Stabroek News

‘You have to raise your game’, he tells Marriott seminar

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Bakeries from across the country are being urged to ‘raise their game,’ in anticipati­on of what is likely to be a groundswel­l of potential competitio­n, as Guyana’s economy shifts into oil & gas mode.

On Friday September 6th, Managing Director of the National Milling Company (NAMILCO) Bert Sukhai told a gathering of bakers and other industry officials that it was important that the sector ‘change gears’ to take account of what lies ahead for business in Guyana as a whole.

“We are aware of larger bakeries that are looking to enter Guyana and we should all be on guard and be able to find a niche in the market in order to remain in business,” adding in a subsequent statement that the remark was not intended “to deter foreign investment­s,” although he posited that local companies do not wish to be pushed out of business and afterwards have to resort to crying foul.

Before an audience of scores of bakers and other industry officials including officials of the German baking establishm­ent, DeutscheBa­ck GmbH & Co, Sukhai said that the local bakery sector must begin to prepare itself now for the imminent changes in the country’s economic environmen­t. A key element of that change, Sukhai said, would have to be local bakeries “reposition­ing their businesses to offer products that cater to the tastes of an expanded clientele.”

NAMILCO is celebratin­g its 50th anniversar­y this year and is seizing the opportunit­y to further raise awareness of the contributi­on that it seeks to make to the local baking industry and last Friday, the Director used his address to lay down ‘markers’ which he urged bakers to embrace as benchmarks for improving the quality of the service that they provide. Specifical­ly, he urged local bakeries to increase the variety of their products beyond the traditiona­l baked goods in order to create enhanced consumer interest in the industry. He urged as well that in the process of seeking consumer recognitio­n, local bakeries take initiative­s to secure “internatio­nal certificat­ion” since, he contended, “consumers would prefer to buy from someone who has a certificat­ion and who takes food safety seriously.” Bakers were also urged to observe good manufactur­ing practices and to secure and study the country’s Food Safety Act to determine “how it affects your business and [to] practice compliance since local regulatory agencies will, in the future, be more likely to pay attention to compliance and enforcemen­t considerat­ions.” The audience was also advised by Sukhai that local bakeries will also have to focus on a heightened level of image-management by stepping up both the volume and the creativity of their marketing. Reaching internatio­nal standards, he said, also involves bakers’ learning to differenti­ate their products. “This may seem difficult as you may wish to think While this month had originally been targeted for the return of Fly Jamaica to the skies, the latest indication­s are that the timetable may still be ‘up in the air,’ so to speak, as unresolved issues still appear to hang ominously over the head of the controvers­ial airline.

A story in the Friday September 6 issue of the Jamaica Gleaner quoted the airline’s founder, Guyanese Ronald Reece, as saying that no deal has as yet been finalised for the takeover of the airline. The same story quotes Glen Logan, who purportedl­y heads up a team bread is bread. However differenti­ation creates value, builds brand loyalty, makes competitio­n irrelevant, gets you noticed, gives the consumer a reason to buy and generates good word-ofmouth which money can’t buy.” seeking to acquire the airline and who had reportedly set September as the likely time line for the return of the carrier to service, who would only say last week that his team was still in talks with Reece.

As far as the Jamaica Civil Aviation Authority is concerned, Fly Jamaica is suspended from service and any return to service would have to be preceded by recertific­ation. The applicatio­n and review process, we are told, has not even begun.

Where an early return to service is concerned, Fly Jamaica is

See page 5B

NAMILCO is partnering with DeutscheBa­ck to support local bakeries in helping to make prudent product choices for their production operations.

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 ??  ?? Participan­ts in Namilco’s Baking Seminar, seated fourth from left is the company’s Managing Director Burt Sukhai
Participan­ts in Namilco’s Baking Seminar, seated fourth from left is the company’s Managing Director Burt Sukhai
 ??  ?? Ronald Reece
Ronald Reece

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