Entering any new career can be daunting. How can you prepare yourself, what can you expect? For anyone starting out as a supplier, we have spoken to 3 expert suppliers about the advice they would give to a new supplier just starting out in their career.
Rachael Foster – Bar Staff at Fullera
My advice is really just to be yourself; you got the role for a reason. Never lose your sparkle.
Peter Mckeone – Founder and Director of Diablo Seasonings
I believe that right now, the power of social media to promote your message is ridiculously underpriced. I built up 100k monthly unique views across social with a zero budget. Whatever you're doing, if you're a chef, a hotel, a restaurant, an independent food business etc. the one thing you must do is create content at scale.
First and foremost, I'm a spice merchant, but I fully understand how to utilise the 7 or 8 apps that dominate our phones right now. This attention is an underpriced commodity that is no doubt going to go away, when it does you'll be paying thousands of pounds to reach the same amount of people, that you can do today for free.
Record a podcast on Anchor, write about your experiences across each social media page. Interview people, shoot videos of you cooking in the kitchen, if someone famous comes in, then you take a selfie, and you post it to FB and Instagram. Learn to use it. Create at scale. Good luck 👍
Barrie Webster - Business Development Manager at Clear Cool
At this point, you can introduce simple measures such as pan lids. Not only will the energy required to heat and cook products on the range top be reduced bit also will cooking times, and the heat and steam released into the kitchen be reduced. Does the breakfast chef need to turn on the solid top range on at 6 am?
Reduce the size of joints - two 3kg joints cook a lot quicker than a single 6kg joint and will cool faster if going into the blast chiller, all of which will give you a positive benefit on your energy bill and the environment. The starting point is to review your operation and start simple.