WSJ article on KKD, Tim Hortons of Canada.
  August 23, 2001 
                     Krispy Kreme, Tim Hortons of Canada                    Square Off in Each Other's Territory
                     By JOEL BAGLOLE                     Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
                     OTTAWA -- Here's something for cruller lovers to chew on: Two of North                    America's most celebrated doughnut chains are invading each other's turf.
                     Krispy Kreme Doughnuts Inc., whose hot-from-the-oven doughnuts have won                    a cult following in the U.S., is coming to Canada. In its first foray outside the                    U.S., the Winston-Salem, N.C., company plans to open 39 Canadian outlets in                    the next six years, with the first slated for early next year in the Toronto area.
                     When it comes to doughnuts, Canada is no small fry. According to                    market-research firm NPD Group Canada Corp., Canada has more doughnut                    shops per capita than any other country on earth -- one for every 9,000 of its                    30 million residents. That compares with one U.S. shop for every 26,000                    Americans.
                     "In England, people go to the local                    pub to socialize; in Canada, they                    go to the local doughnut shop,"                    says Steve Penfold, a history                    student at Toronto's York                    University who is doing his                    doctoral thesis on "The Social Life                    of Doughnuts."
                     Dominating the Canadian scene is                    the Tim Hortons chain, which accounts for more than half of all                    doughnut-and-coffee stores in the country, excluding specialty-coffee shops.                    The chain's red-and-white store banners are as much a fixture in communities                    across Canada as hockey rinks. In fact, the chain's founder and namesake was                    a Hall-of-Fame hockey player with the storied Toronto Maple Leafs.
                     Many Canadians are unaware that Tim Hortons has been owned since 1995 by                    an American company -- Wendy's International Inc., the Dublin, Ohio,                    hamburger-chain operator. Tim Hortons is operated, however, by TDL Group                    Ltd. of Toronto, and is still considered something of a national Canadian                    institution.
                     Tim Hortons has marginalized its competition through aggressive tactics that                    include opening identical drive-through outlets across the street from each                    other to catch traffic going in either direction. Its army of 42,000                    burgundy-and-white uniformed employees has earned a reputation for efficient                    service. Dunkin' Donuts Inc. of Randolph, Mass., the world's largest doughnut                    chain with 5,146 stores in 39 countries, has been in Canada since 1961. Yet                    according to NPD Group Canada, only 6% of the country's doughnut/coffee                    shops are Dunkin' Donuts, a unit of Allied Domecq PLC of Bristol, England.
                     As Krispy Kreme moves north, Tim Hortons is expanding south, focusing on                    U.S. border cities such as Detroit and Buffalo, N.Y. In the past five years, Tim                    Hortons has opened 30 stores in the Buffalo area alone, and plans to open nine                    more there this year. The company says it expects its U.S. operations to break                    even, and possibly turn a profit, by the end of next year, despite the costs                    involved in establishing the brand south of the border.
                     With 1,923 stores in Canada and 124 in the U.S., Tim Hortons shows no signs                    of slowing down. Its overall sales rose 20% last year, to $1.2 billion, making it                    the second largest food-service company in Canada behind McDonald's                    Restaurants of Canada Ltd. Last year, it captured 17% of Canada's $7.2 billion                    quick-service restaurant sales, according to the Canadian Restaurant and                    Foodservices Association.
                                                 Tim Hortons plans to open 180 stores                                                in Canada and 28 more in the U.S. this                                                year. It's even testing Krispy Kreme's                                                southern U.S. stronghold by operating                                                two shops in West Virginia and one in                                                Kentucky.
                                                 "Tim Hortons is formidable to say the                                                least," says John Ivankoe, an equity                                                research analyst at J.P. Morgan in                                                New York. "The company has built                                                success on top of success."
                                                 Of course, Krispy Kreme is no slouch.                                                In the fiscal year ended Jan. 28, the                                                company's sales jumped 40%, to                                                $448.1 million. Its sales have more                                                than doubled since 1996, as have its                                                U.S. stores, which today stand at 192                    across 32 states. Stan Parker, Krispy Kreme's senior vice president of                    marketing, says the company plans to have more than 400 outlets across North                    America by 2006. Of its new Canadian shops, seven will be in the province of                    British Columbia and 32 in central-eastern Canada.
                     Patti Jameson, a spokeswoman for Tim Hortons, says the chain isn't worried                    about Krispy Kreme's entry because of the Canadian chain's product diversity.                    Tim Hortons added soups and sandwiches in recent years, and plans to expand                    its menu further to include upscale bakery items such as baguettes and                    sourdough bread. "We're much more than doughnuts," Ms. Jameson says.
                     Krispy Kreme officials say they are confident the company's singular focus on                    hot doughnuts will distinguish it from Tim Hortons. "All we have are our                    doughnuts," says the company's Mr. Parker.
                     Mr. Penfold, the Ph.D. student, says doughnuts have become an "icon" food                    that Canadians associate with themselves in the same way that Americans                    relate to apple pie. Doughnuts fit into Canadians' humorous self-portrayal as a                    blue-collar, beer-drinking and hockey-loving nation, he says.
                     To appeal to that nationalism, Hortons recently changed its tagline on certain                    Canadian ads from "You've always got time for Tim Hortons" to the more                    patriotic "We never forget where we came from." Krispy Kreme has relied                    largely on word of mouth, instead of ads, to build its brand. (Some brides have                    served Krispy Kreme doughnuts instead of wedding cake.)
                     Helen Smith, a human-resource officer with Canada's federal government, is a                    regular Tim Hortons customer, buying coffee daily and the occasional                    doughnut. She says she likes the coffee's taste and its low price compared with                    coffee sold at specialty stores such as Starbucks. Rev. Gary Nolte, a                    Pentecostal minister, frequents Tim Hortons for another reason. "I like their                    charity work," he says, referring to the five summer camps for underprivileged                    children that Tim Hortons operates.
                     Write to Joel Baglole at joel.baglole@wsj.com
  Copyright © 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. |