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Coffee Shop Talk of a non sexual Nature Visit Sam's Alfresco Heaven. Singapore's best Alfresco Coffee Experience! If you're up to your ears with all this Sex Talk and would like to take a break from it all to discuss other interesting aspects of life in Singapore,  pop over and join in the fun.

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Old 19-04-2016, 02:30 PM
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Thumbs up McDonald's

An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:

Given a choice, I wouldn't go to McDonald's for a meal, I'd pick something else, almost anything. But for running a business, McDonald's would be my number one choice. I don't think there was ever a year, where the accounts department in Mcdonald;s were every sweating. Every year, its always profiting. In Singapore, every McDonald's branch is always packed, any meal time, especially breakfast. Its not difficult to train staff to work at McDonald's. Its not difficult to learn what's on the menu they offer. Even Ah Mah, Ah Kong, soon will familiarize with the stuff they offer to customers. Children fall for their toys given in their happy meal. The organization is on top of environmental sentiments all over the world, and is eco-conscious in its marketing. When it first came to Singapore in 1977(?), people were wondering how it could compete will local fare like wonton mee, chai tau kuey and the vast array of what available to the locals here, well, in a very short time, pancakes and hash browns became part of Singapore diet as well. Kids took to it like nothing, very quickly. And many didn't even want to go to the food courts, they wanted to be seen at Mac's! Been wondering how they would fare in a market like India (I haven't been there) as beef is a no-no there. Well, stumbled onto this article, titled, "How Mac's CONQUERED India!" The word conquered was what grabbed my attention, it is a huge market. And its just growing! It further confirms, MacDonald's is our way of life! If not now, its working its way there!

Cheers!


http://www.bbc.com/news/business-30115555

How McDonald's conquered India

By Shilpa Kannan BBC News, Delhi
• 19 November 2014
• From the section Business

A staunch vegetarian, Amit Jatia was 14 when he walked into a McDonald's for the first time.
It was in Japan and all he could have was a milkshake.
He loved it.
He is now the man behind McDonald's in India, responsible for the phenomenal growth the company has had in the country.
Vegetarian family values
When the American fast-food giant first contacted him in 1994 Amit's first challenge was close to home, convincing his vegetarian family to invest in the business.
"From my family's point of view we thought through this carefully," he tells the BBC.
"What convinced us was that McDonald's was willing to localise. They promised that there would be no beef or pork on the menu.
"Nearly half of Indians are vegetarian so choosing a vegetarian to run their outlets here makes sense."
Across the world the Big Mac beefburger is the company's signature product. Amit and his partners had to come up with their own signature product for India, so the Chicken Maharajah Mac was born.
Originally Amit was the local partner in the south and west of India, running the chain as a joint venture with the global McDonald's company.
Later he bought out the McDonald's stake and now solely runs the chain in the south and west of the country. in India
Culture change
It hasn't been an easy journey.
"From a consumer point of view I had to start with the message that a burger is a meal," he says.
His research shows that in 2003, of 100 meals that people ate in a month, only three were eaten out.
They introduced a 20 rupees (20p) burger called Aloo Tikki Burger, a burger with a cutlet made of mashed potatoes, peas and flavoured with Indian spices.
"It's something you would find on Indian streets, it was essentially the McDonald's version of street food. The price and the taste together, the value we introduced, was a hit. It revolutionised the industry in India," he says.
Now eating out has gone up to 9-10 times per 100 meals and McDonald's in India has more than 320 million customers a year.
"Whether you love or hate McDonald's, they deliver a formula very well," says Edward Dixon, chief operating officer of Sannam S4, which provides market entry advice and support for multinationals in India, Brazil and China.
"Localised menu, delivered with precision quality at a price that works. One other trick they have used very effectively [is] an entry level ice cream which fuels the ability for consumers who might not ordinarily be able to afford to become a customer."
New markets, new customers
The kind of customers McDonald's attracts in India is very different from other countries.
There are still families with young children who frequent it. But diners also include many young people, aged between 19 and 30, with no kids.
During the week, Amit says, this crowd dominates the restaurants.
I wanted to see how true this was so I decided to have lunch in the McDonald's in Delhi's crowded Lajpat Nagar market area.
Sitting to my right, a young IT worker munches on a McSpicy Paneer while conducting a Skype meeting on his laptop.
Breaking into a new market is never easy but many have achieved massive success far from home.
The BBC's global business team meet those who have managed to break into the fast growing global markets and find out what secrets they have learnt about how to succeed in them.
How to succeed in...
On my left, a group of college students share a meal.
But what's most interesting are the two tables behind me.
One table has two elderly couples in serious discussion; the other has a coy-looking woman and man trying to have a conversation amidst the din.
With a bit of eavesdropping I find out that this is traditional matchmaking but in the modern Indian way.
The parents have introduced the potential bride and groom who are having their first official date under the watchful eyes of their mothers and fathers. The parents meanwhile are sorting out the details of the proposed marriage, all over a Maharaja Mac Meal.
So Amit's research seems to be right: unlike McDonald's around the world, there are hardly any parents with young children here.
________________________________________
Fast competition
McDonald's doesn't have the Indian fast-food market to itself:
 Domino's Pizza has more than 500 restaurants across India
 KFC has more than 300 restaurants
 Dunkin Donuts has more than 30 outlets in India
 Burger King has just opened its first restaurant in Delhi and other outlets are reported to be opening shortly - it too has dropped pork and beef from its menu
________________________________________
McLocalising
Adapting McDonald's for the uniquely Indian market was a big expense when he started but Amit believes it has paid off in the long term.
When they started there was no lettuce supply chain in India. Most people used cabbage on burgers.
So they had to set it up from scratch.
The infrastructure is also now becoming a local venture.
"In 2001 we began to localise all the equipment that goes into the kitchen to build a burger," he says.
"For example, we took a burger and took it apart; now piece by piece every component is made locally.
"All the kitchen fabrication is done locally. All the refrigeration, chillers and freezers and furniture are made locally."
In most cases their global suppliers have worked with local businesses to make that happen.
He wants to take it further. His current challenge is to make fryers locally.
While recent weakening of consumer spending has seen a slowdown in sales, overall Amit has managed to grow same-store sales by 200% and he says he's not done yet.
The plans are to open another 1,000 restaurants in the next decade.
"Think about it," he says, "India has 1.2 billion people and we have just 350 McDonald's [restaurants] to service them."
But India is not an easy market to work in, especially for multinational companies.
McDonald's in India has another partner in the north with whom they are still in the process of addressing the issue of ownership amid an ongoing legal battle.
So how did Amit Jhatia get around it?
"There are a lot of regulatory approvals needed to get something done," he says.
"But that is known. Once you know it, you factor it into your business plan."


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