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Cold calling/Door to Door Fresh Food Business

  • 26-03-2010 12:06am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭BlackEdelweiss


    My business idea is to sell a single type of good quality, affordably priced, freshly made food product. I believe the idea is good but I am struggling to think of an effective point of transaction.
    Farmers markets are part of the plan but I dont think they will be enough. I also want to avoid the hassle of selling to shops etc although if the situation arises I will not refuse.
    I was thinking about selling my product door to door during the day, cold calling at first but hopefully at some stage building up enough repeat customers to give me a semi regular income. It would basically be the ice cream van model of selling except I would be selling a quality product, backed up by a lot of local marketing and hopefully word of mouth.

    I am struggling with this idea, it could work or it could be a complete disaster.
    Has anybody any views on this method?
    Would you buy food from someone at your door?


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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 214 ✭✭newfrontier


    Honestly the answer is no, but the farmers markets would be more appealing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 20,830 ✭✭✭✭Taltos


    Personally hate cold callers.
    Went from being polite - rude - and waiting to see what the next stage is. Cannot stop the gits.

    What about something along the lines of the stalls we see for the Wexford strawberries - say a different area each day - but the same area each week on that day. Advertise on notice boards in supermarkets... or flyers thru the doors in those areas. Also include on the flyers a number to call for deliveries of certain products if they miss you in the area. Web address with details of where you grow - types of pesticide, types/seasonality of product and price ranges... Even encourage repeat trade with club cards that get stamped - you know like in some coffee stores.

    Make yourself noticeable - bright colours - large clear signs. Clean stall, clothes etc.

    Even talk to some of the healthfood stores and see if they will buy direct or allow you to advertise in their stores?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭BlackEdelweiss


    Taltos wrote: »
    Personally hate cold callers.
    Went from being polite - rude - and waiting to see what the next stage is. Cannot stop the gits.

    What about something along the lines of the stalls we see for the Wexford strawberries - say a different area each day - but the same area each week on that day. Advertise on notice boards in supermarkets... or flyers thru the doors in those areas. Also include on the flyers a number to call for deliveries of certain products if they miss you in the area. Web address with details of where you grow - types of pesticide, types/seasonality of product and price ranges... Even encourage repeat trade with club cards that get stamped - you know like in some coffee stores.

    Make yourself noticeable - bright colours - large clear signs. Clean stall, clothes etc.

    Even talk to some of the healthfood stores and see if they will buy direct or allow you to advertise in their stores?

    I agree with what you are saying here, I had a previous post on this forum looking for information about becoming a roadside trader but got no replies. I have been checking out good roadside spots everytime I leave the town boundaries to see where would be a good pitch. I would put alot into marketing and getting my product visible but I think I would need more than just the roadside and the markets.
    Do these roadside sellers get a lot of business, I dont know any so I cant ask them, I suppose I could stop and talk to a few but I think they might be a bit suspicious of my intentions. My plan was to set up in a spot beside one of these veg stalls/vans and when people stopped to avail of their services they might also buy my product. I would not be in any kind of direct competition with them, if anything it could benefit them if people stopped to buy my product and ended up buying something from them aswell.
    I know everyone hates cold calling but I thought if I could sell 20 or 30 products a day like this I would be flying. Everybody hates them but some people do buy from them, I bought a €90 painting from an Israeli girl one night that I dident need, I'm sure I could sell a few of my product. I would be hoping that 6 months down the line that I would need very little cold calling anymore and hopefully have built up a bit of repeat custom.

    I would still love to hear what others think and I'm not just looking for yes answers, just honest ones.
    Thanks.


  • Registered Users Posts: 9,764 ✭✭✭antoinolachtnai


    I think the world of sales and marketing has really moved on. Uninvited callers are no longer welcome in our culture from what I can see. Direct marketing in its many forms is really where things are at now. If your item is small-ticket and low margin (i.e., you're making less than 20 or 30 euros per sale) I'd be surprised if it would have any chance of being effective. For one salesman to make 20 or 30 door-to-door sales per day would be impressive.

    In the UK, the answer would be a lot easier. You would work with a company (for example a magazine) that already had customers in the particular postcodes where you operate, with demographics that are of interest to you. You can do this there on a fairly small scale. But here, the facility isn't really available, that I know of. You can do leaflet drops, but it's not great.

    There are companies that do vegetable deliveries on a regular basis. It is a small, niche business, but maybe there is something to it. It is worth looking at.

    Farmer's markets? Sure, if you are trying to reach the sort of people who go to farmer's markets. Getting repeat, direct business out of farmer's markets? I don't know of companies that have succeeded at this, but I suppose it is possible.

    You do have to have a hard look at all the legal issues, separately from marketing and sales. For instance, it is basically illegal to sell goods on the roadside, without a lot of permits. Also, we're assuming you've got all the right hygiene facilities for a food business. It's a substantial investment, for sure. If you want to do something small-scale and informal maybe a different approach will work, but you will really need to build the thing up through family and friends and contacts.

    Could you get someone else to sell your product on their stall at a farmer's market and see how that goes?


  • Registered Users Posts: 455 ✭✭nellyshark


    Like taltos below I believe you should establish a web presence. IMHO this should be established first and then become part of your branding and included on flyers/business cards etc. Lots of people claim to have a quality products and consumers have no way of telling whether the product is quality or not without purchasing. A web presence would ease some of the fears as like taltos said you can state where you grow - types of pesticide, types/seasonality of product and price ranges, basically selling the idea of your product.

    Now onto your question I guess. Farmers markets are agiven, but there are other areas which should be given consideration such as actual markets, notably cattle marts . I dont know where you live, but in my local area you can set up at these marts for a fee per day, not extortionate, maybe €20 per stall (you might need some license to sell food etc, I don't know enough about it and am not involved so this is only my opinion really). Over the course of a week you could have your product displayed/sold in maybe 5 different areas of your locality. Word of mouth helps enormously here, build a good rep and sales should increase!

    The other question is whether the goods are perishable? It might be giving too much away but what type of food is it? Healthy? Wholesome? I ask because you could do the lunchtime run. Advertise your product at any campus, technology park, cluster of work spaces and provide samples if necessary. Again like taltos said club cards that get stamped would be ideal here, repeat business. First one free, take a club card too, next 3 20% off etc. Make sure your web domain is on your club card mind.

    Linked to the above would be the school run, depending on whether your product is applicable of course, you could run offers, family packs etc, 3 for 2, 5 for 4, or my fave 2 for price of 3 lol.

    To answer your question re cold calling, no I personally hate them. Drop an insert in the post maybe, do not call to my house uninvited offering something I have no interest in. I would love to see the stats for cold calling to actual sustained sales ratio?

    Hope any of this helps and I hope I have not missed the point completely


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  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 85 ✭✭bon ami


    Hi OP,

    A couple of years ago , we used to buy par cooked frozen "gourmet" seafood and chickenproducts from a sales person who called each month . You bought the product in bulk for your freezer and a box might contain 24 serivngs. The quality was ecellent and it was good value but unfortuanetly they stopped calling (might have been unsuccessful) . To answer your question I think done in the right manner with the right product it could work. yes have an online presence , yes use the farmers market but don't rule it out as a potential revenue stream just yet , do some market research .


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭BlackEdelweiss


    I know what you mean about the cold callers, I usually dont give them much time as they usually call during dinner time or kids bed time. I was hoping to call during the day when things are often less stressfull in the home. Dont get me wrong, I know being at home minding kids all day can be even more stressful than working, I have done it myself for long periods of time but I think aswell I would have had more time for someone calling to my door selling something, even if it were only to engage in a bit of adult conversation for a few minutes. There are also a lot of people on the dole now who would be at home during the day.
    The cold calling would only take place perhaps once a month, if even and only after a good leaflet drop and some newspaper advertising to get the product name in peoples heads already. The cold calling would be a useful way of informing interested people about the product, the ingredients etc, if people were not interested that is all they have to say and I never need to call again. If they do show interest then we can work from there. I think it would be a good way to develop a rapport with my customers.
    I would expect my product to cost no more than €5 so it is no big sell, and good value at that.
    I remember somebody selling frozen seafood years ago, my mother bought a big bag of king prawns or something like that, great if you had a box freezer.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,793 ✭✭✭✭Hagar


    There's a couple of issues with door to door sales. During the day a lot of houses are empty so a lot of your time will be wasted at locked doors, very disheartening.

    If you are shifting a fair amount of lowish priced product you will most likely be dealing in cash only. You have a serious security/personal safety issue there and you may find insurance non-existant.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭BlackEdelweiss


    69 wrote: »

    If you are shifting a fair amount of lowish priced product you will most likely be dealing in cash only. You have a serious security/personal safety issue there and you may find insurance non-existant.

    Most food suppliers to restaurants are working on COD only these days, very few are working on credit anymore so they would be under the same pressure.Also, veg stalls outside supermarkets and fish vans would also be cash only and they must have some kind of insurance.
    A taxi would probably carry more cash than I would ever have on me at any one time.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 218 ✭✭D.W


    I personally buy my fruit and veg from a guy that calls round weekly and am more than happy to support him. I think its going back a little to where we were 20 years ago when things like this were commonplace. The idea of being able in some small way to support a local business and buy local produce whilst getting a decent service appeals. If your product is nice, good value then yes go door to door and build up a regular clientele. If you can get a few people in each area then it makes calling worthwhile and you build up a regular weekly round.

    However one major thing you may have to consider if you are selling "freshly made foodstuffs" is the whole area of Safety and Hygiene.

    I wouldn't waste 5 cents building a website presence-spend that money on diesel instead and see if people actually want your product or not.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 455 ✭✭nellyshark


    I think everyone is going off topic a little here maybe.

    The original question was whether one would buy at the door.

    In general yes people would buy at the door but not enough people will buy to make door to door viable imo. Other avenues would be more sustainable first, get product awareness through word of mouth etc, and then try door to door.

    Off topic a little but I could not disagree with D.W. anymore in relation to use of a website. I think it a necessity for a venture like this.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 218 ✭✭D.W


    nellyshark wrote: »

    Off topic a little but I could not disagree with D.W. anymore in relation to use of a website. I think it a necessity for a venture like this.

    Nellyshark for the life of me I can't possibly see how a website could add one iota of business to someone selling a door to door or side of the road perishable product. The OP is not talking about an E commerce venture-he is talking about door to door sales. Nobody would order a pot of homemade jam or whatever he intends selling online IMO so his time and money would be far better spent at ground level so to speak. Don't get me wrong I am all for people having a website presence, utilising the internet to generate leads, sales etc.. BUT only if its worthwhile and in this case from the information given its just not worthwhile at all.


  • Registered Users Posts: 455 ✭✭nellyshark


    D.W wrote: »
    BUT only if its worthwhile and in this case from the information given its just not worthwhile at all.

    I think we are going to have to agree to disagree on this aspect.

    The ratio of sales to the number of doors knocked on is going to be very small. Without statistics I cant argue an actual amount. I will give an example. Say you take a housing estate of 100 houses. We will say two hours to cover all 100 houses. How many of these houses are going to a) be occupied b)answer the door at any one time? 100%? 75%? 50%? 25? 0%? Obviously this is going to be dependent on the time of day that the OP calls, but I would imagine somewhere just over 50% would be the max (I don't have stats, don't abuse me). That means that the remainder have never heard of the OP's product. Unless the OP returns and contacts those house then a potential lead is lost. Now instead of ignoring these houses that the OP simply placed an insert/flyer directly through the of these houses and indeed the houses OP has had direct contact with. Product awareness!

    Info on the product, business, other aspects and of course contact details. On the website the OP should have delivery routes and dates. The user is aware of the product and the delivery service and had contact details of the OP to place an order. Nothing about online sales, just cold hard information. Of course the OP could have a booking system but thats above and beyond the scope of the argument. Maybe 90% of inserts will be binned but 10% will have been made aware of the product.

    D.W. You mention roadside selling of perishable goods. Again I would love to see statistics of this, I imagine 20% of road traffic stopping would be a generous amount. Take a national road, without statistics I cannot comment but opinionate, but image 100 road users per hour, 20 stop, 80 drive by. Now, what if the OP has a very clear sign with the myjam.ie domain. Similar to the door to door suggestion above, it is generating awareness. Again the website has all the info mentioned above. Possible sales which would have otherwise been lost.

    No mention of any eCom site and all the above can be done relatively cheaply. Im baffled if you still think it is unnecessary and more importantly if the OP thinks it is unnecessary. Its vital as far as I am concerned


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭BlackEdelweiss


    Hi,
    Thanks for all the replies so far, this kind of discussion is giving me alot to think about, none of it off topic at all. I appreciate every bit of advice or every different take on my idea.
    I would probably go for a website mainly because I used to do a bit of web design so i can knock up my own web site for nothing. As for food hygiene, I am a qualified chef and have done the HACCP Management course, I would be working out of an existing restaurant kitchen so I am covered there.
    Thanks again everybody, any further comments are welcome, this discussion is invaluable to me at the stage I am at now.


  • Registered Users Posts: 455 ✭✭nellyshark


    I still maintain that selling the products to clusters of people e.g. markets, workplaces, schools, etc etc would be more beneficial that door to door sales


  • Registered Users Posts: 70 ✭✭LK1


    During the week I seen a van.Brightly painted looking professional with lots of veg & fruit with organic ..fresh .. locally produced on it and me an my OH said we would buy stuff if they called to our door.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 674 ✭✭✭Southsider1


    OP you said that supplying to retail outlets would be too much hassle... but door to door wouldn't? :confused:

    If you go door to door you need to expect to sell to (if you're lucky) five out of every hundred houses unless it's an amazing product at an amazing price. I know some people who take stalls at farmers markets and do extremely well. Like making a healthy living out of 3 or 4 days a week.

    You will have a few HACCP issues to contend with as well if going door to door with a perishable product - I'm assuming it requires refrigeration?

    It would help if you were a bit more specific about the product. But good luck anyway. Anyone starting to pitch something new in the current climate deserves all the good luck they can get.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,630 ✭✭✭dh0661


    PM sent


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭BlackEdelweiss


    OP you said that supplying to retail outlets would be too much hassle... but door to door wouldn't? :confused:

    If you go door to door you need to expect to sell to (if you're lucky) five out of every hundred houses unless it's an amazing product at an amazing price. I know some people who take stalls at farmers markets and do extremely well. Like making a healthy living out of 3 or 4 days a week.

    You will have a few HACCP issues to contend with as well if going door to door with a perishable product - I'm assuming it requires refrigeration?

    It would help if you were a bit more specific about the product. But good luck anyway. Anyone starting to pitch something new in the current climate deserves all the good luck they can get.

    What I wanted to avoid with supplying retail outlets was mainly down to money, by having to sell at a reduced price so they can make a profit and then dealing with credit terms and returns of unsold products. I would rather be the only point of sale for my goods for now although if I were approached by a retailer or if I thought a certain shop could prove worth it I would consider it.
    I would be delivering the product in a refrigerated van so I think this would cover the HACCP requirements.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 674 ✭✭✭Southsider1


    Will the production process be HACCP compliant - is it cook chill? Have you looked at your liability insurances? Re your roadside trading: You need a street/casual trading permit and need to adhere to a raft of useless laws - H & S, environmental, HACCP etc etc. It's a minefield. One of the advantages of the farmers markets is the trading licences are usually included,refuse/clean up is looked after and public liability is covered.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,529 ✭✭✭BlackEdelweiss


    All cooking will take place in an existing restaurant kitchen and cooked food will be cooled using a blast chiller. The finished product will then be refrigerated. I am not sure about the legal/insurance side of things yet, I have been concentrating on getting the format right first.
    Is there a living to be made from farmers markets or are they more of a supplementary income?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,268 ✭✭✭DubTony


    I haven't seen this much nonsense written in a thread in a long time. But then I haven't used the forum for quite a while. :rolleyes:


    A website isn't going to sell damn all of your product unless you market the site. On a small budget, which I assume you have as you're not taking this to shops and seem to want to sell direct, you'll get little or no marketing done. All the SEO and Adwords in the world aren't going to sell what you've got.

    So unless youfind some retailers to take the goods, your best option is definitely the markets. Don't completely knock the door to door option. You'll do a hundred houses in a couple of hours. A 10% success rate, with half of them giving you repeat business would be an acceptable result. I personally have never bought food from a guy at the door, but that's because my whole career has been spent in the food business, and for absolutely no other reason. I don't even take a milk delivery.

    Road-side selling is ok for strawberries and spuds, but you'd be looking at equipment costs and paying somebody at least €60 a day to sit on their arse and read a book. IMO it is NOT an option.

    Get out there and knock on a few hundred doors. It wont hurt to give it a try. Make sure you've a quick snappy presentation you can unload in a few seconds to get your point across. Give me a shout if you need a hand with that. Best of luck.

    edit: Don't knock the retailers. If you can go in on a sale or return basis offering a 20% margin you should be onto a winner. Make sure it's COD only. As long as they know that from the start you'll have no issues. You'll need promotional point of sale for this though. Most new products get lost in the fridge without it, and you'll be looking at taking lots back if it's not promoted properly. If you find a particularly good door to door area, make sure the product is in the local shop, and then let your customers know it's there, so that you can eventually drop the door to door sales.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 14,144 ✭✭✭✭Cicero


    OP,
    Going back 30 years, a man with a van used to call to our house every saturday selling fresh vegetables...he was way ahead of his time...the quality was excellent and much cheaper than supermarkets...it was practically a farmers market on your doorstep...however, with something like veg, the service has to be very regular- otherwise, people won''t buy as they can't 'rely' on the person coming....while your product appears to be non-perishalbe, you still need customers......anyway, leaving that aside, here's somthing to think of.

    ...30 years ago, the majority of women with families were stay -at-home mums...this meant that they (or someone) were present when the bread man (remember Johnston Mooney & O Brien delivering bread?...maybe you don't) came religiously at the same time twice a week...today, if you went into many estates, you'ld be lucky to get a handful of home dwellers (male or female) in throughout the day...

    so, your challenges, regardless of anything else, are (a) establishing a regular service that people come to rely on and (b) finding people who are around when you are....

    edit.....Places like the Butlers Pantry and a few similar shops that I know of, do/did a good trade in frozen speciality meals...If you were to call to my door, the only way you could possibly get me to buy your product, is if it was connected in some way to a very good/reputable restaurant...think of the top 10/20 most popular/well established restaurants in Dublin...otherwise, I wouldn't touch the product as I wouldn't know enough about it...




  • I started off in door to door sales and was selling telecom and did it pretty successfully. Like antonio though says maybe things have moved on in the last ten years and people are tired of having to open their doors and listen now.

    Its funny, Im on a island in asia and what I would do for someone to knock on my door and deliver nice fresh food every few days. But in Ireland fresh produce, and good quality seems to be available in Tesco and at pretty cheap prices. Have you got enough edge on Tesco quality to have people buy from you instead? Are your prices competitive enough?

    If you called to my door and you had tescos price list in front of you and said my free range chicken breasts are 20% cheaper, and you'll get them freshly prepared from that day, I would definitely listen to you, and Im sure housewives with lower budgets in recessionary times would as well. Same goes for veg and fruit.
    With a good pitch, lower prices and fresher produce I think it would work door to door. But you might have to knock on 100 doors a day for 6 months to build up 50 consistent clients, the return ratio could well be that low. But if your willing to put in the time and build up a base of customers I would say go for it. - subject to you being cheaper and fresher.


  • Registered Users Posts: 455 ✭✭nellyshark


    I :D at dubtony's use of the word nonsense.

    OP: how does your prices compare to the supermarkets for what you are selling?


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 10,461 Mod ✭✭✭✭Axwell


    nellyshark wrote: »
    I :D at dubtony's naivety.

    :confused: what makes you think he is naive?


  • Registered Users Posts: 455 ✭✭nellyshark


    This comment
    I haven't seen this much nonsense written in a thread in a long time
    people have different opinions, anyone here is making suggestions to the OP. I just find it funny that an opinion other than his own is nonsense
    Axwell wrote: »
    :confused: what makes you think he is naive?


  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 10,461 Mod ✭✭✭✭Axwell


    nellyshark wrote: »
    This comment

    people have different opinions, anyone here is making suggestions to the OP. I just find it funny that an opinion other than his own is nonsense

    How does it make him naive though? He mad plenty of valid points to explain what he thought was nonesense about some of the suggestions. It doesnt make him naive to think that some of the other suggestions are bad suggestions.


  • Registered Users Posts: 455 ✭✭nellyshark


    Getting off topic but there are plenty of other valid points in this thread that are not
    nonsense
    .

    You can disagree with me all you want but that to me implies a certain naivety.
    Axwell wrote: »
    How does it make him naive though? He mad plenty of valid points to explain what he thought was nonesense about some of the suggestions. It doesnt make him naive to think that some of the other suggestions are bad suggestions.


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  • Moderators, Business & Finance Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 10,461 Mod ✭✭✭✭Axwell


    He stated the ones he thought were nonsense and backed them up with reasons. Just because you might not agree with his reasons doesnt make him naive. You think a website is a good idea, he doesnt, hardly makes him naive because his opinion is different to yours.

    The OP should be going door to door for market research alone, to see what the interest is like and see would people buy the product. Personally I think a website will be of little benefit to them at this stage. He needs to focus on the local area and get out door to door and do the markets and stalls route first and get a bit of market research based on this and see how demand is. After that he can look at expanding and working on marketing and a website. Once he has regular customers and regular income word of mouth will bring more business. Testing the market initially is more important and see what works and what doesnt.

    OP you have nothing to lose trying the door to door and markets for a while and see how it goes. Give it a go, it could turn out to be a goldmine for you.


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