Inside Franchise Business

A CONVENIENT FUTURE

- By Sarah Stowe

7-Eleven CEO talks tactics and innovation.

Innovation - and new franchisee­s - is helping drive the growth of 7-Eleven.

Angus McKay, 7-Eleven Australia CEO, chats about the new kiosk model, delivery, defining customer service and supporting franchisee­s through the pandemic. 7-ELEVEN IS INTRODUCIN­G A NEW FORMAT STORE IN BRISBANE. TELL US ABOUT IT.

This is the second in the country. It’s an on-premise store, part of someone else’s property. The notion is to use larger businesses where the employee base is captive and looking for convenienc­e. We’re on an industrial site in Melbourne. This [Brisbane] is more of an office block site that we’re testing.

It’s a fraction of the size of a standard store, one wall is eight to 10m long, it has a reduced but complete range. The two stores are very different based on the people in the location. The commonalit­y is cold beverages, fresh sandwiches, bakery.

The distinctio­ns include whether or not to include a coffee machine.

We work with the site owner on an employee offer. It’s not about exclusivit­y. The industrial site has cafes but they are a drive away. At the office building the cafes are plentiful in the area. But if you only have half an hour for a lunchbreak, the 7-Eleven store is convenient.

I’m happy to go head to head with any other business but it’s about what the customer wants.

The notion of convenienc­e is different. It was a corner milk bar when I grew up. That requires walking or driving to it. That notion is very old-fashioned. Every consumer defines convenienc­e differentl­y.

If you want a coffee, you might want it delivered. Time is precious so how do we help customers do things faster and simpler. That’s where we start.

Of course we’re not going to keep doing it unless we can make money out of it.

HOW DOES THIS FIT INTO THE GROWTH STRATEGY?

It’s too early to say it will conquer the world, but I can see how it could.

We have to decide if this model is corporate or franchised. The store needs to be serviced, and you can’t put product on the shelves at 6am. Someone has to do that. So maybe corporate support to service a few stores in an area is the solution. Or it could be an addendum to an additional franchisee store. That’s what we re trying to work out. We’re picking up the bills until then.

LAST AUGUST THERE WAS AN EXPECTATIO­N OF 15 STORES ACROSS QUEENSLAND AND WA OVER TWO YEARS, AS PART OF A STEADY 20-30 STORE ANNUAL GROWTH. WHAT’S THE LATEST?

This last fiscal year, we didn’t deviate substantia­lly from our opening plans.

We’re preserving cash but have not materially changed gross store opening numbers. Queensland has dominated store openings, in this fiscal year it will be Victoria, and those plans are well set.

Covid-19 has been a speedbump for us, but it’s not a monumental one. Business has travelled well.

What we now have to look at is what stores should we be closing based on economic circumstan­ces. There’s no traffic in the cities. Suburban stores have traded very well, city stores are hurting.

WHAT ARE THE PARTICULAR ELEMENTS OF THE 7-ELEVEN FRANCHISE SYSTEM THAT HAVE HELPED FRANCHISEE­S DURING THE PANDEMIC?

In the first place, in the first week, other than Coles and Woolworths everybody stopped.

We were all concerned, ‘Can I go out, will I catch it?’.

Franchisee­s wanted to know what it meant for them. Sales stopped but we underwrite the profit contributi­on, and that really stood the test of time.

All franchisee­s, even if they didn’t use the assistance, valued it, knowing it was there.

The fact that we didn’t change it or turn it off, we did what we were supposed to do was a huge comfort as they try to rebalance their business.

Part two of this, as we worked with different stores, we treated every store uniquely.

Where a business might have had more distress, we would work through with banks, tailor the roster, in a couple of cases, close temporaril­y or reduce hours. We tried to have quite a bespoke approach.

Now we’re into another phase, some stores are well into recovery, what are we doing to help them shine?

In Victoria we have a whole lot in lockdown, we have to go back to the well again. We have to consider if they can play in stage 3 again – from a store perspectiv­e, what is the gross profit level, rebalance labour, get stock levels right.

In the 7-Eleven model, the fixed costs, rent and utilities, we take care of.

7-ELEVEN HAS MAINTAINED ITS INNOVATIVE STREAK – CAN YOU GIVE US AN UPDATE, IT’S BEEN THREE MONTHS SINCE DELIVERY WAS FIRST TRIALLED?

Delivery is now in Sydney and Melbourne and steadily growing.

We are learning what people want delivered from 7-Eleven. You can see when AFL started, because everyone wants chips and Coke – we can work out from when the orders were placed the time of kick-off.

That goes back to the notion of what convenienc­e is. What do customers want as a delivery service? Is it delivery now or in two hours? We can look at high rise versus suburban customers. We’re mining the data to understand.

There’s no doubt it has a place in our future, as does the kiosk.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia