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Marketing Oysters What does the consumer want

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The difference between being the price taker and the price maker. ... alone unless you can be the low-cost producer- the Wallmart of oyster producers ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marketing Oysters What does the consumer want


1
Marketing OystersWhat does the consumer want?
  • by Robert Rheault
  • Moonstone Oysters
  • Narragansett, RI
  • East Coast Shellfish Growers Association
  • Executive Director
  • bob_at_moonstoneoysters.com
  • www.ECSGA.org

2
What does the consumer want?
  • Quality
  • Consistency
  • Cleanliness
  • Shape
  • Flavor
  • Year-round availability
  • Timely shipping
  • Attractive packaging
  • Food safety
  • Name

3
Selling vs. Marketing
  • The difference between being the price taker and
    the price maker.
  • Also the difference between economic success and
    failure

4
Quality is the Key
  • Set high standards and keep them high
  • Perform regular quality control
  • Ask for feedback often, and listen dont argue
  • Pack the box as if every oyster has your name on
    it and your reputation rides on every one it
    does.
  • Sell the ugly ones under a different name
  • If quality is off, stop shipping

5
Consistency
  • Chefs want predictable size, not a range
  • They want to know how many will fill a plate
  • Some want large and some want small find out
    and give them what they want
  • If your crop is coming out variable, cull and
    sort and sell multiple size grades

6
Shape
  • They want a deep cup and uniform shape
  • Dont try and slip in a few snaggly ones
  • If they have a reverse hinge or no cup throw them
    back or shuck em or sell them to Joes clam
    shack, not your high-priced customer

7
Cleanliness
  • Pressure washing costs a fraction of a cent and
    can add 5-10 cents to the price
  • This is food, it is going in someones
    mouth
  • Save the chefs labor
  • Box smells better when they open it
  • Federal law requires removal of sediment

8
Food Safety
  • Society has zero tolerance for illness
  • Test your own waters
  • Marketing tool
  • Protection from lawsuits
  • Keep product cool
  • Harvest early or late in the day and rush to the
    cold room
  • One illness and your trademark is trash

9
Freshness
  • Get your product to the market as fast as
    possible
  • As growers we can leave product in the water in
    trays and harvest only what we have orders for
  • Harvest, pack and ship on the same day if possible

10
Flavor
  • There is little you can do about this except use
    the uniqueness as marketing tool
  • Get some wine snobs together feed them oysters
    and ask them to come up with fancy adjectives to
    help describe and market your oysters
  • Salty, briny, sweet all overused

11
Flavor
  • If your oyster is low in salt emphasize how it
    lets the other flavors shine through
  • Northern consumers tend to prefer a salty oyster
    it is what they are used to.
  • Wet storage or salting (either in tanks on land
    or in cages in a salty location) is legal, but
    ISSC regulations for land-based facilities are
    tough to comply with

12
Polishing
  • For oysters harvested from Approved waters
  • Adds another degree of confidence
  • Good marketing tool
  • Southern oysters have a bad reputation in
    Northern high priced markets
  • An opportunity to increase saltiness and
    penetrate high end markets
  • Adds 3-5 cents in cost, but maybe 10-15 cents in
    value

13
Year-round availability
  • If you can modulate the harvest and supply to
    meet demand you can maintain markets
  • Once you shut a customer off he will find a
    replacement oyster. When you come back on line
    you have to win that customer back again
  • Use some triploids to avoid summer quality issues
  • The goal is to get your name on the menu!

14
Packaging
  • Clean well-designed packaging is well worth it
  • Wax box is 1.75 - 2.50
  • Onion sacks are for sellers
  • The box art is another opportunity to tell
    customers why your product is special and why
    they pay so much
  • A waterproof flyer inside is another great
    marketing tool

15
Competition
  • Try to avoid competing locally get your product
    out on the market, across the country
  • Local competition only serves to drive down
    prices
  • Dont compete on price alone unless you can be
    the low-cost producer- the Wallmart of oyster
    producers
  • Find another feature that sets your product apart

16
Selling Direct vs. Wholesale
  • Permits, HACCP, facilities, delivery truck
    expenses and overhead
  • Weekly calls lots of road trips
  • Money collection keep tight rein
  • Good weekly feedback from chefs
  • Ask for recommendations!
  • Above a certain volume gets challenging
  • Can put you at odds with wholesalers

17
How do you set a price?
  • What the market will bear
  • Dont sell yourself short
  • If customers are not complaining, your price is
    probably too low
  • If customers are complaining too much then you
    probably need a new customer
  • Keep raising prices until you cannot sell out

18
Whats in a Name?
  • Good names evoke clean water, French, exotic
    locales, fruit gemstones
  • Raspberry Point
  • Charleston Cups
  • Emerald Isle
  • Blueberry Cove
  • Bad names evoke filth or are not memorable or
    pronounceable
  • Barnyard animals
  • Harbor or creek
  • Quonset
  • Hog Island
  • Matunuck

19
East Coast Shellfish Growers Association
  • Representing hundreds of growers from Maine to
    Florida
  • Work on national issues closely with National
    Fisheries Institute, PCSGA and Gulf Oyster
    Industry Council
  • Created the East Cost Shellfish Research
    Institute - 720,000 in earmarks 2008
  • LISTSERV discussion group
  • www.ECSGA.org
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