J.P. Molina
SENTREP
SENTREP
Red Crab Case
Relevant Facts
- · Red Crab started in 1998 by Raymond’s mother in Clark, Pampanga. She herself made the recipes herself and ran the restaurant.
- · The initial store was very simple and had no personality yet but everyone knew that the food was very good.
- · 1 year later they seized the opportunity to open another branch in Malate, Manila. The sales was good at first but eventually declined because of emergence of different locations where the people go to.
- · In 2001 two more branches opened. One in Morato in March, the other in Alabang in November. When the Alabang branch opened, that’s when they started to do a little market research. They found out their market was from the 26 – 35 age group bracket.
- · In 2002 they were invited to open a new restaurant in Greenbelt 3, a new upscale mall. They had to change the name and the concept of their brand as per requirement of Greenbelt so they came out with seafood club.
- · By 2004, they already have 5 restaurants up and running and all were profitable when they opened Crustasia in Rockwell. By 2005 they had 13 restaurants including Blackbeard’s Seafood Island.
- · It seemed to the owners that the formula is to find a spot with a big market and then tailor-fit the restaurant for the market in that spot.
Problem
The
restaurants that Red Crab group made were all large successes. Each though was
not planned in a clear cut set of standards. It even seems that they just got
lucky.
The
problem for me is that 13 restaurants doesn’t prove market dominance. The
market is big and people have to eat every day. No one eats in the same
restaurant all the time. The problem for me is how to create more restaurants
and differentiate it from the existing ones. To be the best
Objective
Therefore
the objective is to create more brand names and give alternatives for people to
eat in.
Analysis
Red
Crap Goup is primarily a seafood group. They have found a niche and they are
very successful. But as a businessman, one must never be satisfied with current
earnings even if they’re good. As our leaders in our company have said in the
wake of our current success in the market, “one must not get drunk with success”.
At
Red Crab, if I were in charge, this is what I would also tell myself. As an entrepreneur,
I can see that the opportunities for more growth is close to endless. Now they
have the capital backed up by great food researchers and cutting edge workforce,
I believe the Red Crab group has the potential to be a big force in the
restaurant industry and perhaps the food industry as a whole.
Possible Alternatives
1. Expand
more in NCR and eventually to the provinces using the Red Crab/Seafood Island/Crustacia
brand names which already have goodwill.
2. Create
another brand name and move into the Quick Service Industry.
3. Diversify
further and create other themes other than seafood.
Decision
I
Number
one alternative is a good direction for the company. 13 restaurants I believe
is not enough to saturate the Restaurant Industry. But as you add more
restaurant, I believe laws in economics can catch up with the Red Crab Group.
The
law of diminishing marginal returns states that for every input of resources,
the income generated from the additional input will be smaller than the
previous inputs’ contribution to income.
People
from the different target expansion areas might already be going a lot to the current
red crab restaurants and when you put up one that is near to this people, they
will just switch restaurants that is why profit from one restaurant will just
move to another restaurant.
II
The
number 2 alternative seems logical, related and doable but not feasible at the
moment. For one, the Group’s strength lies in the Restaurant business. They do
not have the expertise in running a quick service food chain thus it would be
inefficient and they might not be able to compete with the big market players
like Mc Donalds, Jollibee, KFC etc.
The
market is already saturated with the big companies, that is why many good
business die in the first place. Take the place of Texas Chicken which used to
be a great up and coming QSR in the early 20’s. The chickens they serve were
big and tasty and it seemed that they had great value for money. Eventually however
they were not really able to compete with the big market players like Mc
Donalds, Jollibee, and KFC.
III
I
believe the third alternative to be the most logical because offering a new
choice to customers would not necessarily eat up the market of the other
restaurants. One may argue that if they
put up additional restaurants, they may shoot themselves in the foot and current
customers will just transfer to the new restaurant.
But
I believe this is not always true in the case of Phohoa and Jack’s loft in
Eastwood city which shares the same venue, same kitchen, but customers of Phohoa
do not necessarily go to jacks loft. This is because the theme for the two restaurants
are not the same.
People
also cannot eat in the same restaurant every day. I for one eat only twice a
month at my favorite restaurant in Eastwood because I do not want to eat the
same kind of food everyday.
Making
a new restaurant with a different theme like a steakhouse will deliver the same
kind of experience that his previous restaurants would offer, same excellent
quality of food, but a different theme for a change.