Starting out with a $3.35 per-hour job at Taco Bell is long odds for success.
After all, the restaurant industry is know for high turnover, part-time starter jobs, and it's the largest minimum-wage employer in the country.
However, Ron Harris, a Chicago native, took that job at Taco Bell after high school in 1985 and made something out of it.
"I tried college and that wasn't for me, but I love to work," said Harris, 50. "I started when I was 18 in Lombard, Ill. And I worked a lot of hours.
"Then I went to Brown's Chicken in suburban Chicago. And then Red Lobster where I was promoted to general manager in charge of a $5 million-revenue store just outside of Chicago. I went to Macaroni Grill for 16 years and rose to be area director in Dallas. I moved up here with Macaroni Grill 13 years ago. And the company was bought by a private-equity firm and the economy fell apart. They let me go in 2008 with a bunch of other people."
Harris liked the Twin Cities. It was time to become an entrepreneur, an owner.
He investigated franchise opportunities and settled on Firehouse Subs, a Florida-based sandwich-and-salad shop started by a couple working class guys who once were firefighters. Harris liked them.
Harris became the first Twin Cities-area franchisee with a store in Maplewood in 2011. And the company also hired him to be the area representative for the state. It costs up to $350,000 to become a franchisee, including an outfitted store, inventory, equipment and the rest.