expat
Member
- May 1, 2012
- 430
- 3
While putting my coffee on a retailer's shelf the other day I picked up some of my competitor's bags to compare with mine. And when I say 'competitor' let me be clear that they are the elephants and, wishful thinking, I'm the flea. They spill more coffe in a couple hours than I roast in a year.
Anyway, now there is barely any room on their bags for information about the coffee or brewing instructions because there are so many logos-- Fairtrade, Rain Forest Alliance, UTZ, FSC, Soil Conservation (in U.K.), Organic this and that, etc., etc.
Living a past life as the direct marketing manager for a Fortune 500 company my antannae began to transmit the words Flim-Flam into my tiny little brain. Then I started doing a lot of research about all these third-party certifiers. And, while these folks have done quite a bit of good in the past, it now looks like, more and more, they are becoming check boxes to tick for big corporate roasters. The marketing department at Big Coffee Corp. says people will pay more for Fairtrade or USDA Organic so we've got to slap that logo on the coffee.
Since, in my experience, big corporations generally have an "it's all about me" attitude and most of their "giving back" is marketing window dressing, the cynical side of me is really starting to wonder about what exactly Fairtrade, Rainforest Alliance, et al, are really all about. And I think it is m-o-n-e-y! D'oh!
I ranted about this on my website -- davenport coffee dot com -- on the Coffee with Conscience page, but am interested in your take on this. Am I being too cynical or has big business co-opted these once noble minded causes for their own profit purposes?
By the way, I created a Coffee With Conscience logo that means whether my coffee is Fairtrade or Utz or whatever certified or not, I've done my homework to ensure that the farmer got a fair price and didn't get shafted by the co-op he takes his coffee too, or shafted by Unilever, Sara Lee, Royal Ahold or some other food behemoth. If you'd like to use it I give it freely, just use it with conscience. You can write info at davenportcoffee dot com and ask for the file.
Anyway, now there is barely any room on their bags for information about the coffee or brewing instructions because there are so many logos-- Fairtrade, Rain Forest Alliance, UTZ, FSC, Soil Conservation (in U.K.), Organic this and that, etc., etc.
Living a past life as the direct marketing manager for a Fortune 500 company my antannae began to transmit the words Flim-Flam into my tiny little brain. Then I started doing a lot of research about all these third-party certifiers. And, while these folks have done quite a bit of good in the past, it now looks like, more and more, they are becoming check boxes to tick for big corporate roasters. The marketing department at Big Coffee Corp. says people will pay more for Fairtrade or USDA Organic so we've got to slap that logo on the coffee.
Since, in my experience, big corporations generally have an "it's all about me" attitude and most of their "giving back" is marketing window dressing, the cynical side of me is really starting to wonder about what exactly Fairtrade, Rainforest Alliance, et al, are really all about. And I think it is m-o-n-e-y! D'oh!
I ranted about this on my website -- davenport coffee dot com -- on the Coffee with Conscience page, but am interested in your take on this. Am I being too cynical or has big business co-opted these once noble minded causes for their own profit purposes?
By the way, I created a Coffee With Conscience logo that means whether my coffee is Fairtrade or Utz or whatever certified or not, I've done my homework to ensure that the farmer got a fair price and didn't get shafted by the co-op he takes his coffee too, or shafted by Unilever, Sara Lee, Royal Ahold or some other food behemoth. If you'd like to use it I give it freely, just use it with conscience. You can write info at davenportcoffee dot com and ask for the file.