Coffee Gold
Posted on June 5, 2025 by Teri Greene

JEFF ROBERTS 鈥07 grew an idea to sell coffee out of a trailer into a local enterprise with seven locations.
鈥淔ly High, Hammer Down鈥 has become the company philosophy.
Jeff Roberts started serving coffee out of a trailer after earning a business degree
from the University of South Alabama. Today, Yellowhammer Coffee has a loyal following
and locations throughout Mobile and Semmes.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY SETH LAUBINGER
Branded Merchandise
James and Monique Roberts
Iconic Yellow cups
Sam Wyatt '15 manages all the stores
at the Cottage Hill and Schillinger roads store (a former PNC Bank) in Mobile, the
vault is a popular hangout.
BEFORE HE EVER SERVED a single Americano, frapp茅 or shot of espresso through the window of a trailer, Jeff Roberts 鈥07 made YouTube videos. Specifically, ones that took people behind the scenes of an idea for a new business venture. A paper cup 鈥 a bright yellow one with a black lid and sleeve that soon would become synonymous with the company he would create and grow 鈥 is featured prominently in the first episode of 鈥淵ellowhammer.鈥
鈥淓ven if it completely flops and crashes and burns, that鈥檒l be kind of cool, too,鈥 Roberts told viewers in 2016. 鈥淜ind of a 鈥榟ere鈥檚 what not to do鈥 lesson.鈥
Less than 10 years later, that idea that percolated in Roberts鈥 brain has produced endless lessons, seven locations and an eighth on the way.
The videos are still up, but he had to stop recording. Things just got too busy.
EARLY TO RISE
Roberts was primed to be an entrepreneur. When he was a kid on school breaks, his dad woke him up around 3 a.m. to milk cows on the family鈥檚 farm near Mobile. They brewed coffee on-site and drank it the way he still does 鈥 black.
After high school, Roberts opted for a gap year and applied to a yearlong leadership
program in Colorado that he describes as a boot camp. Some of the physical challenges
resembled Navy SEAL training, including swimming endurance tests that made him throw
up and abrupt awakenings in the middle
of the night to perform drills.
When he talks about the impact of that training and how it helped him survive Yellowhammer鈥檚 early years, somehow it doesn鈥檛 sound like bragging. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way I would have kept going. I wouldn鈥檛 have lasted six months.鈥
After Colorado, Roberts enrolled at the University of South Alabama and earned a bachelor鈥檚
degree in business with an emphasis in entrepreneurship, leadership and management
in 2007. One enduring lesson was that you could go bankrupt at any time, that failure
could be abrupt. That you have to
expect risk, and thrive on it.
Therefore, don鈥檛 be impulsive. Don鈥檛 make rash decisions. Sleep on it. Yet when Robert and his wife, Monique, finally debuted Yellowhammer Coffee in a shiny black trailer with a bright yellow coffee-bean logo, he almost gave it all up after a disastrous opening. 鈥淒oes anybody want to buy a food truck?鈥 he asked half jokingly.
BIG DREAMS AND HARD WORK
Better days followed, and the Yellowhammer Coffee truck soon had a cult following. That鈥檚 when Will Fusaiotti gave Roberts a call. From early on, the owner of the Foosackly鈥檚 chicken finger empire had watched Yellowhammer鈥檚 progress. In a part of the country with no shortage of chicken finger restaurants, Foosackly鈥檚 stands out as a local, independent success story with 16 locations in Alabama and Florida.
Roberts had no idea that Fusaiotti 鈥 a man he called his hero 鈥 even knew Yellowhammer existed. And Fusaiotti was now on the phone? Roberts immediately thought it was a prank. Instead, Fusaiotti offered sage advice: Get into the brick-and-mortar business.
Roberts was reluctant, but he soon followed through with his customary all-in approach,
setting up shop in a former Foosackly鈥檚 on Dauphin Street.
鈥淔ly High, Hammer Down,鈥 inspired by the company鈥檚 name, has also become its philosophy.
To sum it up: Have spectacular dreams and work tirelessly to bring them to life.
WOW MOMENTS AND MOTORING FRIENDS
A big part of the business鈥檚 success is its emphasis on people. That includes customers, who are called friends, and employees, who are called team members. Team members are thoroughly vetted and meticulously trained under the watchful eyes of Sam Wyatt, a 2015 South business grad and Yellowhammer鈥檚 regional manager since 2018.
One of the precepts of Yellowhammer is, 鈥淭he culture of our company should be just as important as the coffee.鈥 Required reading for all staff is the 288-page book 鈥淯nreasonable Hospitality鈥 by Will Guidara. It seems like a big ask 鈥 homework for employees at a coffee shop 鈥 but Yellowhammer has waiting lists of prospective employees while its industry peers are desperate to find workers.
鈥淲ow moments鈥 are a takeaway from the book. A road trip pack that includes an energy drink, a pack of gum and a playlist is given to drive-thru customers whose cars are packed with suitcases and pillows. If floaties and towels are spotted, there鈥檚 a pack for that, too 鈥 the 鈥渂each trip pack,鈥 complete with sunscreen and sand toys.
THE COFFEE AND THE ROASTER
The search for the perfect bean and roast was an early part of Jeff and Monique Roberts鈥
journey. They found Greg Jacobs, a 25-year roaster based in Jackson, Mississippi.
Jacobs has an international 鈥淨 grader鈥 on his roasting team 鈥 think sommelier, but
for coffee 鈥 who has undergone years of training to master the art of bean selection.
Roberts says he once handed a shot of espresso to a man from Italy. The man walked away, took a taste, then turned around. Roberts was sure he was coming to ask for his money back.
Instead, he said, 鈥淭his is the first time since I have been in America that I have felt like I was in the streets of Italy.鈥
THE FAMILY BUSINESS
The Robertses have four young kids. The two oldest have started 鈥渂usinesses鈥 鈥 pool
cleaning and yard maintenance 鈥 and the third is planning a specialty hot chocolate
shop. They鈥檙e learning about entrepreneurship and concepts like profit and loss and
risk-taking. It鈥檚 not forced on them, but good lessons abound, and it may just create
a legacy.
Eventually the children may work in a Yellowhammer coffee shop, like that eighth one, already primed and in prelaunch near Government Boulevard and Azalea Road. There are other big plans: Roberts, a licensed pilot, plans to buy a Yellowhammer jet 鈥 for convenient business travel and, ultimately, as a perk for staff to fly anywhere they want.
鈥淲e try to keep ourselves in the position to always go to the next opportunity,鈥 he says.
Once, a barista suggested that he鈥檇 never get the jet idea off the ground.
He asked her, 鈥淗ow much would you bet that we don鈥檛?鈥
Her reply: 鈥淲ell, I wouldn鈥檛 bet against you.鈥
鈥淵eah,鈥 he told her. 鈥淢e neither.
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