Monday, 17 February 2014

Culinary zeitgeist: Food businesses look for a slice in the Rs15b home-delivery market

About 95% restaurants in Pakistan do not have their own call centres and the ones that do, have to rely on outsourced human resources. PHOTO: FILE
KARACHI: 
The Pakistani appetite for food, which spurred the growth of restaurant and food business in recent years, is now taking this hyper-competitive market to the next level as many of the new entrants have customised their business models to tap what has now become a Rs15 billion a year food-ordering market.
During the last three years, industry sources say there has been an amazing growth in restaurants and food businesses dealing exclusively in take-away and home delivery. Operating a kitchen-based business with an online presence seems to be the latest trend in the food business, they say.
Take for example some of the new players that entered the market in the last three or so years. Broadway Pizza, 14th Street Pizza, New York Pizza, Chairman Mao, Golden Dragon, Burger Shack, Burger Factory and Burger Lab to name a few are only kitchen-based businesses dealing in take-away and home delivery, said Nauman Sikandar Mirza, CEO of EatOye!, an online food delivery and restaurant reservation service.
 photo NaumanSikandarMirza_zps3b5c9f03.jpg
The food-ordering market has grown to Rs15 billion a year, according to Mirza, the estimated figure comes from an analysis of the 700 restaurants across Pakistan that EatOye, formerly Food Connection Pakistan, has been working with for the last three years.
“Operating a kitchen-driven business is relatively easy to manage,” Mirza said. “It gives you a leverage to focus exclusively on building a great product without having to worry about the ambience of your restaurant.”
The demand for home delivery is not only giving a boost to the restaurant business but is also helping in the growth of home-based establishments providing personalised cakes and health foods, he said.
Food-delivery websites
Moreover, this trend has also spurred the growth of food-delivery websites, like Urbanite.pk, KhaoPiyo.pk, Foodpanda.pk and EatOye.pk, he said. All of these food portals are vying for a slice of the food-ordering space as none has achieved the position of market leader so far.
About 95% restaurants in Pakistan do not have their own call centres and the ones that do, have to rely on outsourced human resources and the service quality suffers as a result, according to Mirza.
 photo 1b_zps407e36e4.jpg
It is perhaps this gap or an additional layer between the customers and restaurant owners that has created a business opportunity for food-delivery websites that are now taking orders directly from the customers.
EatOye is one example of how online food portals are aiming to get some business out of this changing trend. It recently marked a transition from online food guide Food Connection Pakistan (FCP) to EatOye!
Explaining the reasons behind this change of business model, Mirza said FCP was a marketing-based model while EatOye is a transaction-based model. FCP used to help businesses advertise and market their products (food) and customers had to do the actual transaction at the restaurants. But with EatOye they are involved in the transaction, which can be done through this platform.
Long way to go
While the progress is impressive, the food-ordering market has a long way to go for it represents a very small chunk of the country’s overall restaurant business. Pakistanis easily spend more than $1 billion a year on food outlets and restaurants, according to another study by EatOye.
The study, which covered 25,000 restaurants in different cities of Pakistan, was based on the minimum revenue required to sustain a restaurant business month-on-month basis, Mirza explained.
Also, there are signs that this niche market is giving old restaurants a run for their money.
The food-ordering market is responding very well that’s why these kitchen-based businesses are growing, he said.
“During the last six months – since we launched EatOye – there has been 100% growth in the number of transactions month-on-month,” he said. “In the same period, we served between 35,000 and 40,000 customers and had a customer retention rate of 40%.”

Balotelli 'happy' at AC Milan

Balotelli 'happy' at AC Milan
Rumours persist that the Italy international will be offloaded during the summer but he says that he is loving life under new coach Clarence Seedorf
Mario Balotelli insists that he is "happy" at AC Milan amidst continued speculation that he could be shown the exit door at San Siro this summer.

The Italy international was infamously labelled a "rotten apple" by Rossoneri owner Silvio Berlusconi before the forward's arrival at the Giuseppe Meazza from Manchester City last year, while it was also reported in December that the former Italian Prime Minister had demanded that the 23-year-old be sold during the winter transfer window.

Milan denied the latter claim and while speculation is now rife that Balotelli will be offloaded this summer to fund moves for other players, the man himself says he is going nowhere, revealing that he is enjoying life under new boss Clarence Seedorf.

"I have spoken with him about situations with the team and the things that I must do on the field," theAzzurri ace told Marca. "I'm happy.

"Seedorf is a great champion and it's a pleasure to listen to him. He was also a great player. I hope that everything goes well."

Balotelli has been linked with a reunion with former Inter boss Jose Mourinho at Chelsea, while Atletico boss Diego Simeone has spoken glowingly of the forward ahead of Wednesday's Champions League last-16, first-leg clash with Milan at San Siro.

Balotelli admitted that he has nothing but respect for the Argentine but refused to be drawn on the possibility of a move to the Vicente Calderon.

"[Simeone] was a great player and he's a great coach," he stated. "It's always an honour when a coach praises you. In this moment, though, I'm with Milan. I cannot say any more than that."

Milan's meeting with Atletico is being billed as a straight shootout between Balotelli and Diego Costa but the Palermo native does not see the tie in such simplistic terms.

"Diego Costa truly seems like a great player but it's a battle between Milan and Atletico," he reasoned.

"They're doing very well in the Spanish championship. They are a great team."

Meanwhile, Balotelli confirmed that he would be cheering on City in their last-16 clash with Barcelona.

"I hope that Manchester City beat Barcelona," he confessed. "But it will be difficult for my ex-team-mates as Barcelona are one of the favourites."

Vidic agrees Inter switch

Vidic agrees Inter switch
The Manchester United defender announced in January his intention to depart Old Trafford after eight years and has chosen to move to the Serie A club on a two-year deal
EXCLUSIVE
By Fabrizio Romano

Manchester United defender Nemanja Vidic has agreed a deal to join Inter.

The Serbia international, who announced in January that he intended to leave Old Trafford this summer, will sign a two-year contract worth €3 million (potentially rising to €3.5m) per year.

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Vidic is understood to have informed United of his decision to move to Italy after a deal was agreed following the club's 0-0 draw with Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium last Wednesday night.

Piero Ausilio, Inter's general manager, has been in close contact with Vidic's entourage since January and spoke in glowing terms of the defender after he made his announcement to leave United

Ausilio was in attendance for the Premier League clash against the Gunners where a gentleman's agreement was struck between the two parties.

Erick Thohir, the Inter chairman, views Vidic as a potential ambassador for the club and is looking to use the player's vast experience as a means to engage his home nation's interest in football and open up the Indonesian market.

Vidic will become the Serie A side's first signing of the summer and is seen as a sensible piece of business, adding experience, quality and value for money given no transfer fee will be paid.

Monaco and Galatasaray showed interest in Vidic but the centre-back judged Inter's offer to be the most appealing. 

Vidic moved to Old Trafford from Spartak Moscow in 2006 and has won five Premier League titles and the Champions League in his eight years with the Red Devils.

Better than Guardiola's Barcelona? Bayern perfectly placed to end Champions League curse

Better than Guardiola's Barcelona? Bayern perfectly placed to end Champions League curse
No team has retained Europe’s premier club competition since 1990, but there has never been a squad more equipped to do so than the current holders
COMMENT
By Carlo Garganese

Since the rebranding of the Champions League 22 years ago, no team has successfully defended football's most prestigious club trophy. Some winners have come mightily close - four losing in the final and six in the semis - but Arrigo Sacchi's AC Milan remain the last side to capture the formerly named European Cup in consecutive campaigns way back in 1990.

This hoodoo has reached such spellbinding proportions that it has become known as the 'Champions League curse', a follow-on from the 'Cup Winners' Cup curse' which saw a new victor crowned in every year of the now defunct Uefa competition.

Breaking the trend was never really a possibility for a number of Champions League winners. Olympique de Marseille were unable to defend their 1993 title following the Valenciennes bribery scandal, Porto sold many of their 2004 heroes, while Borussia Dortmund '97, AC Milan 2007, Inter 2010 and Chelsea 2012 were all handicapped by ageing squads that needed rebuilding.

In terms of pedigree, the teams best placed to retain the Champions League were Louis van Gaal's Ajax in 1996, Marcello Lippi's Juventus a year later, Vicente Del Bosque's Real Madrid in 2003, the following season's Milan of Carlo Ancelotti and Pep Guardiola's Barcelona in 2010. Fabio Capello's Milan of 1995 and Sir Alex Ferguson's Manchester United of 2009 could be added to this list by virtue of the fact they were eventual finalists.

However, when all factors and circumstances are considered, none of these clubs have been as well positioned to defend their trophy as Bayern Munich this season.
IN NUMBERS
Bayern in 2013-14
99Goals Bayern have scored this season in all competitions from 35 games.
30Number of victories. They have failed to win on just five occasions, one of these a penalty shootout success.
21Clean sheets from keepers Manuel Neuer and Tom Starke this term.
16Number of points Bayern are clear at top of the Bundesliga.
13Matches that Bayern have won on the bounce in the Bundesliga.
0Bundesliga games lost this season.
Since the beginning of 2013, Bayern have played 62 games. They have won 55, drawn four and lost just three times - two of these inconsequential Champions League reverses when qualification was all but secure. They have scored 179 goals and kept 36 clean sheets.Die Roten are on a 13-match Bundesliga winning streak, are unbeaten in the league for 16 months and have captured five trophies in the last year.
The statistics are mind-blowing. Individually, collectively, technically, tactically, physically, mentally – Bayern are the complete team. There is star quality in every department – goalkeeper Manuel Neuer, defenders David Alaba and Dante, midfielders Philipp Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Thiago, offensive talents Franck Ribery, Arjen Robben and Thomas Muller – the list of stellar names goes on and on. And that is without mentioning coach Pep Guardiola, who boasts an enviable Champions League record – two titles and two semi-finals from his four seasons in charge of Barcelona.

"I expect and I am convinced that we will be the first team in history to win the competition back to back," Bayern scout, and former midfield star, Paul Breitner confidently proclaimed to Goal.
Bayern may not be the best team of the Champions League era, but never before has a holder been so far ahead of the rest of the competition. In the mid-nineties, Ajax had a magnificent Juventus side to compete with – a group who would reach three finals on the bounce. The Italians themselves were challenged the following campaign by both a Dortmund squad full of Germany icons and a blossoming Manchester United.

The Madrid Galacticos of Zinedine Zidane, Luis Figo, Raul and Ronaldo were unlucky to participate in one of the strongest-ever Champions League editions in 2002-03. Eventual finalists Milan and Juventus were world class sides, while Inter and Valencia were also exceptional outfits. When Ancelotti's Milan failed the following term, many of these teams were still around - as were the Arsenal Invincibles and Roman Abramovich's nouveau-riche Chelsea.

Guardiola's class of 2010 – with their beautiful tiki-taka and superstars such as Lionel Messi, Andres Iniesta and Xavi - looked odds-on to end the jinx, but it is often forgotten just how formidable their semi-final conquerors Inter were. Jose Mourinho's treble-winners erected perhaps the last great European back line, a virtually impenetrable wall marshalled by Lucio and Walter Samuel.

Mourinho Magic | Jose celebrates eliminating holders Barcelona at Camp Nou in 2010
The pretenders to Bayern's crown this season are nowhere near the level of these past party-poopers. Barcelona are in decline, Atletico Madrid lack numbers, Manchester United are at their weakest for a quarter of a century, an exhausted Arsenal need a miracle to progress to the last eight, while Manchester City are perhaps too reliant on a few key players. Real Madrid, PSG and an improving Chelsea certainly cannot be ruled out, but Bayern are in another stratosphere.

Their strength in depth is unparalleled. Despite missing Bastian Schweinsteiger, Javi Martinez, Arjen Robben, Franck Ribery and long-term absentee Holger Badtsuber for extended periods this term, Bayern have still broken record after record. Guardiola even felt safe enough recently to exile Toni Kroos and Mario Mandzukic. With the exception of Capello's Milan – who infamously stockpiled talent – no Champions League holder has been blessed with such an embarrassment of riches and could cope so comfortably when faced with an injury crisis or congested calendar. "We have the best squad ever. We have 25 players and most of them are internationals," Breitner noted.

And with Bayern 16 points clear at the top of the Bundesliga, Guardiola can continue to rotate his side and ensure there is plenty of fuel left for the business end of the Champions League. By the end of next month, Bayern will have probably already retained their Bundesliga crown. The Premier League and La Liga title races, on the other hand, are as intense as ever with multiple teams battling it out at the top. Come March, April and May, a fresher Bayern - who were also rejuvenated by Germany's one-month winter break - will hold the upper hand physically. Few champions have enjoyed such an advantage.

And Bayern are not only fresh, they are hungry. With a new coach in Guardiola, a new formation and no one assured of a first team place, there is zero chance of complacency. This has not always been the case in the past – Ancelotti's Milan cruised to a 4-1 first-leg lead in their 2004 quarter-final against Deportivo but took their foot off the gas and were inexplicably thrashed 4-0 in the return leg in Galicia.
"Due to the change in coaches, the players cannot lie back and relax," Bayern's 2001-winning captain Stefan Effenberg told Goal.
"Plus there is a World Cup approaching. They have to give 100 per cent in every match. The players are greedy. They want to achieve something that nobody before them has managed. This is their motivation. I can feel it here in Munich and you can see it in the players' interviews."
Ribery confirmed as much in one such interview with bundesliga.com: "I can promise you one thing: I'm still hungry for more. We want to continue winning everything and create history by becoming the first team to defend the Champions League."

And this brilliant Bayern side may just create history. If they don't, then we may as well accept that the Champions League curse is never going to be broken.

Arsenal's lack of striking options comes to the fore as they face Liverpool

Arsenal's lack of striking options comes to the fore as they face Liverpool
Arsenal face Liverpool in the FA Cup on Sunday as the form of Sturridge and Suarez serves as a reminder of their own deficiency up front.
The events of the latest January transfer window are what Arsenal fans have become only too accustomed to over the years. Following another disappointing performance in the transfer market, the lack of options upfront is becoming excruciatingly clear with the passage of every game.
The signing of Mesut Ozil on deadline day in the summer transfer window had overshadowed Arsene Wenger’s gamble to stick with a single established striker. However, it was assumed that the club would rectify the mistake in the winter. While the club had been linked with a horde of strikers in January, none of the rumours materialized.
The old adage that goals wins games holds true. Every successful club usually operates with at least two quality strikers. Manchester City’s striking quartet of Sergio Aguero, Alvaro Negredo, Edin Dzeko and Stevan Jovetic has been prolific in the Premier league.
At Chelsea, Jose Mourinho has made efficient use of the qualities of Fernando Torres, Demba Ba and Samuel Eto’o and has built his team accordingly. The duo of Luis Suarez and Daniel Sturridge has ensured that Liverpool are not only on course for a fourth place finish but remain in the title hunt as well.
Arsenal’s humiliating 5-1 loss to Liverpool and the latest draw to Manchester United have only served to highlight the glaring deficiency in their armoury – the lack of a quality alternative to Olivier Giroud.
Trusting Giroud to lead the line for an entire season was always going to be a massive risk. Though he started the season in fine goal scoring fashion, his form has waned of late. With 14 goals in 34 appearances this season, and with most of them coming in the first quarter of the campaign, it is evident that the Frenchman is running out of steam as the race for the Premier League heats up.
Giroud’s inconsistent finishing has been a cause for concern ever since his arrival at the Emirates and has cost Arsenal in crunch games. His performance against Manchester United at the Emirates in mid-week served as a reminder of his deficiencies in front of goal. He managed to get himself in great positions but once he got there, he lacked the finishing touch.
With Giroud being the only viable option for Wenger, it has also restricted Arsenal from employing different tactical approaches which would have been a crucial aspect when it came to breaking down resolute defenses.
In his defense, Giroud often does a fine job of linking-play between Arsenal’s horde of attacking midfielders, enabling them to play with the freedom and fluidity that they flourish in which is integral to their style of play.
Had Wenger succeeded in bringing in another striker, Arsenal could have had a genuine plan B which would have gone a long way in supplementing their bid for the title. Moreover, Wenger would have been presented with opportunities to rotate his squad resulting in a sharper and fitter set of players for the remainder of the season.
As Arsenal gear up to face Liverpool in the FA cup on Sunday, the mouth-watering combination of Suarez and Sturridge up front for Liverpool is something they will look upon with envy. Either one of them invariably gets the goals Liverpool need and are able to thrive even in the other’s absence.
Their electric performances have even propelled Liverpool back into title contention while Arsenal may pay the price for not having a suitable back up to Giroud. With Nicklas Bendtner supposedly due to face the Merseyside outfit on Sunday, that particular drawback seems all the more glaring

Sunday, 16 February 2014

ENJOYED WATCHING CASTILLA'S VICTORY OVER BARÇA B

Florentino, Ancelotti and players attended the 'Mini-Clásico'

Florentino, Ancelotti and players attended the 'Mini-Clásico

Real Madrid president Florentino Pérez and first team manager Carlo Ancelotti went to the Alfredo Di Stéfano stadium to watch the 'Mini-Clásico' between Real Madrid Castilla and Barcelona B on the 26th matchday of Spain's second division, 'Liga Adelante'.
Florentino, who always likes to attend the home games of the club's B team, arrived minutes before kickoff and had his photograph taken with a few of the fans at half time.
Ancelotti meanwhile arrived at the VIP box just after the game had started and sat next to Sports Director Miguel Pardeza two rows behind their boss.
Moreover, as the first team had recently finished its training session, various top flight players came to see the game, such as Nacho Fernández, Dani Carvajal and Xabi Alonso. All witnessed Castilla's 3-1 victory over the visiting side, having had to come back from being a goal down.

Who wants to be a Real-lionaire?

Who wants to be a Real-lionaire?
02/15/2014
German magazine 'Sport Bild' revealed that Bayern Munich forks out some €203 million a year on the wages of its squad and coach, Pep Guardiola. Now it has come to light that the earnings at Real Madrid are almost as high.
According to a report in 'El Mundo Deportivo', Florentino Pérez spends not far from €200m on first-team salaries alone. Specifically, 23 senior players rake in €183.93m, while Carlo Ancelotti nets a cool €15.5m a year, making him by far and away the highest-paid coach in 'La Liga'. To put that figure into perspective, Barça manager Gerardo Martino and Atlético boss Diego Simeone pocket €5.4m and €2.5m respectively.
'Sport Bild' claims that only Manchester City and Chelsea, who are respectively bankrolled by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, pay out more in wages than Champions League holders Bayern, Real Madrid, Barça or PSG.
Naturally, the man who gets the biggest slice of Real's €200m pie is Cristiano Ronaldo. His latest contract extension, which runs until 2018, nets the Portuguese ace €17m a year after tax (€18.3m of his €35.3m wage goes to the taxman). The next highest earner is record signing Gareth Bale, whose €101m transfer fee also came with an €11m-a-season pay packet.