Showing posts with label Coffee Shop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Coffee Shop. Show all posts

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Interview with Mr. Nabi Saleh, the Executive Chairman for Gloria Jean's Coffees

Specialty coffee chain Gloria Jean’s Coffees, which silently entered India two years ago via a master franchise agreement with Citymax Hospitality, a company controlled by the Dubai-based retail group Landmark, is looking to ramp up operations now. From the current nine outlets, the intention is to scale up to 25 and then 100 by the end of 2013. This will see the privately-held coffee chain, which has 917 outlets globally, go to 16 cities from the current four. Nabi Saleh, the New-South-Wales, Australia-based executive chairman of Gloria Jean’s Coffees, talks about the company’s plans in India. Excerpts:

What took you so long to ramp up operations here despite a presence since the last quarter of 2007?We are not into growth for growth’s sake. We believe in the franchising concept like most other fast-food and coffee chains, but we choose to scrutinise our partners carefully. We are fine if they take their time when setting up operations in a country. We have master franchise agreements in 35 countries. We understand how it works. There is no point in rushing in to set up stores only to shut half of them down later. This is, at the end of the day, a retail business. You have to guarantee foot falls. How do you do that? With a first-class service offering that targets the right consumer.

How different is Gloria Jeans from other coffee chains?The big differentiator is that we do not outsource our back-end operations to third-party vendors like other coffee chains do. Operations such as sourcing, roasting and blending are all done in-house. We have a team in place that directly sources single-origin coffee beans from growers across the world. At the moment, our team is sourcing from over 26-27 coffee-growing nations across the world.

To us, coffee is our hero. So everything emanates from there. We have something called a coffee university, where we train our staff rigorously. Even our master franchisers are invited to participate in our programmes at our university. There is a certain degree of localisation we permit to suit the palate of people in the region. But there is a broad template we follow over and above that. That is our signature style.

Who is your target audience in India? It is the up and coming middle class. We could have people from above or below this catchment walking into our outlets, too. That is not an issue. But we have positioned ourselves in a manner we feel would appeal to upper middle class Indians.

But how competitive are you on pricing in India?
We are quite competitive. A Gloria Jeans cappuccino, for instance, costs anywhere between Rs 49 to Rs 55 for a 230-millilitre cup. Competition provides lesser volume, 180-millilitres, I understand, for the same price. A consumer would land up spending anywhere between Rs 49 to Rs 110 depending on what he or she purchases at our outlets. It’s not a such a bad deal, if you ask me.


Tony White shares his vision for Australian Franchise Gloria Jean in India

Australian cafe chain Gloria Jean’s Coffees, which forayed into the Indian market through the Dubai headquartered Landmark group’s hospitality 
Tony White
Tony White, regional general manager, Gloria Jean's Coffees
arm Citymax in 2008, has grown at 23% year-on-year. With 917 cafes globally, the chain expects to brew its way into the Indian market with 100 stores by 2013. Gloria Jean’s Coffees regional general manager Tony White speaks about its lessons from this market and how it is using India as the node to serve countries from Africa to the subcontinent. Excerpts: 

Where does Gloria Jean’s position itself and what has been experience like since its 2008 entry? Gloria Jean’s operates at around 10% premium over the two main cafe players in India, offering 100% arabica beans. Although we position ourselves at the upper end of the mainstream cafe market, we do not want to operate at the price points of international players as it would prevent us from achieving scale. We have grown to a presence of nine stores across Mumbai, Bangalore, Hyderabad and Chennai. Gloria Jean’s India broke even at the retail level two months back and is targeting company-level profitability by 2012. By then the Citymax would have 40 stores in place.

Is there a possibility that your tie up with master franchisee Citymax be extended to subfranchised growth? Sub-franchising is definitely an option to grow. But we will look at branching out into sub franchisees only once we reach a 50 store presence. Although most of our outlets are franchised in Australia, it is usually owned by a couples for whom it is a means of livelihood. They’ve got their skin in the business and are focused on driving sales. But in India, the franchisee does not necessarily run the business. Although we may train him, a lot of factors may get lost in translation when he reaches out to the staff. Consistency of experience is essential to not dilute the brand. 

What is the progress on your roasting facility in Bangalore on stream? We have a long term commitment to this market and are setting up a roaster with a capacity to manufacture up to 12,000 cups per batch by the calendar year end. Being situated in the city, the fresh beans can be easily distributed to our outlets which are largely metro specific. Import tariffs have forced us to source locally and this facility is expected to become a hub for Asia. It will also allow us export to 11 countries across the subcontinent, Middle East and Africa, which were earlier importing beans from Australia. By 2012, 80% of the in house production will serve India while the remainder will be exported.