“More niches mean more opportunity” – Farmer Brothers on how different formats meet demand for coffee

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Farmer Brothers is a US-based coffee roaster, wholesaler and foodservice distributor of coffee, tea and some food products, with coffee comprising around half of the business’s sales. Last July, it sold a coffee facility in Northlake, Texas, and its non-direct store-delivery coffee business, known as Direct Ship to private-label manufacturer TreeHouse Foods for $100m.

In the opening half of its fiscal 2024 since the sale, Farmer Brothers has slowly been turning around its performance, with adjusted EBITDA turning to a positive $2.3m in the second quarter compared to a loss of $2.2m the year before. Six-month sales were $171.3m, up from $168.7m a year earlier.

Matthew Swenson was hired in March as the vice president of coffee operations at the Texas-based company, adopting some of the previous CEO’s roles amid a time of change at the company’s helm. He previously served as the director of coffee at Nestlé.

Just Drinks sat down with Swenson to discuss how Farmer Brothers is looking to streamline the business, what consumer trends to keep an eye on and sustainable practices in the supply chain.

Henry Mathieu (HM): How have your first couple of months been at Farmer Brothers?

Matthew Swenson (MS): I just joined the end of February, early March, and just been getting my feet fully under me the last couple of weeks. But in Farmer Brothers, it’s the vice president of coffee operations and that’s a relatively large scope: not only do we look at the quality of the coffee, the sourcing of the coffee and green coffee procurement side of things, it’s also looking at the R&D and innovation pipeline, and then overseeing our manufacturing site here in Portland, Oregon as well.

HM: Can you break down the structure of the business and how it operates?

MS: It’s interesting, right? It’s a relatively neat business model in this day and age. In July 2023, we sold off our direct ship business, our national account business, to TreeHouse Foods. What that has really allowed us to do is kind of step back and take full inventory and stock of our direct-store-delivery business.

When I say it’s a unique business model, we have 80 distribution centres all across the country that service our customers, which is roughly 30,000 customers and 250 routes across the country. By having these localised distribution centres, we’re able to service these customers in a really personalised way. For us, it’s about getting back to the basics and building the efficiencies and streamlining those operations. And then where my role fits into that is really looking at the production schedules, making sure we’re making this factory here as efficient as possible, maintaining the highest quality to be able to service those customers that way.