Customer Relationship Management of KFC
Customer Relationship Management of KFC
Customer Relationship Management of KFC
KFC Corporation (KFC), founded and also known as Kentucky Fried Chicken,
is a chain of fast food restaurants based in Louisville, Kentucky, in the
United States. KFC has been a brand and operating segment, termed a
concept[2] of Yum! Brands since 1997 when that company was spun off
from PepsiCo as Tricon Global Restaurants Inc.
KFC primarily sells chicken pieces, wraps, salads and sandwiches. While its
primary focus is fried chicken, KFC also offers a line of grilled and roasted
chicken products, side dishes and desserts. Outside North America, KFC
offers beef based products such as hamburgers or kebabs, pork based
products such as ribs and other regional fare.[citation needed]
In 1929 Sanders opened a gas station in Corbin, Kentucky, and cooked for
his family and an occasional customer in the back room. Sanders enjoyed
cooking the food his mother had taught him to make: pan-fried chicken,
country ham, fresh vegetables, and homemade biscuits. Demand for
Sanders's cooking rose; eventually he moved across the street to a facility
with a 142-seat restaurant, a motel, and a gas station.
During the 1930s an image that would become known throughout the
world began to develop. First, Sanders was named an honorary Kentucky
Colonel by the state's governor; second, he developed a unique, quick
method of spicing and pressure-frying chicken. Due to his regional
popularity, the Harland Sanders Court and Cafe received an endorsement
by Duncan Hines's Adventures in Good Eating in 1939.
Sanders Court and Cafe was Kentucky's first motel, but the Colonel was
forced to close it when gas rationing during World War II cut tourism.
Reopening the motel after the war, Sanders's hand was once again forced:
in the early 1950s, planned Interstate 75 would bypass Corbin entirely.
Though Sanders Cafe was valued at $165,000, the owner could only get
$75,000 for it at auction, just enough to pay his debts.
Therefore, rather than struggle to live on his savings and Social Security, in
1955 Sanders incorporated and the following year took his chicken recipe
to the road, doing demonstrations on-site to sell his method. Clad in a
white suit, white shirt, and black string tie, sporting a white mustache and
goatee, and carrying a cane, Sanders dressed in a way that expressed his
energy and enthusiasm. In 1956 Sanders moved the business to Shelbyville,
Kentucky, 30 miles east of Louisville, to more easily ship his spices, pressure
cookers, carryout cartons, and advertising material. And by 1963 Sanders's
recipe was franchised to more than 600 outlets in the United States and
Canada. Sanders had 17 employees and travelled more than 200,000 miles
in one year promoting Kentucky Fried Chicken. He was clearing $300,000
before taxes, and the business was getting too large for Sanders to handle.
In 1964 Sanders sold Kentucky Fried Chicken for $2 million and a per-year
salary of $40,000 for public appearances; that salary later rose to $200,000.
The offer came from an investor group headed by John Y. Brown, Jr. a 29-
year-old graduate of the University of Kentucky law school, and Nashville
financier John (Jack) Massey. A notable member of the investor group was
Pete Harman, who had been the first to purchase Sanders's recipe 12 years
earlier.
Under the agreement, Brown and Massey owned national and international
franchise rights, excluding England, Florida, Utah, and Montana, which
Sanders had already apportioned. Sanders would also maintain ownership
of the Canadian franchises. The company subsequently acquired the rights
to operations in England, Canada, and Florida. As chairman and CEO,
Massey trained Brown for the job; meanwhile, Harland Sanders enjoyed his
less hectic role as roving ambassador. In Business Week, Massey remarked:
"He's the greatest PR man I have ever known."
Within three years, Brown and Massey had transformed the "loosely knit,
one-man show ... into a smoothly run corporation with all the trappings of
modern management," according to Business Week. Retail outlets reached
all 50 states, plus Puerto Rico, Mexico, Japan, Jamaica, and the Bahamas.
With 1,500 take-out stores and restaurants, Kentucky Fried Chicken ranked
sixth in volume among food-service companies; it trailed such giants as
Howard Johnson, but was ahead of McDonald's Corporation and
International Dairy Queen.
The revolutionary choice Massey and Brown made was to change the
Colonel's concept of a sit-down Kentucky Fried Chicken dinner to a stand-
up, take-out store emphasizing fast service and low labor costs. This idea
created, by 1970, 130 millionaires, all from selling the Colonel's famous
pressure-cooked chicken. But such unprecedented growth came with its
cost, as Brown remarked in Business Week: "At one time, I had 21
millionaires reporting to me at eight o'clock every morning. It could drive
you crazy." Despite the number of vocal franchisees, the corporation lacked
management depth. Brown tried to use successful franchisees as managers,
but their commitment rarely lasted more than a year or two. There was too
much money to be made as entrepreneurs.
CEO Brown spent the rough year of 1970 shoring up his company's base of
operations. By September, Kentucky Fried Chicken operated a total of 3,400
fast-food outlets; the company owned 823 of these units. The company,
once too large for the Colonel to handle, grew too mammoth for John Y.
Brown as well. In July 1971 Kentucky Fried Chicken merged with
Connecticut-based Heublein Inc., a specialty food and alcoholic beverage
corporation. Sales for Kentucky Fried Chicken had reached $700 million,
and Brown, at age 37, left the company with a personal net worth of $35
million. Interviewed for the Wall Street Journal regarding the company's
1970 financial overhaul, Brown commented, "You never saw a more
negative bunch.... If I'd have listened to them in the first place, we'd never
have started Kentucky Fried Chicken." Article author Frederick C. Klein
included closing parenthetical remarks in which observers close to the
company noted that "in engineering Kentucky Fried Chicken's explosive
growth, Mr. Brown neglected to install needed financial controls and food-
research facilities, and had let relations with some franchise holders go
sour."
For Heublein, acquisitions were doing more harm than good: Kentucky
Fried Chicken was stumbling just when the parent company had managed
to get United Vintners, bought in 1969, on its feet. In 1977 the company
appointed Michael Miles, who was formerly responsible for the Kentucky
Fried Chicken ad campaign at Leo Burnett and had joined Heublein's
marketing team in 1971, to chair the ailing Kentucky Fried Chicken. Richard
Mayer, vice-president of marketing and strategic planning for Heublein's
grocery products, took charge of the Kentucky Fried Chicken U.S. division.
Mayer found that the product mainstay, fried chicken, wasn't up to the
high quality Colonel Harland Sanders would expect. Miles and Mayer also
faced the same problem John Y. Brown had not managed to surmount:
relations with franchisees were sour. In the mid-1970s, the franchisees sold
more per store than company-owned stores. Faring better without
Heublein's help, they resented paying royalty fees to the ineffective
corporate parent. To top that off, the stores were looking out of date.
Having unloaded well over 300 company-owned stores in the early 1970s,
by the end of the decade Heublein began to buy some back from the
franchisees. Renovation of the original red-and-white striped buildings
began in earnest, with Heublein putting $35 million into the project. On the
outside, Kentucky Fried Chicken facades were updated, while on the inside,
cooking methods veered back to the Colonel's basics. Sticking to a limited
menu kept Kentucky Fried Chicken's costs down, allowing the company
time to recoup. Timing was fortunate on Kentucky Fried Chicken's turn-
around; it happened just in time for Colonel Sanders to witness. After
fighting leukemia for seven months, Harland Sanders died on December 16,
1980.
Miles and Mayer's work culminated with the highly successful 1981 ad
campaign, "We Do Chicken Right." A year later, in step with the fast-paced
1980s, R.J. Reynolds Industries Inc. acquired Heublein, giving Kentucky
Fried Chicken another lift; the company had expansionary vision, capital,
and the international presence to tie it all together. Kentucky Fried Chicken
sales that year reached $2.4 billion. By 1983 the company had made
impressive progress. With 4,500 stores in the United States and 1,400 units
in 54 foreign countries, no other fast-food chain except McDonald's could
compete. But while many industry insiders were crediting the team with
victory, Mayer wasn't so quick to join in. As he noted in Nation's Restaurant
News, "People keep talking about the turn-around at KFC. I'd really rather
not talk about it. The turn-around is only halfway over."
With the entrance of R. J. Reynolds came the exit of Michael Miles, who
resigned to become CEO of Kraft Foods; Mayer took over as chairman and
CEO. Mayer continued on a cautious line for the next several years, refusing
to introduce new products as obsessively as its competitors. "In the past
two years," Mayer said in a KFC company profile in Nation's Restaurant
News, "people have gone absolutely schizoid.... A lot of chains have blurred
their image by adding so many new menu items." In further commentary,
he added, "We don't roll out a flavor-of-the-month."
Mayer's conservatism gained him the respect of Wall Street and his peers in
the fast-food industry. In 1986 soft-drink giant PepsiCo, Inc., bought
Kentucky Fried Chicken for $840 million. Reasons cited were KFC's superior
performance and its 1980--85 increase in worldwide revenue and earnings.
The successful operator of the Pizza Hut and Taco Bell chains, PepsiCo did
quite well introducing new products through those restaurants. It was just
a matter of time before Kentucky Fried Chicken would be expected to
create new products.
In 1966, for instance, the Kentucky Fried Chicken Advertising Co-Op was
established, giving franchisees ten votes and the company three when
determining advertising budgets and campaigns. As a result of an antitrust
suit with franchisees, in 1972 the corporation organized a National
Franchisee Advisory Council. By 1976, the company worked with
franchisees to improve upon contracts made when Brown and Massey took
over. Some contracts even dated back to when Colonel Sanders had sealed
them with a handshake. The National Purchasing Co-Op, formed in 1979,
ensured franchisees a cut of intercompany equipment and supply sales. All
of these councils had created a democratic organization that not only
served the franchisees well, but helped keep operations running smoothly
as Kentucky Fried Chicken was shifted from one corporate parent to
another. As time passed, however, PepsiCo's corporate hand seemed to
come down too heavily for franchisee comfort.
Though KFC may have had problems competing in the domestic fast-food
market, those same problems did not seem to trouble them in their
international markets. In 1992 pretax profits were $92 million from
international operations, as opposed to $86 million from the U.S. units.
Also, in the five-year span from 1988 through 1992, sales and profits for the
international business nearly doubled. In addition, franchise relations,
always troublesome in the domestic business, ran smoothly in KFC's
international markets. To continue capitalizing on their success abroad, KFC
undertook an aggressive construction plan that called for an average of one
non-U.S. unit to be built per day, with the expectation that by 1995 the
number of international units would exceed those in the United States.
International sales, particularly in Asia, continued to bolster company
profits. In 1993, sales and profits of KFC outlets in Asia were growing at 30
percent a year. Average per store sales in Asia were $1.2 million,
significantly higher than in the United States, where per store sales stood at
$750,000. In addition, profit margins in Asia were double those in the
United States. KFC enjoyed many advantages in Asia: fast food's association
with the West made it a status symbol; the restaurants were generally
more hygienic than vendor stalls; and chicken was a familiar taste to Asian
palates. The company saw great potential in the region and stepped up
construction of new outlets there. It planned to open 1,000 restaurants
between 1993 and 1998.
These moves gave a small boost to KFC's image, which had grown
somewhat out-of-date, and to its bottom line. However, problems with the
franchisees continued, and PepsiCo was not seeing the return on its assets
that it saw with its beverage and snack food divisions. PepsiCo was having
similar problems with its other restaurant subsidiaries, Taco Bell and Pizza
Hut, and decided the drain of capital expenditure was not worth it.
PepsiCo CEO Roger Enrico explained the move: "Our goal in taking these
steps is to dramatically sharpen PepsiCo's focus. Our restaurant business
has tremendous financial strength and a very bright future. However, given
the distinctly different dynamics of restaurants and packaged goods, we
believe all our businesses can better flourish with two separate and distinct
managements and corporate structures." KFC and its franchisees did settle
their contract disputes; according to a press release, "the crux of the
agreement revolves around KFC franchisees receiving permanent territorial
protection. In turn, KFC Corporation will have more direct influence over
certain national advertising and public relations activities." Still KFC faced
the need to rennovate its restaurant buildings, and also faced stiff
competition from Boston Market, Burger King, and McDonald's, so it
remained to be seen if the new parent company would refresh KFC's image
and profits.