Waitrose Archives - Tea & Coffee Trade Journal https://www.teaandcoffee.net/organisation/waitrose/ Wed, 22 Nov 2023 17:13:57 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 Virtue rebrands its yerba mate energy drink https://www.teaandcoffee.net/news/33274/virtue-rebrands-its-yerba-mate-energy-drink/ https://www.teaandcoffee.net/news/33274/virtue-rebrands-its-yerba-mate-energy-drink/#respond Wed, 22 Nov 2023 17:13:57 +0000 https://www.teaandcoffee.net/?post_type=news&p=33274 November 2023 sees Virtue, yerba mate tea energy drink company, launch a new rebrand, and an enhanced flavour profile, with a slightly tweaked and upgraded recipe.

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November 2023 sees Virtue, yerba mate tea energy drink company, launch a new rebrand, featuring a stripped back aesthetic and an enhanced flavour profile, with a slightly tweaked and upgraded recipe that sees the full range include yerba mate. Autumn also sees the start-up brand roll out across Waitrose nationwide, where it will be included in the stores’ Meal Deal, as well as the launch of a new Virtue 12 Can Variety Pack to Amazon. Virtue is certified Carbon Neutral, with 100% organic caffeine, is vegan and contains nothing artificial.

Founded in the UK by entrepreneur Rahi Daneshmand, Virtue is the UK’s first all-natural, zero sugar and zero calories energy drink, according to the company. Harnessing the power of yerba mate tea to create a more sustained and all-natural energy alternative to coffee and energy drinks. Virtue is made in the UK and is available in three varieties: Tropical, Peach & Raspberry, and Strawberry & Lime (GBP £1.75 RRP per 250ml can).

Yerba mate

Each of the Virtue contains 80mg of organic caffeine (similar to a cup of coffee), no sugar, no calories and nothing artificial, and they are now all super powered by yerba mate. Dubbed ‘the drink of the Gods’ yerba mate is an adaptogen naturally high in caffeine made from the dried leaves of the South American holly tree. Yerba mate is said to have the energy of coffee, the health properties of tea and the feel-good endorphins of chocolate, it provides more antioxidants than green tea, as well as 24 vitamins and minerals, including riboflavin, thiamine, phosphorus, iron, calcium and vitamins C and B6 and 15 amino acids.

Investment & growth

Since inception, Virtue has achieved high profile backing, and the brand secured investment from English footballer, Chris Smalling, in 2021, supplemented by a recent raise of £1.2million in Autumn 2023, which will help to accelerate business growth, with further hires in sales and marketing, alongside driving key marketing activity to increase brand awareness.

Chris Smalling, professional footballer, and Virtue investor commented, “I joined Virtue as they are disrupting the energy drinks category, with clean energy drinks that support a truly healthy lifestyle, which as an athlete, is critical. From flavour to function, Virtue is game changing.”

Virtue has seen +462% growth in international revenue in the last 12 months (Q3 FY23 vs Q3 FY22). Virtue is now sold in 35 countries, with over 15,000 distribution points globally, stockists include major international chains Casino, Carrefour and Aeon. The UK energy drinks market is worth £1.85billion (source: Nielsen, WE 23 Sept 2023) and the desire for ‘better for you’ energy drinks is growing. Virtue is the fastest-selling clean energy drink product in grocery in the UK (Strawberry & Lime 17.0 ROS, Source: Nielsen – GB Grocery Multiples – Latest 13 Weeks – WE 23 Sept 2023) and is set to grow further as desire ramps up. Virtue distribution has grown 225% in the UK over the last year with new stockists including Waitrose, Asda, Tesco and Motor Fuel Group (the largest petrol station operator in the UK).

Matthew Blake, Waitrose soft drinks buyer, says of the listing, “We’re really excited to have the Virtue Yerba Mate drinks onboard as part of our offering. The range is perfect for active adults looking for drinks with functional benefits and comes packed with natural caffeine, contains nothing artificial as well as being zero sugar or calories.”

Rahi Daneshmand, Virtue founder added, “We are very excited for this next stage of growth, as we build the market leading clean energy drinks brand. Virtue is the first all-natural, zero sugar and zero calories energy drink in the UK and we plan to make our drinks accessible to even more people.”

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The quest to certify sustainability https://www.teaandcoffee.net/feature/33245/the-quest-to-certify-sustainability/ https://www.teaandcoffee.net/feature/33245/the-quest-to-certify-sustainability/#respond Fri, 17 Nov 2023 12:29:04 +0000 https://www.teaandcoffee.net/?post_type=feature&p=33245 Certifications are an important part of consumers' purchasing decisions and how organisations' convey the initiatives they are undertaking. But as the demand grows, so does the competition. By Kathryn Brand

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Certifications are an important part of how consumers make their purchasing decisions and how organisations convey to their stakeholders the efforts and initiatives they are undertaking, particularly in the name of sustainability. And with demand for them growing, so are the options available, and indeed the competition. By Kathryn Brand

With corporations beginning to grasp that sustainability and corporate social responsibility (CSR) are important to customers and for the long term future of businesses, company claims of achievements and action plans are everywhere, alongside, of course, accusations of greenwashing. Which is why it is increasingly important for businesses to have certifications against their claims, to enlist consumer and stakeholder trust. Whether it be Fairtrade, Rainforest Alliance, organic, B Corp, non-GMO or vegan, consumers and company partners are looking for the certification labels, especially within the tea and coffee industry.

Certifications are notably prolific in the tea and coffee value chains. With 17 percent of tea, globally, certified Fairtrade, organic or Rainforest Alliance, and 25 percent of global coffee certified by these or similar schemes, according to Ethical Consumer (ethicalconsumer.org). This may be due to the fact that many tea- and coffee-producing areas are in developing countries, as well as the way in which both products are marketed to consumers; the origin of the tea and coffee is often one of its main selling points and helps the consumers build a narrative of the product before deciding to make the purchase. By instilling this focus and painting a picture of where the tea or coffee grew and was farmed, it is natural for consumers to want to imagine it with fair working conditions, nature friendly processes and beneficial to its local area, socially and environmentally. Amanda Archila, executive director, Fairtrade America, explained, “Coffee and tea are two critical commodities for Fairtrade. Globally in 2021, Fairtrade worked with 872,916 coffee farmers, and 400,402 tea farmers and workers. Premiums earned across coffee and tea amounted to over USD $102 million. We partner with traders, roasters, brands, and retailers around the world to ensure Fairtrade is easily accessible to consumers.”

As one of the biggest players in the tea and coffee certification field, Fairtrade as an organisation facilitates equitable and sustainable trading for producers in developing countries, working with co-operatives, businesses and governments. It does this by enforcing a Fairtrade Minimum Price for when the market price drops, as a safety net for producers, as well as an additional fixed Premium payment to be paid on top of the market price, to be invested in producers’ local communities.

It is an organisation and certification that is seeing a lot of growth; “The number of certified tea farmers in the Fairtrade system has been gradually increasing over the past few years: up to 347,000 in 2021 compared with 319,500 in 2019, in diverse origins,” commented Amy Collis, senior sustainable sourcing manager, Fairtrade Foundation.

Archila added that recognition among consumers has also increased: “Since 2019, recognition of the Fairtrade label has jumped by 118 percent among US shoppers,” demonstrating the building consumer interest in certified products. Archila continued, “Gen-Z shoppers showed the highest increase in recognition of the Fairtrade label among all age groups: 18-24 year olds who recognised the mark jumped by 121 percent, from 33 percent in 2021 to 73 percent in 2023. And millennial shoppers (25-34) are the most frequent purchasers of Fairtrade products.”

Archila agreed that “in the broader world of sustainability products, consumer awareness is definitely in the mainstream. Eighty-six percent of shoppers recalled seeing a sustainability or ethical label on a product while shopping. We also see this consumer connection to sustainable and ethical products growing stronger in the future.”

While the Fairtrade certification is seeing growth worldwide, Collis explained that the UK is currently the biggest market for Fairtrade tea, holding a share of 62 percent of Fairtrade tea sold globally. Collis said this was due to strong commitments from retail partners, “with Marks & Spencer, Waitrose and Co-op all having a 100 percent Fairtrade commitment on tea and coffee.”

Image: Kloth & Köhnken

Duncan Gray, head roaster and managing director, Bay Coffee Roasters, a west Wales, UK -based roastery, explained why the Fairtrade certification is important to his company: “Fairtrade is often far more than paying a good price to the farmer and also their workers, many of the Fairtrade cooperatives that we have worked with have community initiatives providing training and education for the families, health care and often other improvements to the local area.”

Consumers embrace organic

Bay Coffee Roasters’ other major certification that it champions, is organic, which often goes hand in hand with Fairtrade, with “over 50 percent of Fairtrade farmers [choosing] to go organic: tea, coffee, chocolate, bananas and cotton are among the products carrying dual Fairtrade and organic certification,” said Collis, as they both call for sustainable farming practices. “The nature of organic farming where farmers cannot rely on chemicals means that they generally have to care for their land, respecting its bio diversity and farming in a more sustainable way. Organic certification means that the farmers have to keep to their word,” said Gray. With organic farming, the emphasis is on techniques such as crop rotation, biological crop protection, green manuring and composting, and different regions have their own organic certifications, such as the EU and USDA Organic.

As discussed in ‘The Balance of Organic’ feature in the Tea & Coffee Trade Journal October 2023 issue, the organic market is seeing growth, with the tea market holding a value of USD $1.24 billion as of 2023, with a CAGR of 8 percent through 2033, while the organic coffee market estimates are even higher with a CAGR of 12.5 percent until 2028, according to market research companies FMI and Mordor Intelligence. Organic products are not only perceived as better for the environment and for the producers by the consumer, but they are also believed to be healthier, with less chemicals needed to grow and process them.

Gray added that they even have some customers who will buy only organic coffee, and whether that be for sustainability, ethical or health reasons, it is clear it is something that is important to many customers, or at a minimum regarded highly and as a bonus to their purchases.

Organic tea is something that it is ingrained in Kloth & Köhnken’s (K&K) identity, explained Sandra Nikolei, tea department/corporate social responsibility at K&K; “Organic farming can result in a better taste of a product as the plant grows slowly compared to most conventional products.”

Nikolei added that they are seeing much interest from their customers for organic products, but also for Rainforest Alliance-certified products. Rainforest Alliance, an even bigger scheme than Fairtrade and which now includes the UTZ label, is another non-profit organisation that promotes responsible business practices and strives to improve producer livelihoods and communities, especially in the face of the climate crisis. It does not do this with fixed pricing structures, but rather through policing production.

Image: Rainforest Alliance

“As we approach 2030 – a year experts mark as the potential point of no return – we must respond with unparalleled speed and scale to shift the course of sustainability transformation,” said Rainforest Alliance CEO, Santiago Gowland, “The hard truth is that the old sustainability models are good but not good enough.” The Rainforest Alliance certification has been going for 35 years, and, as of December 2022, has since achieved sustainability projects and certified farmers in 58 countries, worked with over 6,000 companies, and made Rainforest Alliance certified products available in 190 countries.

B Corp on the rise

Another major certification that is rising to the forefront of the tea and coffee industry, indeed most consumer industries as a whole, is B Corp. For a company to achieve B Corp certification, it must be verified by the ‘B Lab’ organisation, to “meet high standards of social and environmental performance, transparency and accountability,” B Lab explained. There are B Labs across the world, including UK Australia, East Africa, Europe, and North and South America, with 6,800 B Corp certified companies across 89 countries and 161 industries.

Duncan Gray that becoming a B-Corp is next on Bay Coffee’s agenda to achieve, joining the many tea and coffee companies certified as B Corps, such as Nespresso, Pact Coffee, English Tea Shop, Bigelow, and Pukka Herbs to name a few.

The cost of certifications

Many companies, including Bay Coffee and K&K, hold multiple certifications, particularly if they have a strong international presence as different certifications are more popular in different regions. K&K for one, lists Fairtrade, Fair Trade USA, Bio EU (organic), Bio Suisse organic, USDA Organic, Rainforest Alliance, FairBioTea, and kosher, among theirs.

Different certifications cover different areas and demand different requirements from companies, so perhaps the more the better, it could be argued. There is such a variety of certifications available, many much smaller than the ones listed here, and it comes down to a company’s specific operational practices, locations, and community needs as to what certifications will have the largest impact on its environmental and social undertakings. However, it is the big names such as Fairtrade, Rainforest Alliance, organic, and B Corp that seem to be major drivers of consumer and customer interest and purchases.

Image: Bay Coffee Roasters

But there are also a lot of conversations around certifications in relation to pricing and verification. Consumers realise that they will likely pay more for certified products than they do for those without certifications. “For a pound bag of coffee, shoppers said they were willing to pay a price premium of up to 35 percent more for certified coffee over uncertified. Nearly four in five consumers said they were willing to pay more for a product to ensure that producers received a fair price,” explained Archila.

While it is understandable that there must be additional costs to ensure the producer is receiving a fair price, it does mean the more price sensitive consumer may struggle to choose the ethical option when making their purchasing decisions. This allows the mass produced and possibly unethically sourced tea and coffee companies to keep a sizeable share of the market. Collis detailed that “Fairtrade-certified organisations sell only around 4 percent of their tea on Fairtrade terms – this means they don’t benefit from being certified to the extent that they could. When shoppers choose Fairtrade tea, tea producers can sell more of their product on Fairtrade terms.”

So, while there is growing demand for certified products, and a certain amount of consumer willingness to pay extra for them, there may not be enough for producers to justify the additional expense if it is not being bought from them at the certified price.

Certifications are costly for the producer as well as sometimes for the consumer. “Significant commitment is needed from producers to achieve and maintain compliance with the Fairtrade Standards: but it isn’t always feasible for producers who are facing other challenges, such as rising costs of inputs, low market prices and the effects of climate change,” said Collis. Likewise with organic, there is a conversion phase where anything grown cannot be sold under the organic title with the benefits that come with it, until the transition is complete, and no compensation is offered for the expense or yield loss.

K&K is proud of its certifications and recognises their value, but also their limitations; “Certifications are necessary to help to make the world a better place. But often they are too cost intensive and too difficult to implement, for farmers, small businesses and for start-ups. They should be less complicated and should focus on an easy way to make changes. Imposing the same requirements on everyone in this world and origin is, from our point of view, unfortunately very European and unidimensional. It should be more individually adaptable. Many certificates are too bureaucratic and rigid,” explained Nikolei.

Therefore, while they are an important mark of credibility and of good intentions to inform consumers, having certifications is not the only nor final step to sustainability and ethical business practices. “Certification can only ever form part of a company’s sustainability efforts,” articulated Collis, they do not “replace the duties of state or business actors with respect to human rights or sustainability.”

  • Kathryn Brand is an associate editor on T&CTJ, while still writing for several of Bell’s other magazines. She joined Bell Publishing as an editorial assistant at the beginning of 2022 after graduating from the University of East Anglia with a degree in English Literature and Creative Writing. She may be reached at: kathryn@bellpublishing.com.

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Pact Coffee products now available at Waitrose https://www.teaandcoffee.net/news/33042/pact-coffee-products-now-available-at-waitrose/ https://www.teaandcoffee.net/news/33042/pact-coffee-products-now-available-at-waitrose/#respond Mon, 16 Oct 2023 08:54:42 +0000 https://www.teaandcoffee.net/?post_type=news&p=33042 Six lines will roll into most UK Waitrose stores nationwide from 16 October, including Pact Coffee’s Bourbon Cream Espresso, Fruit & Nut Espresso and Single Estate Microlot Filter. 

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UK speciality coffee roaster Pact Coffee has secured its first retail listing with Waitrose. Six lines will roll into most Waitrose stores nationwide from 16 October, including Pact Coffee’s Bourbon Cream Espresso, Fruit & Nut Espresso and Single Estate Microlot Filter.

A dark roast as indulgent as the classic biscuit, Pact Cofffee’s Bourbon Cream Espresso offers creamy and chocolatey flavours. It will be available as ground coffee, wholebean and in pod form.

The Fruit & Nut Espresso will also be available ground and in pod form. It has a fuller body and a more caramelised flavour profile, with hints of milk chocolate, dried fruit and almonds – characteristics that naturally exist in the coffee.

The Single Estate Microlot Filter will be available as ground coffee only.

All the lines are 100% specialty grade and ethically sourced directly from farmers. The Single Estate Microlot Filter has been sourced directly from Kibirizi Washing Station – a collective of 1,130 farmers that each have less than a hectare of land, on average. It’s common for each farmer to tend to the coffee trees along with fruit and vegetables on their small farms, and the cooperative supports its members with agricultural training, loans and advances in gender equity.

Paul Turton, CEO of Pact Coffee, said: “We couldn’t be more proud to be making Waitrose our grocery home, as we look to provide more consumers with the opportunity to enjoy the taste of some of the world’s best specialty-grade coffee.

“We’re fully aligned with Waitrose in that we’re constantly searching for the highest quality possible, whilst at the same time prioritising recognition and remuneration of the producer.

“Most exciting of all, every bean sold will make a huge difference to the lives of farmers and their families at its origin. Our coffee has the potential to be a tool for significant economic change, and we’re thrilled to have Waitrose on board with our mission and vision.”

The listing follows a spate of exciting developments for Pact Coffee. Last year, its Surrey roastery became carbon-neutral and the company achieved B Corp status. It also paid 76% above the 2022 Fairtrade base price. More recently, the roaster received awards for six of its products.

The Bourbon Cream Espresso and Fruit & Nut Espresso will be on sale with an RRP of GBP £6.95 per 200g bag (ground and wholebean) or 14 x Nespresso Compatible Pods. The Single Estate Microlot Filter will be available for £7.50 RRP.

A promotional offer of 20% off all lines will be running from 16 October to 28 November 2023.

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Private label brands enjoy rising popularity in Europe https://www.teaandcoffee.net/feature/30053/private-label-brands-enjoy-rising-popularity-in-europe/ https://www.teaandcoffee.net/feature/30053/private-label-brands-enjoy-rising-popularity-in-europe/#respond Mon, 09 May 2022 11:22:20 +0000 https://www.teaandcoffee.net/?post_type=feature&p=30053 Private label coffee and tea products are quite well established in Western European retailers, but now their presence is growing is Eastern European retailers as well and moving beyond the ‘lowest price’ option with which they were once primarily known.

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Private label coffee and tea products are quite well established in Western European retailers, but now their presence is growing in Eastern European retailers as well and moving beyond the ‘lowest price’ option with which they were once primarily known. By Vladislav Vorotnikov

Changing consumer habits and the development of grocery retailers are shaping up the private label segment of the tea and coffee market across Europe. The growth potential in this segment is yet to be exhausted, especially in the eastern part of the continent, where market players are now catching up with Western trends.

Over the past few years, private label coffee has been increasing its presence in the European market. Numerous European supermarket chains put their own brands on the shelves, such as Perla from Dutch supermarket Albert Heijn, E.Leclerc’s L’origine du goût in France, and Tesco Finest and Marks & Spencer in the United Kingdom.

Private label tea at Netherlands-based grocery store, Albert Heijn. Image: World Brand Design Society Website

Nowadays, it is believed that the share of the private label tea and coffee products is the highest among discounters, and they could drive growth in sales in Europe even further.

“Private label genesis and evolution are impossible without developed modern grocery retailers. Further penetration of discounters, especially in Eastern Europe, brings more space for private label moves and initiatives,” commented Julija Poliscuk, senior analyst of London-based market research company, Euromonitor International. “This is the main factor for healthy dynamics of retailers’ own brands across hot drinks. Channel shift transforms private label to comprehensive and trusted brands,” she added.

The entire European market is currently under an influence of the rising production costs, which affect all links in the production chain, and change consumer attitudes, Khansaa Ruiz, export manager of the Alicante-based coffee factory Burdet Coffee said. “There is a major crisis. Roasting factories are suffering at the moment because of the increase in coffee prices. We have been struggling to keep business going. The coffee prices have escalated tremendously due to the Covid-19, then due to the transport problems, and now due to the war. So, it’s a bit chaotic.”

“As for the private label coffee the trend is towards higher quality coffee, or at least this is our business, and we do see an increase here,” Ruiz said. She explained that there is a relatively high demand for new brands on the market. In general, many small businesses and people are looking for small business opportunities, and the market witnesses a very important increase in small businesses, including those wanting to create online websites to sell coffee.

“As for the quality of the coffee, we see that more and more a single-original coffee is being sold better. [This concerns] pure coffee, such as Colombian, Ethiopian, Guatemalan, Costa Rican, etc. People are starting to appreciate the meaning of good quality coffee,” she added.

Alberto Lusini, head of Northern Europe at Massimo Zanetti Beverage cited New York-based consultancy, Nielsen, estimating that private label share in the European coffee market is between 10 per cent and 25 per cent. “This data has had a relatively constant growth in past years. Private labels in the mass market and food service are no longer synonymous with entry-level pricing,” he explained.

The private label segment developed an important evolution in terms of innovation and improvement in quality, typical of the branded business, Lusini said, explaining that trade labels are answering the needs of consumers for additional transparency, and traceability, in case of single origins, and sustainability. “The increased sales of coffee beans is proof of a trend to bring the barista experience at home,” he added.

Poliscuk said that another reason why private label coffees are so popular is that there is more variety. “Most supermarkets offer several quality options and coffee from different origins. Many supermarkets have entered the premium segment and are expanding their range of certified coffee products. Retail sales of organic-certified private label brands are increasing. Examples of organic private label brands in Europe include REWE Bio in Germany, Carrefour Bio in France, and Waitrose Duchy Organic in the UK.

Covid-19 as a game-changer?

The coronavirus pandemic has reshaped the European grocery-retail landscape tremendously. With restaurants, cafés, and bars remaining largely closed in most countries during at least the first wave of the pandemic, consumers rushed to stock up on groceries.

The out-of-home coffee market was greatly affected during the Covid-19 crisis, said Utrecht, Netherlands-based consultancy ProFound-Advisers, in a post shared by the Dutch Centre for the Promotion of Imports from developing countries. Many coffee shops closed, and people worked and drank coffee at home instead. Coffee sales at supermarkets went up, which benefitted private label brands, and created a trend.

“Early in the Covid-19 pandemic, consumers around the world rushed to supermarkets to stock up on products. Retail sales went up a lot. Retailers also developed online sales and delivery solutions for consumers. This made supermarkets the main source of food and beverages during the pandemic,” the Dutch analysts added.

MZB says the demand for private label coffee is growing across Europe. Image: Massimo Zanetti Beverage

Lusini agreed, adding, “The Covid-19 pandemic and, even further the strong inflation on raw materials from Q4 2021, has pushed consumers towards private labels. In particular, the inflation driven by the strong price increases in green coffee has polarised the consumers towards entry-level prices on one side, and premium products on the other. Private labels could possibly take advantage of this.”

However, it is yet to be said that the Covid-19 pandemic has been a game-changer for the hot drinks market in Europe. Poliscuk explained that financial hardship caused by the pandemic forced consumers to re-think their spending, so value for money embodied in private label quickly became a priority, but that trend is primarily related to soft drinks. “Branded products remain important within hot drinks, due to their indulgence and rituality essence, in addition to the request for quality differentiation. Neither tea nor coffee of retailers’ owned brands did not gain share in 2020,” she added.

The European market is uneven

Private label hot drinks’ presence in Europe is not homogeneous and differs regionally and from country to country.

In 2021, almost 16 per cent of value sales of coffee and 14 per cent of tea in Western Europe were under retailers’ house labels. Meanwhile, in Eastern Europe this indicator does not reach 5 per cent for coffee and is 7 per cent for tea, Poliscuk said.

“The significantly stronger presence of private label in the Western part of Europe is explained with strongly developed chains of modern grocery retailers and already earned trust to own brands. Eastern Europe is only catching up with Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland, and Slovakia pursuing a Western model, with the strongest share of retailers’ brand overall and in hot drinks too,” Poliscuk noted, adding that these countries successfully adopted international – or developed their own – discount chains.

Single origin coffee is making its way into the private label segment. Image: Burdet Coffee

Different levels of development of store-owned brands define the way companies raise these products’ awareness. Thus, Eastern Europe usually puts the focus on low cost. More advanced chains enter the mode of portfolio expansion and product range broadening. Eastern Europe has already witnessed the evolution of basic needs’ satisfaction to catching up with expertise from brands they mimic, Poliscuk said.

Rising beyond the low-cost segment

As the popularity of private label products in Europe promises to gain traction in the coming years, this segment starts playing an increasingly important role for market players.

“We have a long-standing experience in private labels, both in mass market and food service. The management of private labels is part of our ongoing relationship with the trade at the global level and it represents one-fourth of our total turnover. We leverage our strong expertise in green coffee and the roasting capabilities of 18 plants located all over the world to support our PL clients,” Lusini said.

Poliscuk said that further projected penetration of modern grocery retailers and especially discounters will support the development of private labels across Europe with the highest dynamics in its Eastern part. “Private label in Western Europe is entering a new era where penetration of modern grocery and a developed omnichannel allow them to evolve towards something new and unique. Retailers’ own brands are ready to rise beyond low-cost, wide assortment and segmentation,” she said.

Currently, these brands target specific consumers’ needs and higher expectations with little or no sacrifice in terms of product quality. Poliscuk is confident that this will result in more private label coffee pods and fresh coffee beans with the underlined origin and technology of roasting, and private label tea will be able to offer more varieties and added value via functionality.

“As modern consumers are eager to buy sophisticated, premium organic or sustainable products, even price-sensitive private label [will be able to] enter the niches,” Poliscuk shared, adding, “It’s worth mentioning, that ever-continuing expansion of e-commerce with forms of dark stores and delivery services will draw new horizons for coffee and tea private label across Europe.”

  • Vladislav Vorotnikov is a Moscow-based multimedia B2B freelance journalist writing about the tea and coffee industry since 2012

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