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If your model is strictly business then the multiple roasts concept is difficult to defend.
Stefan Hersh said:If your model is strictly business then the multiple roasts concept is difficult to defend.
Why do you say that?
In many industries, it is recommended practice to source multiple suppliers for purchased goods. It gives you options when you have availability issues or price disagreements with one supplier. That's a pretty sound business policy.
Here's a related question for you multiple-roaster shops... Do you sell beans and coffees under the roaster's name, or under yours? I can see benefits of both approaches, and am curious what the experiences have been.
Another item to add to the discussion - there are some very good roasters that only do exclusive arrangements.
Good discussion.
As articulated elsewhere here it is simply much more economical to buy quantity from one source at as steep a discount as possible. That means one coffee order instead of many, a training regimen suited to one coffee and presumably a volume discount. To manage accounts with multiple roasters is a commitment of much greater resources: time and money both.
Brady said:Stefan Hersh said:If your model is strictly business then the multiple roasts concept is difficult to defend.
Why do you say that?
In many industries, it is recommended practice to source multiple suppliers for purchased goods. It gives you options when you have availability issues or price disagreements with one supplier. That's a pretty sound business policy.
We sell beans from each roaster they way the sell them. We even go as far as having our baristas wear shirts from other coffee houses and we have been toying with the idea starting a "disloyalty card" here in Chicago.
Brady said:Here's a related question for you multiple-roaster shops... Do you sell beans and coffees under the roaster's name, or under yours? I can see benefits of both approaches, and am curious what the experiences have been.
Another item to add to the discussion - there are some very good roasters that only do exclusive arrangements.
Good discussion.
Is there any PRICE bargaining power at all in the volumes that your average shop buys?
Buying in volume works great for cups, but for perishable product?
Depending on the roaster I can unequivocally say Hell Yes. Especially in this economy. He asked, I crunched the numbers. It hurts the bottom line and my own struggle to keep my doors open but I just gave a struggling wholesale cafe customer a temporary 20% recession discount even though my actual cost of greens has gone up 18% in the last year and 10.3% just since the end of October '09. I'm in it for the long haul and will bend over backwards helping a loyal customer survive, whatever it takes. I would not give the same discount to a onsie twosie account.
Brady said:
Is there any PRICE bargaining power at all in the volumes that your average shop buys?
Buying in volume works great for cups, but for perishable product?
Stefan Hersh said:As articulated elsewhere here it is simply much more economical to buy quantity from one source at as steep a discount as possible. That means one coffee order instead of many, a training regimen suited to one coffee and presumably a volume discount. To manage accounts with multiple roasters is a commitment of much greater resources: time and money both.
Brady said:Stefan Hersh said:If your model is strictly business then the multiple roasts concept is difficult to defend.
Why do you say that?
In many industries, it is recommended practice to source multiple suppliers for purchased goods. It gives you options when you have availability issues or price disagreements with one supplier. That's a pretty sound business policy.
Theoretically, yes. Real-world, not so much.
Have you actually found that the difference between being a 80lb-a-week and being a 40lb-a-week customer severely changes your bargaining position with your supplier? Is there any PRICE bargaining power at all in the volumes that your average shop buys?
Buying in volume works great for cups, but for perishable product?
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