Peter Ramsden, Baird Symposium

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Peter Ramsden, President & CEO, M.F. Foley Company, Inc. Topic: Selling Shellfish at Home

Transcript of Peter Ramsden, Baird Symposium

12th Annual Ronald C. Baird Sea Grant Science SymposiumNovember 14, 2013

The Future of Shellfish in Rhode Island

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1) Introduction

2) The Challenges of Selling Local

3) How Foley Fish Markets Shellfish

4) What Foley Fish Values in a Vendor

Agenda(in 15 minutes)

FOLEY FISHFamily Owned and Focused for Four Generations

• Full service, primary processor of fresh seafood• Only ship direct to the end user (hotels, restaurants, clubs, schools & specialty retail) • Customers in 40 states, Bermuda, and the Caribbean

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Foley Shellfish Statistics

1) At any given time we handle: 12 Varieties of Oysters 6 Varieties of Mussels All sizes of hardshell clams Soft-shell Clams & Razor Clams

2) Virtually all of our sourcing is from New England andthe Canadian Maritime Provinces

3) Every business day ( on avg) we sell: 140 bags of Oysters 120 bags of Mussels 80 bags of hard-shell clams

4) We do not wet store (tank) any shellfish inventory

2013 BAIRD SEA GRANT SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

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Challenges of Selling Local

Local Farm to Local Table

• Can the local table offer stable, sustained, year round demand?

• Are there enough local tables?

• Do the local tables pay promptly?

• Are there too many local farmers all looking for a spot at the table?

• Are you prepared to jump every time the dinner bell rings?

• Are you willing to set up your own tables?

• Is it possible that a table in Singapore or Shanghai might valueyour shellfish more than the local table?

2013 BAIRD SEA GRANT SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

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Evaluating Shellfish – What Does Foley Fish Look For?

Quality of Harvest Area / Environment Uniformity of Size Cleanliness of Shell Meat to Shell Ratio Salinity / Taste Logistics – time out of water Availability – Harvest Season Commitment of the Farmers Record Keeping Name Price

Blue Hill Bay at Sunrise

2013 BAIRD SEA GRANT SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

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Tell the Role of the Vintner - Shell fisherman

Farmed or Wild Seed Grown out with upwellers? Racks or Ocean Floor? Time in the Beds – Sizing? Winter Storage? Tumbled – Cup Shape? Method of Harvest? Different Culls? Washing Method? Processing - Purged?

What makes your product different? better?

2013 BAIRD SEA GRANT SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

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Highlight environmental attributes… shallow water cover, with ample sunlight penetration 8-10 foot tidal movement delivers nutrients and removes waste, twice daily the harbor has no commercial or industrial development 75% of the land surrounding the harbor is conservation protected the natural geography creates a tidal swirling effect moving through the

area, constantly reintroducing nutrients the bay is naturally high in salinity

2013 BAIRD SEA GRANT SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

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Points of Differentiation:

Full traceability from premium hatchery seed stock

Oysters moved during grow out for maximum nutrients

Last year of grow-out done in raised mesh bags for a cleaner oyster

Graded before shipping for uniformity of sizing

Purged for cleanliness

WAWENOC OYSTERS

2013 BAIRD SEA GRANT SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

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SeaTrace QR code technology

2013 BAIRD SEA GRANT SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

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Characteristics of Foley’s Best Shellfish Vendors They have a passion for what they do

They are willing to share their knowledge – educate

They are always striving to improve the product

They run their operations as businesses, not a hobby

They are good communicators – in real time

2013 BAIRD SEA GRANT SCIENCE SYMPOSIUM

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Keys to Customer Retention(as espoused by Frank Foley)

Pick a business model and stick with it

Try not to overpromise

Grow your business gradually

Telegraph any price changes

Get to know your customers’ business

Don’t compete with your best customers(keep a level playing field in all markets)