Hey /trv/, I want to move to Italy. I know the language proficient around to get around alone just fine. I know the culture, how the regions hate each other but only unite as a whole during football games, shit economy, etc. My question is, would the last part matter so much if I want to start my own food business over there? I am aware that Italians love kebab.
Yes I know /biz/ is a thing, but they just shitpost all the time. Thanks in advance
>>1285333
In venice the government is trying to limit foreign food chains. They want to promote italian food instead.
You can do it somewhere else tho.
Biggest problem is corruption and a confussing badly constructed business system.
How did you learn the language? I'm trying to learn it
>>1285336
>In venice the government is trying to limit foreign food chains. They want to promote italian food instead.
Right. Florence is doing that as well.
Please, OP, no more kebab in Italy. We like it but we know where to go if we want kebab.
>>1285336
>Biggest problem is corruption and a confussing badly constructed business system.
Throughout Italy?
>>1285341
School mostly. I saw some films like La Vita e' Bella and listened to music like 50 mila (gay, I know, but the lyrics were clear and used basic words to help you learn fast.) /t/ had a language learning thread if you want to choose the non school route.
>>1285353
I promise it will not be kebab. How welcome are other non italian restuarants?
>>1285384
>How welcome are other non italian restuarants?
They're pretty much welcome, but we're currently facing an invasion of Japanese restaurants (almost exclusively sushi). There are several Chinese restaurants, some Brazilian and some Greek ones, while Indian/Mexican/Argentinian ones are only a few. I guess we hate American fast foods (Mc Donalds/Burger King style) and we especially hate Starbucks. You do the math.
>>1285403
yes, we eat at fast food only when we are on vacation and there's no place for overpriced coffee in Italy. the kebab in Italy that "make money" are the ones near to the nightlife and the ones open late at night.
>>1285333
In Venice opening a business is extremely expensive, and it's not worth it if you just open a kebab place. Maybe some gourmet hipster falafel shit but not a kebab join. There are already a lot of those.