Bakery Business - Heading due north:
The Compass Bakery story
July 2006
This vibrant bakery business has two personas; a public face as a
favourite factory shop sought out by many Cape Town fans in the southern
Peninsula, but whose major business is as a key supplier to Woolworths.
On this, its 30th anniversary, Brenda Neall uncovers the story behind
The Compass Bakery.
THE Compass Bakery, today one of the largest manufacturers of its kind
in the Western Cape, started out as a small general bakery - the
Kommetjie Continental Bakery - in what was then a rather remote seaside
outpost on the Cape Peninsula. Back in 1976, it was a business
opportunity spied out by Bob Horton, a British emigrant and professional
baker who came out to South Africa in 1968 to work for a flour company.
He was then, most fortuitously as it would later turn out, employed by
Woolworths as its first ever bakery technologist. With bigger ambitions
for his career, Horton saw the potential of the Kommetjie Bakery to
service an area of the greater Mother City that was still commercially
very undeveloped, and decided to go the entrepreneurial route. Partners
and financial backers he found in the form of Rodney Cottrell and Dave
Bruce, both successful in the construction industry, and thus The
Compass Bakery was born.
Things did not go quite as well as they had hoped, however. 'We had a
general-purpose bakery, little focus and were barely surviving. Our key
assets were three clapped-out delivery vans,' comments the
quietly-spoken and dignified Horton. Impending financial disaster
promoted a different and better business model, and turning to his
network of past colleagues, Horton persuaded Woolworths to allocate him
some baked goods lines. 'This was a defining development that allowed us
to streamline the business and greatly improve efficiencies and cut
costs, especially those worn-out vans!' he says.
The business soon moved from the red to black and prospered in tandem
with its key clients, eventually outgrowing its Kommetjie village
premises. The move to its current site in 1991, much in the public eye
on the Sun Valley/Kommetjie road, became a space and capacity imperative
following the bakery's very successful move into biscuit manufacture in
1989.
It was at this juncture that, big on ideas, big on enthusiasm and with a
really big customer, the trio found themselves at that classic second
stage of an entrepreneurial business: the market is proven, survival is
no longer a daily issue and comes the need to develop a long-term vision
and make the transition from entrepreneurial to professional management.
Largely sleeping partners until the early 1990s, Cottrell and Bruce
subsequently intensified their directorial input to the business and set
the pace for what has been a remarkable growth curve: the first-year
turnover of R100 000 blossomed to R18 million in 1994, to R50 mlllion in
2004, and should hit a projected R100-million plus this year.
While still directors and key shareholders, the trio of Cottrell, Bruce
and Horton has eased out of hands-on management and given the helm to a
new generation of skippers, including three sons - Richard Cottrell,
Miguel Howell and Alistair Horton - who have cut their teeth in several
aspects of the business. The day-to-day buck stops at the desk of
no-nonsense financial manager, Neville Sullivan.
This team currently has its time cut out overseeing Compass' latest
expansion: imminent renovations to create a new raw materials warehouse
and the installation of a new 45m travelling oven from Laser in Italy
and supplied by local agent, Macadams Baklng Systems. It also
incorporates a wire-cut biscuit machine. This significant R4-million
technology investment will quadruple its biscuit-baking capacity.
Compass is also bolstering its chocolate capability with a new Lloveras
tempering and enrobing line imported from Spain. Macadams, too, has
installed an automatic, five-lane depositor for muffins as well as
several rack ovens over the past year.
Right place, right time
Compass is fortunate to find itself at the crux of some major business
and consumer trends, enjoying the spin-off of a buoyant economy,
increased consumer spend on life's luxuries and Woolworths' rapid
expansion of its food stores that has attracted many new customers
through its doors. In a recent interview with BUSINESS TIMES,
Woolworths' CEO, Simon Susman, describes this as 'going down the market'
- targeting customers beyond the traditional top-level income, but not
diminishing the aspirational allure of the brand.
'Woolworths' increased visibility and accessibility is obviously to our
benefit, as is the consumer trend to indulgence,' comments Horton. 'I
think the public regards our products' home-style, preservative-free
image as being a touch of "healthier decadence", too.'
Compass' range is extensive - in a marvel of production planning,
hundreds of baked SKUs leave its portal every week, but none containing
yeast or cream which would require a whole set of different facilities.
It makes baked puddings, brownie confectionery and dessert, round
gateaux, muffins, cup-cakes, Swiss rolls, lamingtons, bar cakes, ring
cakes and 77 ranges of biscuits. And then there are several seasonal and
special occasion lines, such as mince pies around Christmas times, and
for which it has often scooped top honours in newspaper 'Whose Are Best'
evaluations.
Bar cakes are its biggest range in volume terms and it supplies these on
a national basis. Muffin volumes are also huge but are only sold in
regional stores. 'We produce 11 variants, including some novel savoury
options which are almost soufflé-like in texture. I think muffins'
popularity is due to a "healthier" perception over other sweet goods,
but they also make a great anytime snack,' Horton remarks.
Compass is particularly famous for its biscuits and, in this instance,
is not solely devoted to Woolworths, but also has its own biscuit brand,
Compass Rounds and Squares, that is distributed in the Western Cape.
This is an aspect of its operations that it would like to grow in
future.
Path to innovation
In the flexible bakery world, innovation is a major driver in keeping
consumer interest fresh and sales buoyant. Compass' seven-strong R&D
team is headed up by Liesl Huysamen, an unusual professional combination
of dieticlan/MBA and passionate about her work. All new concepts are
trialled to mimic the factory floor in every way and, says Huysamen,
'ultimately so finely tuned that once in production, the R&D team can
walk away'. Customers are never shown kitchen samples but pass judgement
only on product from pre-factory trials.
She explains that new ideas are largely taken from a bank of concepts
with fully-developed recipes that can be tweaked according to taste,
cost and packaging parameters. On a more philosophical level, Huysamen
believes that real innovation lies not so much in a 'wow' idea, but
delivering it with available equipment, skills and use of mainstay
ingredients: 'One always should work within core competencies: endeavour
to rock the world with a quality product at a good price or put a fresh
spin on an existing product,' she comments. In this regard, Huysamen is
particularly proud of a recent innovation for Woolworths, Marshmallow
Brownies, a brownie base topped with marshmallow and enrobed with
chocolate. They have been a sales hit; a decadent swoon especially when
microwaved for a few seconds to melt the marshmallow. Another such
example is the old-but-fading stalwart, the Swiss roll that has been
rejuvenated by Compass in successful mini format.
She also feels strongly that it is the supplier who should take category
ownership and tell customers what they ought to be doing. Key bakery
trends today, she adds, lie in nostalgia, on the go and health - with
real winners being products that can encompass all three. Muffins, a
contemporary bakery phenomenon, can be put into this category.
We also have to take account of new eating habits - people are very
aware of fat and sugar - and we are catering in this country to a whole
new market of mouths in the emerging black middle class; to people who
could never before afford these sorts of products. It's an exciting
time,' Huysamen remarks.
Responsible employer
Through its unusual and commercially-remote situation in Kommetjie, The
Compass Bakery is very aware of its role in the community, not only via
its well-patronised factory shop, but as major employer and substantial
contributor to the economic well-being of this corner of the Peninsula:
over 700 workers are employed over two shifts on a 24/7 basis. Most of
these staff members hail from the nearby Ocean View and Masiphumele
townships. An ethical sense of responsibility to thousands of dependents
dissuades Compass from any real consideration of moving closer to the
hub of the city. 'Being out there brings with it many logistical costs
and headaches, but the only movement Compass plans is in our sales
graphs,' says Horton.
The Compass factory is divided largely into cake and biscuit production,
each section with its own ingredient compilation and various finishing
and packaging teams. A number of rooms are cordoned off as special-care,
temperature-control led areas ie for chocolate enrobing, cake icing and
specialities.
While the Compass factory is home to an array of baking equipment,
mixers, multihead depositers, flow wrappers and an army of rotary rack
ovens, production remains relatively manually intensive with greater
automation not on the cards for the foreseeable future: 'Lack of skills
and absenteeism are inherent challenges in any labour-heavy operation in
this country, but we see more value in managing these issues than
further investment in automation,' observes Horton. 'Automation can be a
double-edged sword, particularly when the competitive edge of our
products is based on their premium, home-made appeal - we'd never want
to compromise on this standard or quality.'
Compass' large workforce is guided by seven senior managers and eight
production managers (all qualified bakers). Much attention is given to
training, both work and life skills, and is the domain of the well-known
Vernon Wheatcroft who used to run the Cape School of Baking, an
acclaimed artisanal training college but which is now unfortunately
defunct. They are also backed by a 17-strong engineering department and
19-person QC team.
Being a supplier to acme retailers entails rigid adherence to quality
and safety protocols and Compass is subject to regular food safety,
traceability and ethical practice audits that are undertaken by the Food
Safety Consortium. HACCP certification, too, is in the pipeline. QC and
microbiology testing is currently outsourced, but future capex plans
include an in-house facility.
Another perhaps under-recognised challenge of the baking game is
controlling wastage. Baking's precise physics and chemistry allow for
very small margins of error (everything is made from scratch with no
premixes used), and there are also inherent losses that go with the
fragility of biscuits as well as the cutting and trimming of cakes and
Swiss rolls into shelf-acceptable shape. Compass' popular and really
customer-pleasing factory shop is a logical channel for product that's
marginally out of spec, for offcuts and over runs and a viable way to
reclaim some of these costs, although some baking is specifically done
for the outlet.
At the time of our interviews, CEO Rodney Cottrell and director Dave
Bruce were overseas and so Bob Horton was assigned to come up with some
reflective commentary on thirty years' work and the creation of an
immensely successful company: 'We're naturally delighted with our
achievements - and it's an honour to be a key supplier to top retailers.
Considering how many small businesses don't make it, we're extremely
fortunate that we have survived some challenging times and that we
continue to flourish.' he concludes.