NZ Business + Management

BEARING FRUIT THE GROWTH OF ORGANIC

ORGANIC FROZEN FRUIT EXPORTER OOB HAS SUCCESSFUL­LY OVERCOME THE CHALLENGES OF MARKETING ITS PRODUCTS TO INTERNATIO­NAL BUYERS. CATHERINE BEARD SHARES THEIR LESSONS.

- BY CATHERINE BEARD

A s the world continues to experience a huge uplift in demand for organic fruit, I picked the brains of Oob CEO Robert Auton to find out how to overcome the challenges of internatio­nal growth in the organic fruit market. “It was always our intention to export from day one. Part of our criteria was getting involved in a product that had mass appeal beyond New Zealand. Our research showed blueberrie­s were in high demand internatio­nally and growing in popularity,” explains Robert.

Oob started exporting fresh fruit to the US quite early, and have been exporting to Dubai during the fresh fruit season for the past ten years.

Producing frozen fruit took off when they entered the Australian market in 2012, after approachin­g Woolworths with an organic berry and ice cream offer. Their consumer base grew massively in a very short period, so the challenge was securing enough product to meet demand. Purchasing organic fruit off other Kiwi growers was no longer enough. They had to search the globe for organic fruit, and Chile came to their aid.

Two years after getting into Woolworths, Coles approached them, followed by Metcash (the independen­t group of supermarke­ts). Now in over 3000 stores in Australia, Oob are the dominant organic brand there, and in New Zealand.

“We started exporting frozen fruit and ice cream into Singapore and Malaysia about four years ago,” adds Robert. “Given both countries have ample fruit year-round, I was surprised at how well our fruit is going. But I think being certified organic, and convenient, has made it popular.”

PREDICTION COMES TRUE

Back when they started in 2001, Robert and wife Shannon predicted that organic was going to be a long-term trend. It’s since gone from a niche market to more mainstream. “We’ve had challenges along the way,” says Robert. “When you’re growing at 50 percent there are financial and capability strains. We got through that, and now we’re still growing but able to manage it better with financial modelling.

“We’ve had pressures along the way from adverse exchange rates and the huge uplift in demand for organic fruit over the past three to four years which drove up the price of that commodity significan­tly.”

Growth in organic orchard planting globally has eased the situation, and their Chile partner has expanded its operation.

Plans for the future include developing more fruit lines. They’ve just introduced organic mango into New Zealand, and Australia will follow soon.

“We still think the organic market will grow 16 percent by 2020, and there’s a willingnes­s to pay premiums for organic products.”

The smoothie market is also a target. Robert predicts it’s still got significan­t growth in it.

Given his success in picking the organic trend, I’d say he’s probably right. Check out Robert’s top five marketing tips at www.exporterto­day.co.nz/articles.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand