DerekC
Established Member
PS - don't talk to me about Greggs - they bought our nice local bakery, sold off the bakehouse for apartments and turned it into a grotty little Greggs with standardised products brought in from wherever.
There's a rip off Upper Crust which never seems that busy due to the other options you mention. I did use the Upper Crust there once and got a dreadful stomach upset which I attribute to the ham and mozzarella baguette I paid a small fortune for. I should've used the little cafe outiside the station, which pre-pandemic, seemed to do a good trade with commuters.Then take London Maylebone, its managed by Chiltern Railways, the Burger King, a small coffee brand, a bagel place etc are all charging normal decent prices no SSP in sight, they value their passengers more than profits.
It's quite amusing to read SSP's own description of the Upper Crust brand - in particular, this bit: "Upper Crust is a well-established international brand, with a proven track rcord as a filled baguette led brand. At Upper Crust, we promise freshly prepared baguettes generously filled with mouth-watering ingredients as well as freshly baked pastries and breakfast rolls. Our classic white, super sourdough and seeded multi-grain baguettes go straight from the oven to our counter in their crispy, crunchy gloriousness." They also claim it "demonstrates universal appeal with customers around the world."There's a rip off Upper Crust which never seems that busy due to the other options you mention. I did use the Upper Crust there once and got a dreadful stomach upset which I attribute to the ham and mozzarella baguette I paid a small fortune for. I should've used the little cafe outiside the station, which pre-pandemic, seemed to do a good trade with commuters.
I've often thought this myself. The actual cost of ingredients for hot drinks must be trivial - maybe 10p to 20p per cup including the cup itself and other costs. So selling three cups at £1 generates similar profits to selling one cup at £2.50.On board Catering:
- Generally expensive due to shortsighted managers who don't understand that if the price is dropped, for say an instant coffee to £1, you will sell four times as much. A good example was CrossCountry and Arriva Trains Wales, both selling coffees at £2.50ish. Very few were buying on those services.
- At another company, the contractor was doing Kenco Instant coffees at £1 and went through 7 sleeves (70 coffees) - two full trolley urns of hot water... in just 2 hours. Far more profit in selling dirt cheap instant coffee en-masse than a few overpriced posh ones.
The 'other company' was indeed a large rail franchise, with the 80-trolley catering contract supplied by an independent, proper cowboy outfit - but, credit to them, they had a better understanding of how to turn a profit than some of the other so called 'professional' intercity firms. They also shifted a lot of Stella at £2 a can, and did quite excellent sandwiches (£1.80-£2) too ... sandwich supplier was the now-gone Brambles of Middlesborough. It worked well for about six years until one of the business partners walked out and the remaining chap got greedy racked the prices up and started charging staff for uniforms... at that point other irregularities were discovered during an audit (double invoicing the train firm for comp drinks in First Class) - it was re-tendered and RailGourmet were brought in... sort of the trolley of last resort.Only it probably doesn't work like that in practice. Presumably the 'at another company' was not on board trains?
If they were turning in such a good profit, why was that model discarded? Always good to use the word greed ( everybody hates that) but perhaps the profit was not that good....? Funny how nobody else has stumbled across this great business model!The 'other company' was indeed a large rail franchise, with the 80-trolley catering contract supplied by an independent, proper cowboy outfit - but, credit to them, they had a better understanding of how to turn a profit than some of the other so called 'professional' intercity firms. They also shifted a lot of Stella at £2 a can, and did quite excellent sandwiches (£1.80-£2) too ... sandwich supplier was the now-gone Brambles of Middlesborough. It worked well for about six years until one of the business partners walked out and the remaining chap got greedy racked the prices up and started charging staff for uniforms... at that point it was re-tendered and RailGourmet were brought in.
Err.. Another company, a second, major train operating company, did infact use that exact business model. Central Trains went on to hire the same contract firm in 2001 and was using them into the two new EM and LM franchises for several years.If they were turning in such a good profit, why was that model discarded? Always good to use the word greed ( everybody hates that) but perhaps the profit was not that good....? Funny how nobody else has stumbled across this great business model!
So what happened to them then? They were so profitable that the owners retired on the proceeds, and no-one else has sought to emulate their business model, apparently so much better than anyone else? Just seems too incredible to be true.Err.. Another company, a second, major train operating company, did infact use that exact business model. Central Trains went on to hire the same contract firm in 2001 and was using them into the two new EM and LM franchises for several years.
Although the exterior station scenes of Brief Encounter were filmed at Carnforth the fictitious Milford Junction was actually a suburban junction, probably in the Home Counties. Even in those days a small junction would have a buffet where you could consume stewed tea, rock-hard buns and drooping sandwiches while enduring long waits for connections.If you remember Brief Encounter, supposedly set at Carnforth (LMS) station, it had the classic old-fashioned refreshment room run by a dragon behind the counter.
(I remember the refreshment room on Chester station used to be just like that when I first used it in 1961 - Lyons Individual Fruit Pie anyone?).
Today's facility at Carnforth is not the usual SSP outlet, but is privately run and a pleasure to use.
They piggy-back on the film's legacy of course, but they've replaced the dragon with customer-friendly staff.
There are a few other non-SSP-run refreshment rooms of course, Llandudno Jn being one.
None of these businesses have had an easy 18 months with Covid of course, and high prices are not surprising as they try and rebuild.
Prices on the high street are on the way up too.
You know, for a moment, I thought you might be right. A lot of people hallucinated the entire 1990s, I'm sure I did too. Infact, I must have hallucinated the memories from working at that exact catering company myself, dragging a trolley up and down trains on twelve hour shifts for several years flogging coffee (Kenco, either black or with powdered milk) at £1 and or PG Tea at 90p, or Hot Chocolate (also £1) on a flatbed Kenco trolley. Well, I thought I dreamt it up until I dug out a lodgement invoice sheet from Express Catering Limited (registered office Chester, later Nottingham) with a top up order from their service centre from 12 October 2000. I could bore you with the entire order I put in, including the type of biscuit used (Walkers Luxury Shortbread) but I'm hoping at this point you realise it may not have been a pipe dream.So what happened to them then? They were so profitable that the owners retired on the proceeds, and no-one else has sought to emulate their business model, apparently so much better than anyone else? Just seems too incredible to be true.
I always laugh at comments like these. Clearly you are someone who has lived a very sheltered life never leaving these shores.Because it is the UK.
Presumably the ’sell more cheap’ model only works if there are plenty of passengers (depending on the ratio of ‘would buy it any price’ types to the ‘buy if cheaper’)I've often thought this myself. The actual cost of ingredients for hot drinks must be trivial - maybe 10p to 20p per cup including the cup itself and other costs. So selling three cups at £1 generates similar profits to selling one cup at £2.50.
But, while the trolley is stopped in front of you, and you're getting out your wallet or card to pay anyway, most people will add a packet of biscuits or crisps, or a cake, to go with their drink.
Which sounds like the classic win/win - more sales and profits for the operator, and travellers happy because they've paid a sensible price for their tea or coffee. So is there a snag in this logic, or is it just that accountants seeing losses can't think beyond "we must put the price up"?
That's Switzerland in general, though. Espresso at Zurich Airport - CHF7. Plain margharita pizza in a nondescript pizzeria in Basel, some way away from the Hbf - CHF25. Small sausage from a stand in the centre of St Gallen - CHF6.50. Schnitzel at a restaurant by the harbour in Romanshorn - CHF36. I assumed it came with chips - no, they're CHF5 extra. Infact, my experiences in Switzerland were that food was usually cheaper at the train stations than at restaurants in the towns they served.If you think the U.K. is bad, I suggest you don’t try to buy anything at Geneva airport. McDonalds Meal deal £11, bottle of coke a fiver, etc.
My - admittedly quite limited - experience in Switzerland is that some of the cheapest and best value meals are to be found in department store restaurants in the larger towns and cities.That's Switzerland in general, though. Espresso at Zurich Airport - CHF7. Plain margharita pizza in a nondescript pizzeria in Basel, some way away from the Hbf - CHF25. Small sausage from a stand in the centre of St Gallen - CHF6.50. Schnitzel at a restaurant by the harbour in Romanshorn - CHF36. I assumed it came with chips - no, they're CHF5 extra. Infact, my experiences in Switzerland were that food was usually cheaper at the train stations than at restaurants in the towns they served.
Isn't a lot of the issue that many passengers (myself included) have now bought into the idea of a 'proper coffee' and are happy to pay several pounds for a genuine experience - often in a dedicated coffee shop down the road from the station.
Back in the 1980s I was 'happy' with an instant coffee at a low price.
I know that retirement gives me a completely different perspective on the urgency or speed of travel but I will quite happily break a journey at Nottingham (for example) for the full coffee experience over three quarters of an hour rather than grab a quick Pumpkin or whatever on the station.
Others might have a similar view about real ale/authentic pub near a station rather than a luke warm can of a mass produced brand from a trolley.
I think that the market for on-board refreshments has reduced a lot other than on the longest journeys. Other factors like split ticketing also encourage a 'take a break en route' approach.
Or sometimes a warm, mysteriously-filled "meat pie", served on a small plate in a little puddle of its own grease. Which, funnily enough, I would choose every time rather than the £1 per bite disappointments from concourse Pasty Shops........Although the exterior station scenes of Brief Encounter were filmed at Carnforth the fictitious Milford Junction was actually a suburban junction, probably in the Home Counties. Even in those days a small junction would have a buffet where you could consume stewed tea, rock-hard buns and drooping sandwiches while enduring long waits for connections.
What brand is said sweets stall?Because of this thread I'm going to take a moral stand against using anything SSP.
Uhh...can someone please tell me if the sweets stall at Liverpool Lime Street is SSP? Because my moral standards will last all of two minutes otherwise.
Costa isn't SSP, they are an interloper. Was Whitbread, now Coca Cola
Because of this thread I'm going to take a moral stand against using anything SSP.
Uhh...can someone please tell me if the sweets stall at Liverpool Lime Street is SSP? Because my moral standards will last all of two minutes otherwise.
Back in the 80s there where the same gripes about their prices too.Time for a return to Travellers Fare
SSP generally have a contact details plate affixed at the entrance/counter of all of their outlets regardless of brand - all of the Costas I've seen on the railway have the contact details for Whitbread Group, or did until recently anyway. They also generally give a staff discount to railway staff unlike the SSP outletsIIRC most Costas are franchised (which is how their owner makes the money). I don’t know if SSP have the franchises or not.
Fairly sure it is.