1 / 25

Lessons From a $1.20 Pizza

Lessons From a $1.20 Pizza. Case exploration and analysis on. Presented by Trevor Zink. March 26, 2008 MBAG/H 646 Dr. Anatoly Zhuplev. The Overview. Brief case review Chinese lifestyles and trends Tradition, change, implications Company overview Company, founder Industry overview

Download Presentation

Lessons From a $1.20 Pizza

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lessons From a $1.20 Pizza Case exploration and analysis on Presented by Trevor Zink March 26, 2008 MBAG/H 646 Dr. Anatoly Zhuplev

  2. The Overview • Brief case review • Chinese lifestyles and trends • Tradition, change, implications • Company overview • Company, founder • Industry overview • Competition, analysis models • The future • Prospects, recommendations

  3. The Case • Anthony Le Corre • Started and closed two pizzerias before opening… • Hello Pizza • Cheap, consistent pizza • Started with $500,000 in seed capital • Three restaurants, three delivery centers, others • Surprise: Successful

  4. The People Changing Traditions Implications for Business

  5. The Preferences • Preference is for Asian tastes, flavors • Western food attractive, but not daily meal • Eating out is common • At least 1 meal per day average • Majority of sales are eat-in (not take-out) • “Chunr” (Street food) is popular • Convenient, cheap, fresh, tasty • Fast-casual not popular • Price/convenience first considerations • Difficult to break in to market Source: Euromonitor Consumer Lifestyle Report 2008; Newman, Jacqueline

  6. The Changing Culture • High motivation to eat healthy, organic, local • Traditional foods, such as rice, seen as healthier • Health regulations growing stricter • Relative growth in restaurant food/drink spending is low • Cooking is traditional, still common • China still very Chinese • Local’s purchasing power equal with foreigners • -0.39 migrants/1,000; 0.655% population growth Source: Euromonitor Lifestyle Report 2008; CIA World Fact Book 2009 Newman, Jacqueline; Law Library of Congress

  7. The Changing Culture (Cont.) • Increasing disposable income • Spend more on entertainment/shopping • Growing urban population • Concerns of work, career, time management • Trend towards prepackaged and frozen food • Singles, working professionals • Refrigeration is common • Increasingly, “convenience is king” • With growing young working class, price is major consideration • Link Source: Euromonitor Lifestyle Report 2008; Newman, Jacqueline

  8. The Meaning of It All • Balance of tradition and change • New businesses • Opportunities for non-traditional products, services • Large, untapped market willing to seek variety • Must be culturally sensitive, aware • Inside contacts or cultural assimilation needed • 2008 Study: Reputation and relationships play important roles in formal financing of the small private firms • Chains, established businesses • Must be willing to adapt to culture • Western management with Chinese tastes good mix • Partnerships, physical presence, speaking language, government appeasement crucial to success Source: Zhang, Guidin; Anderson, Derek

  9. Hello Pizza The Man, the Mission

  10. The Entrepreneur • Anthony Le Corre • Finished French “military service” • Accountant for Swiss water company • Motivated by necessity • Set up pizza parlor in Kunming • Was distracted, sold business • Set up another in Chongqing • Sold standard pizzas at standard prices • Didn’t stand out, closed business after one year • Read the history of McDonald’s • Was commanded by God himself to make cheap pizza

  11. Michelangelo, The Creation of the 10 Yuan Pizza Michelangelo’s alternate title: Adam is disciplined for trying to steal God’s piece of Pizza

  12. The Business Model • Competitive Strategy • Aggressively cost-based • Overall mission: Turn pizza into an inexpensive commodity • Standardization and mass production of pizzas • Precisely measured ingredients separated in single-pizza portions, premade crusts • Prepared the night before, cooked upon order • Small, easily trained workforce, segregation of tasks • Offer limited, rotating choices • “People will get sick of old products” • Economies of scale • Model viable for large number of restaurants

  13. The Marketing Mix • Price • Cost-leader, minimum price • Product • The “Model T” of pizza • Limited choices, precise ingredients • “Really not bad at all considering how cheap it is” • Distribution • Restaurants, delivery centers • Online orders, phone orders • Promotion • Online coupons • Room for improvement

  14. Hello Pizza, Welcome to Today • Link • Consistent with business model • Slight changes • Price changes September 2007 • 元25-35 up from 元10 ($3.66–5.13) • Specialty pizzas • Sweetheart Pizza • Desserts, Risotto • Also cheap (元5-25; $0.73–3.66) • Growth • 8 restaurants in 5 cities Source: Hello Pizza Website

  15. The Industry Fast Times in Fast Food China

  16. The Industry: Overview • Highly saturated market • Over 1 million outlets, 6% growth in 2007 • 元340 billion in 2007 (~$49.79 billion) • 9% growth in 2007 • 12% growth per annum since 2002 • Dominated by multinational chains • Yum! Restaurants China – 41% • KFC, East Dawning, Pizza Hut • McDonald’s – 21% • Ting Hsin Intl Group – 9.5% Source: Euromonitor Industry Report 2008

  17. The Trends • Slower growth expected • Increasing cost of ingredients • Many Chinese consumers are quite price sensitive • Western style operations • Chains moving to lower-tiered cities • 24-hour stores gaining foothold • Started by McDonald’s, picked up by others • Food safety, health are main concerns Source: Euromonitor Industry Report 2008

  18. The Competition • Yum, McDonald’s, Ting Hsin • Pizza Hut • 400 “casual dining” restaurants in 100 cities • 79 Delivery stations • Project 20,000 units • Link • Dominoes entered 1995 • 12 locations • 15 choices, West/Asian mix • 元76-108 ($11-16) • Other Premium and “Authentic” Pizza Parlors Source: Euromonitor Industry Report 2008; Yum! Website; Dominoes Websitec

  19. Hello Pizza vs THE WORLD

  20. The Good, the Bad… • Opportunities • Huge market potential still exists • Growth, expansion, new product lines • Leverage combination of local tastes and western business model • Risks • New entrants • Rising cost of ingredients • Increasingly health-conscious market

  21. Source: Euromonitor Industry Report 2008; Zhang, Guibin; Euromonitor Lifestyle Report 2008;

  22. The Future The Prospects The Pitfalls The Magic 8-Ball says…

  23. “The Signs Point to Yes” • Niche market • Business model unique in sector • Motivated, savvy entrepreneur • Established, past point of probable failure • Meets/solves a growing need/problem • Sustainable competitive advantage

  24. The Advice • Promotion, promotion, promotion • Make name known both to convenience seekers… • Many choices, low-involvement decision • Bombard with image, identity • …And subculture • Backwards integrate • Reduce supplier bargaining power • Expand • Economies of scale are key • Develop business system “package” • Franchising • Training • Expanding

  25. Selected Bibliography • Anderson, Derek. “Yes To FTA, but what about the Barriers?” NZ Business; Mar2008, Vol. 22 Issue 2, p12-12, 1/3p • “Burger-Thy-Neighbor Policies” Economist; 2/7/2009, Vol. 390 Issue 8617, p68-68, 1p • CIA World Fact Book: China; 2009. • "Consumer Lifestyle Report: China." 10 Nov. 2008. Euromonitor International. • Dominoes Corporate China Sitehttp://www.dominos.com.cn/english/ • “Industry Report: Fast Food – China.” 22 Oct. 2008. Euromonitor International. • Newman, Jacqueline M. Food Culture in China (Food Culture around the World). New York: Greenwood P, 2004 • Pizza Hut Consumer China Website http://www.pizzahut.com.cn/phcda/index.aspx • Zeldin, Wendy. “China: Dairy Product Quality and Safety Regulations.” 3 Nov. 2008. Law Library of Congress http://www.loc.gov/lawweb/servlet/lloc_news?disp3_762_text • “Yum! Corporate information - China” http://www.yum.com/company/china.asp • Zhang, Guibin. “The choice of formal or informal finance: Evidence from Chengdu, China.” China Economic Review (1043951X); Dec 2008, Vol. 19 Issue 4, p659-678, 20p Special Thanks • Jesuit Connection Librarian Assistance • Dr. Anatoly Zhuplev

More Related