RFG director taking on operational role

Retail Food Group director Jessica Buchanan has resigned from her position in order to transition to an operational consulting role.

The move, announced in a statement to the ASX on Thursday, will enable Buchanan to execute some of the strategic initiatives she has helped to formulate in her capacity as director.

These include a strategy for the rollout of 62 new product campaigns, which are now being delivered to franchise partners by the company’s brand general managers.

The first of these campaigns are showing significant improvements, a company spokeswoman told Inside Retail.

According to RFG, the new Gloria Jean’s ‘Kit Kat Chiller’ promotion so far has lifted sales by 9 per cent, and the Brumby’s ‘Gourmet Donut’ campaign has lifted sweet category sales by 8 per cent.

Buchanan, who founded consumer research agency Consumerology, which counts Autograph, Katies, Millers and Crossroads as clients, has many years of experience in consumer product marketing and retail franchising.

She was also a non-executive director of Banjo’s Bakery Cafes for four years from 2008 to 2012, according to LinkedIn.

Earlier this month, The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Buchanan had sought to stock products from Naytiv, a food brand she started in 2017, in some of RFG’s franchises.

The company ultimately decided not to move forward with the idea, according to a statement given to the publications.

“Jessica has served on the RFG Board for eight years and as we close out the end of another financial year, she has decided the best use of her time at this point is to step into the company and commit more of her time to help drive the successful execution of these campaigns for our franchisees,” the spokeswoman told Inside Retail about her transition to operational consultant.

RFG executive chairman Peter George thanked Buchanan for her contribution as a director and said he looks forward to working with her as a contributor.

“[I]nnovative product offerings and campaigns will be critical to the revitalisation of the RFG’s franchisee network which will, in turn, underpin the operational turnaround of RFG,” he said.

The franchisor, which owns the Gloria Jean’s, Donut King, Crust, Pizza Capers and Brumby’s Bakery businesses, has faced ongoing challenges since it got caught up in the parliamentary inquiry into the franchising sector.

In March 2018, the company revealed plans to close more than 200 stores and posted a $306.7 million loss later in the year, after it was forced to make impairments and provisions to the tune of $402.9 million to cover store closures and restructuring and a reduction in brand value and assets.

Over the last 12 months, RFG has renegotiated its financial covenants with lenders, gaining some breathing room while it seeks to reduce debt levels, including the potential sale of its Crust, Pizza Capers and Donut King businesses.

The company’s stock price spiked in early July after it received a $160 million refinancing proposal subject to various conditions from Soliton Capital Partners, which it did not make public despite the ASX’s continuous disclosure rules.

The company defended this decision, citing the fact that it has said numerous times that it is exploring various ways to reduce its debt.

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