This is a great article that highlights a lot of the topics we cover in class.  It is quite long, but worth your time if you have 15-20 minutes to read and think about a variety of things including:

  • The strategic decision made by Tim Hortons to take control of coffee roasting by moving that operation in-house.  Like we discussed in the early chapter of the Blocher textbook, sometimes controlling quality (probably the biggest factor for this company), delivery schedules, etc. necessitates a move in-house even when it may cost more.

If you were a Tim Hortons devotee back then, you might have noticed that the coffee in, say, Halifax didn’t taste quite the same as it did in the chain’s spiritual home base of Hamilton. That’s because the chain bought its coffee from third-party roasters. Then-CEO Paul House decided the company needed to take control of the consistency of its brew, and to that end built a lab at the firm’s Oakville HQ.

  • The tweaks necessary when a successful company moves to new markets.  In Canada, Tim Hortons is the king of the market.  The article references, though, difference between Western Canada and Eastern Canada and then spends a lot of time looking at ways that they are trying to crack the American market as they expand into new areas in the East & Midwest.

In 2008, Tim Hortons undertook what David Clanachan, Tim Hortons’ jovial head of U.S. and international operations, calls “a deep dive,” surveying tens of thousands of people about what would get them through the door of a Tim Hortons. The company built a full-sized model store in a warehouse in Oakville, spending months testing and refining the concept before rolling it up, so to speak, to the gates of Troy.

The result is a cross between the likes of Starbucks and the Tim’s Canadians know. “Not that I’m gonna hang around, write poetry and sing songs,” says Clanachan, “but I am gonna feel comfortable.”

  • The focus on quality as a competitive advantage as highlighted by the frequent “cupping” sessions that even involve some senior executives.  The management team realizes that without quality, Tim Hortons has no competitive advantage:

Consistency is key—both Schroeder and West never tire of that axiom. Achieving it is tricky, since coffee from a particular mountainside will not taste the same from season to season. Flavours change depending on the weather: too much rain or too little, more sun or less. The mercurial nature of the bean means that Tim’s coffee team is constantly revising the secret blend to maintain its trademark flavour.

  • The breakeven-point ramifications of the “Always Fresh” program where the cost of individual products (the article mentions donuts) is higher on a per-unit basis, but the hope was that the benefits of not running out of goods and with not having to discard stale product would offset this.  It seems like that hasn’t happened, at least in the eyes of some franchisees.

For 37 years, standard Tim Hortons stores were equipped with in-store kitchens, where staff bakers produced batches of fresh, hot doughnuts twice a day. Shortly after Joyce sold his Tim Hortons stake in 2001, the company brokered a deal with Ireland’s IAWS Group to build the $75-million Maidstone facility. Then-CEO House promised franchisees that the conversion—which cost store owners between $35,000 and $50,000—would boost their bottom line. Instead of letting unsold doughnuts go stale during downtimes, operators would be able to zap new batches as needed, in a glorified microwave oven. Voilà—“fresh-baked” in two minutes. And though the cost of producing one doughnut would change from eight or nine cents to 12 cents, that increase would be offset by a reduction in operating costs—no highly paid bakers on the payroll, less discarded product.

  • The value-chain relationships between Tim Hortons and its franchisees.  There are pending lawsuits between the parties and it is interesting that two groups that are so dependent on each other find themselves locked in these kinds of battles.

Still, it’s clear some franchisees have become disillusioned with Always Fresh. Arch Jollymore, a former high-ranking executive at Tim Hortons (and Joyce’s cousin), is seeking certification of a class-action lawsuit against the company. At issue: the impact of the Always Fresh conversion on franchisee margins. Jollymore and his wife, Anne (who owns a store in Burlington in her own right), are alleging breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, and breach of the duty of good faith and fair dealing. They are seeking damages of $1.95 billion.

  • The decision to centralize or decentralize decision-making.  Most franchise systems rely on strict centralization with standard signage, colors, marketing,etc.  Tim Hortons is selectively decentralizing certain things:

De Nardo leads a tour of Riese’s four other Tim Hortons counters at Penn Station, proudly pointing out the New York-only promotions—the only instance of non-standard advertising allowed in the chain. “It’s the New York mentality. We like to be a little on the edge.” Whenever he can, he steers clear of earnest in favour of funny. “Hell,” he says, “it’s doughnuts and coffee.” Hence Tea and Timbits (T&T—it’s dynamite!) and $5 dozens after 5. “And for New Yorkers, $5 is basically free.”

  • The impact of sourcing raw materials globally and the potential cost changes due to weather in parts of the world where coffee is grown:

“Central and South America are coming off the worst crop in 44 years,” West says as he slaps a sack of beans. And Colombia was deluged with rain for 16 months straight, diminishing crops. That has helped drive standard-grade coffee to a 12-year high of $1.75 (U.S.) per pound. The top-quality beans Tim Hortons buys—West says they compete with Starbucks for the finest Arabica beans on the market—are much pricier.

To read more (and please do!), visit this link: How Tim Hortons will take over the world – The Globe and Mail.