Spotting a market opportunity ten years ago, John Mudd set out to create an alternative to mass-produced crisps, building a business that today sees 2.5 million packs of Real hand-cooked crisps sold each week in the UK.
"My objective was to design a crisp that tasted of potato, and my selling concept was 'why pay 40p for ordinary crisps when you can eat hand-cooked for the same price?"said Mudd, now a consultant to the firm he created after selling the business to Irish food firm Tayto.
Price was key to tackling the fiercely competitive crisp market: Real crisps entered the marketplace with its prices on a par with the mass-produced versions.
Mudd hit the trend for thicker, hand-cooked crisps at the beginning of the curve: moving from £1.3 million is sales in 2003 to about £13 million in 2008.
Today Real crisps has won a considerable slice of this competitive market, and is now the number two hand-cooked crisp product in the UK behind the market leader, Kettle Chips.
Real crisp success underlines consumer shift to hand-cooked crisps
Like to receive news like this by email? Join and Subscribe!
Join Our Telegram Channel for regular updates!
Uitgelichte Bedrijven
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content