New coffee chain to enter packed market

Jul 24th at 14:32
24-07-2013 14:32:08+07:00

New coffee chain to enter packed market

South Korea-based coffee chain Caffé Bene plans to open a Phnom Penh shop in in October, making it the latest entrant into a crowded market with numerous international and local coffee chains all angling to caffeinate Cambodia’s rising middle class.

General manager of Caffé Bene in Cambodia, Jinsil Lee, said yesterday that construction is in progress and the shop will open in Phnom Penh’s Boeung Keng Kang 1 area, already a bastion of pricey coffee and tea options.

There is still potential for a new player, however, because “the economic level [in Cambodia] is rising”, she said.

The store will differentiate itself from other coffee chains through “specialities from Korea”, she said, adding that they are concentrating on specialty desserts.

Caffé Bene announced in January that it was on the hunt for staff. The store was initially planned near Central Market on Monivong Boulevard, where a sign still hangs on the side of a building that seems to be under renovation.

Rami Sharaf, CEO of the parent company controlling Express Food Group, the local owner of UK-based chain Costa Coffee, said he isn’t overly worried about the extra competition.

The way he sees it, customers are becoming more willing to pay two or three dollars for their cup of coffee.

Two more Costa Coffee branches are expected to open next month, he said: one along the riverside near the Royal Palace, and a second on a Phnom Penh university campus. In November, it plans to open a fourth branch in Vattanac tower.

Despite the presence of international brands such as Costa or Gloria Jean’s Coffees, a number of local chains such as Brown and T&C have held their ground.

“Local brands can do well as long as they can deliver a product with a consistent quality and the right ambiance,” said Karl Johan Remoy, general manager of Indochina Research (Cambodia) Ltd.

“It is not only about the coffee. In Phnom Penh, controlling service levels can be challenging considering the difficulty of finding qualified staff. International brands with their global training programs may have to rethink their staffing strategies to stay competitive,” he said.

Remoy said Cambodian-owned Brown, a local brand with Khmer-style design, is still the most popular coffee shop town.

“Looking at their followers on Facebook they have over 45,000 likes and 1,300 people talking about them. In contrast, Costa Coffee has 10,000 followers and 500 people talking about them.”

Kouch Sokly, managing director of CBM Corporation Co Ltd, the company that owns local chain T&C, said they have a different target group than international brands, and for that reason, do not see the newcomer cutting into their businesses.

phnompenh post



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Malaysian motos to enter market

Naza Bikes Sdn Bhd, a subsidiary of Malaysia-based Naza Group of Companies, will enter Cambodia’s crowded motorbike sector, according to the local brand manager.

Cambodia sees gold price dip

Gold prices in Cambodia are down about 27 per cent from January through June, according to the Ministry of Commerce.

Scooter connects to phone

Japan-base Terra Motors said it plans to sell its smartphone-compatible electric scooter in Cambodia by the end of this year.

Kampot pepper demand dips

SALES of Cambodia’s World Trade Organization-certified pepper from Kampot province fell to 21 tonnes at the end of this year’s harvest season, a slight decline from...

Sales of palm sugar not so sweet

SALES of Cambodia’s World Trade Organization-certified palm sugar from Kampong Speu province dipped to 12 tonnes at the end of the harvest season this year, about a...

Recovering supply lifts car sales

Thanks to a more stable and undisturbed supply chain, sales of new cars in Cambodia have risen dramatically over the first six months of this year compared with the...

‘Thinnest’ smartphone is set for debut in Cambodia

Two days after Huawei introduced the world’s thinnest smartphone in London and Singapore, the Cambodian representative office of the China-based company announced...

Thai rice cuts pose problems

Thailand’s recent announcement of a 20 per cent price cut within the government rice-pledging scheme will have little impact for Cambodian exports, but farmers may...

Rice unsalable, farmers in big distress

Millions of farmers in Mekong Delta never dream of making a profit of 30 percent as promised by the government. They just wish to sell out the rice.

Milled rice exports up 127 per cent

Cambodian milled rice exports increased by more than 100 per cent during the first five months in 2013 compared with the same period the year before, according to...


MOST READ


Back To Top