Founder &
CEO at Foodem.com
Food Distribution Industry Disruption in
the US
“They always say time
changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself.” – Andy
Warhol.
When you hear the word
‘innovation’, what’s the first thing that comes to mind? For me, the word
‘change’ appears. Per Merriam-Webster, one of the definitions for ‘change’ is
to make radically different. Another is to give a different position, course, or direction to.
Almost all systems, processes, and methods have the potential to become more
efficient with a little ingenuity, innovation, and change. In short, this is
how Foodem began.
I simply saw and experienced first-hand an industry that needed
a major change; the wholesale food distribution industry.
My first experience came after graduating from University of
Maryland, College Park in 2000. I ran a small B2B food distribution company for
a few years and grew it quite successfully. While winning commercial kitchen
accounts came with a level of ease, restaurants were a different beast.
Overall, we had nearly 220 accounts, but it was extremely difficult to get
business from restaurants. This led me to rely heavily on sales consultants,
which was not financially feasible in the long-term. Of course, the more sales
consultants I was able to have in the field, the more accounts we were able to
acquire, but we didn’t have the liquid cash to hire a huge sales force. This
made competing with food distribution giants, Sysco and US Foods, a task within
itself. They have what seems to be endless cash, resulting in a massive sales
team that’s able to capture over 60% of the market in any given metropolitan
area.
In turn, I began talking with other small food distributors,
inquiring about their frustrations, growing our businesses, and competing with
the likes of Sysco. By the end of my stint running the company, the wheels
started turning. I began brainstorming ideas and searching for solutions that
would alleviate or even eliminate some of the hardships I, as well as other
small to mid-size distributors suffered. I wanted to find or create a
disruptive solution that would help distributors effectively grow their
business without the added overhead of a large sales force. This is when the
initial concept of an e-commerce food distribution marketplace began to take
shape; what is now Foodem.
It was evident that distributors were in need of tools to help
them compete with larger distributors, increase their market share, and become
or remain relevant in a highly competitive industry, but I still needed
validation. Before moving forward with my business concept, I needed to know
how restaurants operated and what their most pertinent needs were. After all,
wholesale food buyers were the other component. In order to fully experience
the other side of the food supply chain, I bought a restaurant, which soon
presented a different set of struggles.
To my surprise, restaurant operations were completely antiqued,
as well as flawed. Everything was done manually; yes, paper, pen, phone calls,
and faxes. Due to the lack of price transparency, wholesale food buyers such as
myself, were forced to set aside time to prepare written food orders and call
multiple distributors, from multiple categories to price compare or wait for
faxed price sheets. Not only was this highly inefficient, it was also very
costly in time and money. On average, I was spending nearly 15 hours per month
on procurement alone, further letting me know the wholesale food industry was
ripe for an innovative change.
Having seen both sides of the spectrum, I was confident in
pursuing my idea. I envisioned Foodem as the Amazon.com of the wholesale food
industry; a marketplace that would facilitate relationships and connect
wholesale food buyers, and smaller food distributors and growers. A marketplace
that has the potential to lower the overhead costs for smaller distributors and
growers, as far as sales and marketing costs are concerned, and expand their
market reach. On the flip-side, restaurants, catering companies, hotels, and
other wholesale food buyers would spend less time placing orders and more time
running their businesses. Price transparency, food cost analytics and in-depth
search capabilities in one centralized location would be of the utmost
importance, saving both time and money.
Now live in the Washington, DC Metro area, the Foodem
marketplace was four years in the making. Growing rapidly, we launched the
second version of the website in May, 2013 which also supports the growing
demand for local and sustainably-farmed food by connecting local farmers, in
addition to food distributors, with wholesale buyers.
My unique professional experiences allowed me to walk the path
of both a food buyer and distributor; giving me the chance to observe the needs
of the industry from both perspectives, but with any startup or existing
business, there are challenges. The Foodem team had its share of startup
stumbling blocks including limited industry contacts, marketing barriers,
compiling a diverse tech team, and the task of raising capital and
bootstrapping.
Starting a business is no easy feat and we could all use a
little help along the way. My personal advice to young entrepreneurs is to 1)
brainstorm an idea or product that can be bootstrapped, allowing time for the
product/model to be proven 2) know your target audience, seek users for your
product, and build a following 3) only seek funds after your model has been
proven and buzz worthy and 4) compile a great team with complementary, yet
diverse skill sets. Lastly, PASSION is something that I feel very strongly
about. Entrepreneurs must be passionate about their idea and their concept.
Without passion, why do it in the first place?
It’s my first time to visit this site & I’m really surprised to see such impressive stuff out there.
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