Philadelphia Pizza Parlor Demonstrates It Doesn't Take Much To Make A Difference
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While most of us want to help those in need, we are often constrained by our own finances. Now a Philadelphia man is demonstrating that sometimes it takes as little as a slice of pizza, to make a big difference in a person's life.
27-year-old Mason Wartman quit his corporate job on Wall Street in 2013, and returned to his home city of Philadelphia to pursue his entrepreneurial dream. When he opened Rosa's Fresh Pizza, his only intention was to replicate New York's $1 a slice concept that he had grown to love during his three years there. However, today the no-frills pizzeria is not just known for its delicious thin crust pizza, but also for its unique business model in giving forward.
Customers that come in to grab a slice are asked if they would like to contribute an extra dollar to buy a slice for a homeless person. Those that agree are invited to write a little message on a sticky note and add it to the wall. Whenever someone in need walks in, they simply remove one of the colorful and encouraging messages and give it to Wartman in exchange for a hot slice.
The 27-year-old says that he had always given away free slices to those in need. However, in March 2014, a customer asked if he could prepay for the next homeless person that walked in and the simple but ingenious system of giving back, was born.
Since then, Wartman, who estimates that he feeds about 40 homeless people daily, has distributed over 8,400 slices of free pizza. The young entrepreneur says that the demand for giving back is so large that his sticky note system of keeping count does not work anymore. He now keeps track of all the donated dollars by placing them in a separate compartment in his cash register.
While a slice of pizza may not seem much, it is a lifeline for those that are down on their luck. Their gratitude is very apparent in the poignant notes that are scattered all across the pizza parlor's walls, alongside the colorful donation notes. What's even more gratifying is that many homeless people have told Wartman that in addition to saving money, the free pizza also prevents them from committing petty crimes for food.
Wartman who has received national recognition and even a $10,000 USD donation from Shutterfly, says that the donations account for about 10% of his business - a number that can only grow as more people find out about it. His hopes that his story will encourage other businesses to adopt similar pay-it-forward initiatives.
Resources: huffingtonpost.com, odditycentral.com, NPR.com, NBCphiladelphia.com
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543 Comments
- Avaover 9 yearsThat is awesome. 😃
- OMG LOVERover 9 yearsOMG FREE PIZZA !!!! AHHHH
- gipumover 9 years1. Mason Wartman decided to quit his job so that he can go back to his hometown and open up his own pizza shop. He decided to give the homeless free pizzas. 2. Costumers that have donated have asked to write on the sticky note and stick on the wall and given him an extra dollar so that he could give a homeless person a slice of pizza. A person in need for a pizza they grab a sticky note and hand it to the cashier. 3. The free pizza helps the homeless so that it will give them food so that they're not hungry and they could have hope. Wartmans wants other corporations to do the same thing he is doing or at least close to what hes doing for other people.
- chmeeover 9 years1 he quit his job to go back to his town after that he opened up a pizza parlor 2 there told to write on a sticky note off thr wall and hand it to the cashier 3. it helps bc they don't die or steal food anymore
- rttigersover 9 yearsWOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! that's amazing I might do that when I grow up.
- rjtigersover 9 yearsthat is soooooooooo cool and I'm going to Pennsylvania and might stop :)
- sofiaover 9 yearsThat was so nice of them to give pizza to the homeless people does people were so happy that they gave them pizza for them because they where homeless and she even said to them god belss you if that was me I would say bthe same thing has she said .
- IMSOCOOLover 9 yearsLOLOLOLOL
- rydivover 9 years1. Mason wanted to pursue his entrepreneur dream. He opened a pizza parlor in Philadelphia that helps the less fortunate. 2. If you donate you put a nice saying on a little sticky note, then put on the wall. If your a person in need you go in and grab a sticky note from off the wall and hand it to the cashier. 3. This way people who cant afford a piece of pizza can have one. Wartman is setting an example for other corporations to follow his example and those in need.
- sjsgalover 9 yearsPizza is a great way to give back. Especially if you give up a job on Wall Street just to do this. with pizza. I want to be like him🍕👌