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Elliot Maras By Elliot Maras
Editor



Karsay Coffee Builds on its Foodservice Base to Shine in OCS
By keeping abreast of a changing retail coffee market, this Somerset, N.J.-based company expanded its focus to include offices, focusing on single-cup systems



Karsay Coffee
A downtown coffee shop serviced by Karsay Coffee has a grinder, a batch brewer, an espresso machine, an automatic drip brewer and a powdered cappuccino dispenser.
At left, brothers Ryan, Tom and Rich Karsay join their father, Steve, in the warehouse in Somerset, N.J.
Rich Karsay
Rich Karsay checks on a liquid-based dispenser in a health care account. Karsay Coffee does not provide the machine, but it does provide the product.
Karsay Coffee
Karsay Coffee makes ample use of point-of-sale materials provided by suppliers, both in office accounts and in foodservice accounts.

Fortunate timing and staying on top of trends are twin keys to succeeding in business. Karsay Coffee in Somerset, N.J. offers a case study of a company that shifted its focus in response to changing market conditions in the coffee service industry.

Under its third generation leadership, the family-owned business several years ago recognized the need to move away from its traditional foodservice customer base to the office market. This was at a time when new tools — namely single-cup brewers — were creating new opportunities in OCS. The result has been double digit growth every year for the last 10 years.

Single-cup revolution changes company focus
The company was well positioned to capitalize on single-cup brewers when offices in central New Jersey were switching over from glass pot brewers in the mid 1990s. Having already established a strong presence in restaurants and institutions, Karsay Coffee was familiar with the single-cup concept that was revolutionizing OCS. This change was occurring at a time when the company's traditional foodservice market was changing as well.

"We were programmed to sell the restaurants," said Steve Karsay, the son of company founder Elmer Karsay. However, the restaurant business was changing as the large foodservice distributors, which previously left the coffee side of the business to coffee specialists such as Karsay, were developing dedicated coffee divisions.

The big foodservice distributors were beginning to become more competitive in coffee, making that market less profitable.

Fortunately, the third generation of Karsays — brothers Rich, Tom and Ryan — were managing the company and were up to speed on everything happening in the coffee market.

While the big foodservice companies were gaining more of the coffee business, these companies weren't focusing on the smaller coffee shops that were popping up.

Retail coffee stores emerge
"The street business was changing," said Rich Karsay, the current president. When Rich Karsay came on board in 1987 after studying marketing at Radford University in Radford, Va., there were three coffee shops in downtown New Brunswick, N.J. Today, there are more than 20 coffee shops, some of which are his customers.

The changing market required the company to adapt to serving smaller accounts. To meet the needs of these independent retail accounts, it was necessary to provide equipment in addition to product. This required a new business model for the company, which began as a "coffee wagon jobber" in 1950, selling coffee to locations that owned their own coffee urns.

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