Interview with Olaf Koch 2/4
Food Service Distribution is a strategic growth area for METRO. How much potential do you see here in the future?
We need both: Food Service Distribution and store-based wholesale. Store-based wholesale is very important and will continue to be so. Our customers like selecting products from us in the store, receiving advice and meeting other chefs and retailers. Wholesale stores are a marketplace for products, but also for expertise and face-to-face encounters. That’s something we should never lose sight of.
The fact is, though, that more and more customers also want us to deliver...
... yes, exactly. That’s why we launched our delivery service 10 years ago. Sales are already over €5 billion – and we have by no means exhausted the growth potential. We also want to improve our service quality further. The aim is to make our processes and our interaction with customers as easy and efficient as possible, for instance through innovative interfaces and the digitalisation of our customer relationships. Many things are already running very well and we are working hard on further improvements. Ideally, food specialists will choose us because of our product expertise and service quality, but also because they can work with us efficiently thanks to digital tools.
That means digitalisation is indispensable, even – and especially – for the food delivery service. How far has METRO progressed along this path?
Digitalisation in the context of delivery starts with the customer and extends as far as our warehouses. Our M-Shop online shop is a tool for interacting with our customers. Processes like order processing and warehouse restocking are already completely digital because we restock for the following day based on stock levels and orders received. Another big step is digitalising the work of our drivers. Our driver app simplifies the administrative work for drivers, cuts transport costs, reduces paper use by up to 50% and makes data more transparent. We will be able to make further improvements to processes on this basis.
Organisation is the key
In the kitchen of Pauly Saal, the freshest of ingredients are prepared in very narrow time frames. Individual ingredients are precisely attuned to each other in the creation of each dish; the service must be perfectly synchronised. Accordingly, flawless organisation in the kitchen is essential. Arne Anker thinks of himself as the captain of a ship: ‘It’s my task to ensure that we keep right on course and that no icebergs arise ahead of us.’
Arne is always happy to recommend the 7-course dinner to his guests: ‘We bring them 5 amuse-bouches to start with and finish the meal off with 3 coffee garnishes,’ he elaborates. ‘So, with this big meal, our guests have 15 small dishes on the table in all – and therefore the full inspiration of our kitchen!’
Ideas? Always and everywhere.
For Arne, creativity is a continuous process, and Berlin offers a wealth of inspiration. The chef finds ideas for new dishes and creations everywhere – whether he is cycling to work, walking his dog or cooking with his restaurant team. ‘You see herbs growing, an artwork someone has sprayed on a wall, a colourful T-shirt on a co-worker – and your mind just starts clicking. That’s how dishes come about in our kitchen.’
Arne has no worry whatsoever that he could run out of ideas. Nearly 1,000 dishes are already saved on his laptop or in development, while the next ones are germinating in his head. ‘The creative well never runs dry,’ he says. ‘The only problem is time.’
Watch video againLearning from the customer
In the former electrical substation in Berlin’s Kreuzberg district, energy is still flowing. Here, the forward-thinkers and developers of the METRO-NOM team are working on solutions such as the M-Shop and the sales force app SAM, which stands for Sales And More. The tech unit sees itself as an IT sparring partner for the customers and the METRO countries. Its objective is to develop solutions that make processes more efficient and generate the greatest possible added value.
And the METRO-NOM approach is as unpretentious as it is successful: always speak with the customers and partners, listen and learn from them – instead of knowing everything better.
Paperless, sustainable, time-saving
At METRO, food service distribution used to be a rather bureaucratic, paper-based process – with a clipboard full of documents that had to be signed in triplicate on delivery runs. METRO-NOM has now developed a paperless, digital solution: the driver app simplifies processes for all involved, displays customer-relevant data and makes the process more transparent.
No wonder the solution has met with such a hugely positive response – and not only among users in Germany.
Watch video againDiscover more
WE ARE ON THE MOVE
How can we make processes more economical, simpler, better? With the driver app for our METRO drivers, for example. Less effort, less paper, more transparency in delivery – digitalisation at its best!
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