Mr Philip Carolan (left) with chefs during a past training of hotel operators in Nairobi. PHOTO | FILE
By MUGAMBI MUTEGI, pmutegi@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
The ubiquitous Kenchic Inn name is set to disappear
from city streets after the poultry company behind it terminated
franchise agreements with about 30 fast-food restaurants that use it
across the country in a bid to protect its brand.
The firm has announced that all “Kenchic Inn” restaurants
should cease using the name as from March 31, explaining that this move
is informed by a strategic decision to concentrate on its core business.
Kenchic, in a statement to its franchisees, said it
had decided to exit the agreement “due to Kenya’s rapidly evolving
local fast food market”.
International fast-food chains such as Kentucky
Fried Chicken (KFC), Subway and Pizza Hut have recently opened shop in
Kenya, offering an expanded market for Kenchic whose core business is to
hatch and sell chicken.
The franchisees are accused of disregarding quality
standards at their restaurants, which Kenchic feared would impact
negatively on its brand and possibly hurt its sales.
“Effective March 31, Kenchic will discontinue the
use of the brand Kenchic Inn,” Philip Carolan, Kenchic’s processing and
sales distribution operations manager said in the letter.
“At the end of the period, the Kenchic Inn brand
will no longer be used nor will any of the Kenchic-associated logo’s
brands or colours.”
Kenchic, which was established in 1984, produces
processed chicken for consumption (broilers and layers) as well as
day-old chicks which are sold to farmers.
The firm produces about 600,000 layer and broiler chicks per week.
It also packages processed meat products (whole
chicken, thighs, drumsticks, burgers, sausages, viennas, and wings) in
supermarket under the brand name Farm 2 Fork.
The company in December moved into its newly-built
Sh350 million chicken processing factory in Thika which has a capacity
to slaughter 30,000 chickens per day and closed its Tigoni (Limuru)
slaughter house.
Some of its clients include international
franchises like Steers, Galitos, and KFC as well as in-flight caterer
NAS Servair and several leading hotels in the country.
To grow sales and its brand, the company years back
entered into franchise agreements with independent businesspeople who
operated fast-food restaurants using the Kenchic Inn name.
Kenchic’s only requirement, in exchange, was that
these restaurants use chicken exclusively sourced from them and that
businesses are run at the highest standards.
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