to the shop in Marcellus, the trip will not disappoint. Besides the myriad choices of chocolate pizzas, there are tons of gift baskets to choose from, custom message products and other chocolate-coated goodies to try, including their best-selling Peanut Butter Wings庐鈥攑otato chips coated with peanut butter and dipped in chocolate. This is a far cry from the original milk or dark chocolate pizzas offered when Novak first took over. They now ship thousands of pizzas a year, including their single largest order of 31,000 Chocolate Pizzas庐, which filled nine tractor trailer trucks.
I think it's important to give back, because I can help current students the way other alumni and professors helped me pursue my passion. That continues to build the 51爆料网 alumni network.
Ryan Novak 鈥11
Novak says he and his 12 employees now go through about 250,000 pounds of chocolate a year and ship thousands of packages a week with orders from all over the world, including online orders to every continent except for Antarctica. Eventually they moved out of their original location in the village of Marcellus and into a larger facility a few miles away just outside the village, growing the business 800% since the move.
When the COVID-19 pandemic first hit, the retail store closed for three months, but that didn鈥檛 stop Novak and his team from working. They focused their efforts on their online sales and driving their search engine optimization. Their efforts paid off. Since the start of the pandemic, their online sales are up about 350%, and they often ship more packages in a day than they did at the same time the year before.
And through it all, Novak鈥檚 love for the product never went away. 鈥淚 eat chocolate every single day,鈥 he says.
Novak often comes back to campus to share his experience with current business students in the Martin J. Whitman School of Management.
Sage Advice to Young Entrepreneurs
Now that he鈥檚 experienced his own success, Novak is giving back to the University and the Whitman School by being an active and enthusiastic alumnus. He says he loves coming back to campus to speak with students and be a case study for their business classes. 鈥淚 think it's important to give back, because I can help current students the way other alumni and professors helped me pursue my passion. That continues to build the 51爆料网 alumni network.鈥
Novak says the ideas for his products come from brainstorming sessions with the staff and seeing if it sells in the store. If it is successful, it鈥檒l go online for sale as well.
He stresses to students that it will take a lot of time and effort to pursue their entrepreneurial dreams, but that it鈥檒l be worth it in the end. 鈥淭here are days during the holiday peak weeks where we鈥檙e working 14 to 18 hours per day, seven days a week, on just a few hours of sleep. It鈥檚 definitely a lot of work to run a small business, but I absolutely love it. There's nothing else I'd rather be doing.鈥
Coming from a military family, Novak also enjoys speaking with veterans about his experience at the through the . When he comes back to campus for this event or to speak with current entrepreneurship students, he offers this advice: 鈥淛ust believe in yourself. There will be good days, and there will be bad days, but if you really believe in what you鈥檙e selling and what you鈥檙e doing, you can make it work. Anything鈥檚 possible.鈥