fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 10 March 2015 10:19

Milk bars set the bar high - Editorial

Written by 
Infant formula in China. Infant formula in China.

Not every day do you hear of Fonterra working with smaller players in the competitive global market. A case in point – China.

 The co-op has been pumping millions into China since launching its infant formula and nutritional milk powder brands; in a market where Fonterra is rubbing shoulders with the world’s largest dairy players this is understandable.

 New Zealand companies have a dubious reputation for savagely competing with each other in global markets; the meat industry is an obvious example.

What is astoundingly different is the offer by young entrepreneurs Simon Page and his wife Jane Li to help exporters break into the notoriously difficult Chinese market.

The couple own Biopure and have established 25 specialty New Zealand Milk Bar stores in China.  Biopure exports milk products including infant formula to China, selling through its stores in 23 cities and six provinces. It hopes to have 1000 stores by the end of 2017.

Biopure recently gained Chinese registration for its Infapure infant formula brand, which Page has described as a “game changer”. Page and Li are highly regarded for their efforts. Even Fonterra has sought their advice on the sale of branded products. 

Their company, like many, started small and has grown quickly, drawn along by the astonishing pace of the Chinese market where the rising middle class is seeking western consumer products – notably milk.

Page and Li clearly understand the psyche of the Chinese consumer and have tailored their products accordingly. But what’s really special about them is that they ‘own’ the retail space and interface with the consumer by virtue of their stores. Owning the value chain is a big prize and that says a lot about their expertise.

While New Zealand Trade and Enterprise and other trade related agencies offer great help to exporters, hearing the news from someone who is there and doing it is pure gold. New Zealand has always been highly regarded as a producer of high quality food. Its farming systems have been widely copied, which is flattering.

But too often we have come up short on the marketing side, and lagged in developing higher value products from our base products – namely milk and meat.

Surely, Page and Li must be doing something right. If they can do it, so can others? Their success offers an attractive case study.

More like this

Aussie farmers get A$8.60/kgMS as opening milk price

Australian dairy farmers supplying Fonterra are getting an opening weighted average milk price of A$8.60/kgMS for the new season or around NZ$9.26/kgMS -  NZ74c less than New Zealand suppliers, based on the current exchange rate.

Featured

LIC Space folds for good

Farmer co-operative LIC has closed its satellite-backed pasture measurement platform – Space.

Editorial: Time for common sense

OPINION: The case of four Canterbury high country stations facing costly and complex consent hearing processes highlights the dilemma facing the farming sector as the country transitions into a replacement for the Resource Management Act (RMA).

National

DairyNZ Farmers Forum underway

Over 300 farmers and rural professionals have gathered in Hamilton for the first DairyNZ Farmers Forum for this year.

Machinery & Products

Shearing legend hooked on CanAm

Sir David Fagan, world-renowned competitive sheep shearer with 642 shearing titles worldwide and a knighthood to his name, now runs…

50 years of tractor pull

This year, the Fieldays Tractor Pull, in association with PTS Logistics, mark a major milestone – 50 years of crowd-thrilling…

The Wrangler's birthday bash

It's the Wrangler Limited’s 30th birthday and to celebrate the milestone a prototype of the E Series Wrangler - a…