From the humble Crumble to Waffling on: How this Adelaide family business is giving new life to the Aussie favourites

A business model that uses nostalgia to drive sales through iconic Australian brands is proving a winning formula for South Australian chocolate confectionery company Robern Menz.
The maker of local favourites FruChocs and Crown Mints has become a national player in recent years since buying the Violet Crumble brand, recipe and production line from Nestle in 2017.
It is now gearing up to produce Violet Crumbleโs younger sister Polly Waffle after an 11-year absence.
The Adelaide-based manufacturer experienced a double-digit sales bump in March and April across its business as people hunkered down on couches with their favourite chocolate brands to escape the pandemic.
While that was a welcome sugar-hit for the business, its steady growth in recent years from 70 to 110 staff has been fuelled by the addition of the Violet Crumble chocolate honeycomb bar and led to the move to 24/7 production in recent months.
The purchase of Violet Crumble was a logical step for the family-owned business as it was already a major honeycomb producer for private labels and its own brand, which was renamed Bumbles in 2019.
Robern Menz CEO Phil Sims said the investment in Violet Crumble had already been recouped and had cemented the companyโs position as the biggest honeycomb producer in Australia.
He said expanding Violet Crumbleโs distribution into petrol stations and convenience stores and introducing new formats were the keys to its success.
โThe original bar that we bought is up at least 50 percent on the volume that we inherited from Nestle and weโve come out in other variants now such as cubes and nuggets as well,โ Sims said.
โViolet Crumble is a national brand and very much a part of our Australian culture and itโs had a really strong place during COVID because people trust brands and the comfort brought about by the memories of things theyโve grown up with and trusted.
โThereโs no question that those nostalgia brands weโve grown up with have done well during COVID and weโve seen that โ you think about that period when we were all stuck at home and there was a lot of chocolate bars and comfort food being eaten on couches.
โAt the start of COVID we moved to 24/7 production for the first time and weโre still 24/7.โ
The success of Violet Crumble has not come at the expense of the companyโs own honeycomb brand, which it ironically launched when Nestle stopped producing Violet Crumble cubes in a share bag format in the 2000s.
Bumbles Choc Honeycomb uses a different recipe to Violet Crumble and continues to be sold in major supermarket and variety stores nationally. It is also exported to a number of countries including the United States and Japan.
Sims said Robern Menz was able to use its contacts to begin exporting Violet Crumble to the United States and had been working with AusTrade for the past nine months on developing other export markets, which it expects to announce soon.
He said there were also opportunities in several other countries where Violet Crumble was sold through the โgrey marketโ by distributors who sourced the product from Australian wholesalers but the US was the main target.
โItโs a market that loves its candy, it is a fairly unique proposition over there, itโs competitive from a price point of view, itโs US compliant and has a long shelf life.
โThe opportunity is there โ youโve only got to jag a Walmart or a Target in the United States and it just takes it to a completely different level.โ
Robern Menz is also now shipping its Violet Crumble bars directly to the Philippines.
โWe heard it was the former Philippines presidentโs favourite chocolate bar,โ Sims said.
โSo we headed up there and met with the major importers and retailers and we realised that Violet Crumble was a thing, people knew about it, people wanted it and theyโd been buying it even though we had no idea how it got there.โ
The Violet Crumble was invented in Melbourne in 1913 by jam-maker turned chocolatier Abel Hoadley.
Hoadleyโs Chocolates, which was bought by Rowntree in 1972 and then Nestle in 1988, also introduced the Polly Waffle bar in 1947. The Polly Waffle was a combination of chocolate, wafer and marshmallow and like the Violet Crumble developed somewhat of a cult following in Australia.
Robern Menz bought the rights to the Polly Waffle in January 2019, a decade after Nestle stopped making the bars.
โWhen we bought Violet Crumble, brought in the equipment and starting manufacturing, right through that first 12 months we got a lot of commentary saying โitโs great that you bought Violet Crumble and brought it back into Australian hands but what about the Polly Waffle?โ,โ Sims said.
โThe two brands seemed to be intrinsically linked โ it was quite bizarre โ but it became such a thing so we started a conversation with Nestle about buying the brand.โ
The company is working to bring it back and received a $1 million Australian government grant in April from the Modernising Manufacturing Fund to help fund the $5.2 million project.
But unlike the Violet Crumble sale when the production line was shipped from Nestleโs Melbourne Kit-Kat factory to Adelaide and immediately installed to keep orders filled, the ageing Polly Waffle line was junked long ago.
Sims said most of the parts for the new Polly Waffle line would be sourced from Australia but some specialised components would need to be designed and made overseas, slowing the process because of COVID-19 travel restrictions.
He said the Polly Waffle would now not be back on shelves until late 2021 or early 2022.
โWe bought the brand, got the recipe and got the process know-how as part of the purchase but there was no production line so weโve gone about designing our own production line, which will be highly automated and fairly bespoke with respect to producing the Polly Waffle.
โWe have spent 18 months designing this production line that is about 120-metres long with 60 to 70 pieces of equipment that all have to work together.
โOur goal is to replicate the product exactly because there is an army of very passionate people out there who want to see it back and thereโs an expectation that it will match what it used to be.
โThatโs a challenge in itself because itโs been over 10 years since anyone has even eaten one.โ
The Polly Waffle grant came with a promise to employ an additional 38 staff, which will take the Robern Menz workforce to more than 140.
Sims said purchase orders for sections of the production line would be placed in the coming months but travel restrictions were causing the greatest delays.
โThe reality is we probably wonโt be heading overseas until next year so that holds up part of it,โ he said.
โSome of these pieces of equipment will take nine months to make โ itโs not stuff off the shelf, itโs designed specifically for us.
โPeople are probably a bit frustrated and are starting to say โwhere is itโ but the product hasnโt been in the marketplace for 10 years and weโve got to get it right.
โSo itโs about making sure we meet those expectations and if that takes a bit longer to achieve then so be it.โ
The Robern Menz story dates back to 1850 when Prussian immigrants Johan and Magdelena Menz began a baking business in Wakefield Street in Adelaide.
They developed the Yo-Yo and Bush Biscuit, which later achieved national distribution through Arnottโs, and started producing confectionery including Crown Mints in 1892.
The Menz family produced its first FruChoc โ a chocolate covered fruit ball โ in 1948.
The company was sold to major biscuit manufacturer Arnottโs in the 1960s , then the confectionery part of Menz sold to Robern in 1992 when the Campbell Soup Company bought the Arnottโs biscuit business.
Sims and his brother Richard are the fourth generation of the Robern business started by their great-grandfather, Walter Sims.
Walter opened his first of four Serv-Wel stores in the Unley/Wayville area of Adelaide in 1908. The difficulty of accessing quality dried fruit prompted Walter to start a dried fruit business of his own in 1926.
He named the business Robern in honour of a family friend, Robert Burnley, who had died aged 14.
Walterโs son Edgar left retail to build up the fruit business from the late 1930s.
โWe did dehydrated vegetables for the Allied Forces in World War II as our part of the war effort and he really grew that business to six or seven factories and Angas Park (in the Barossa Valley) was the best-known one,โ Sims said.
โMy father (Grantley) started working in the business in the 1960s, but when Britain joined the EU in 1973 we lost so much business when Australiaโs preferential duty rate was lost overnight.
โWe had a fair exposure to canned fruit back then and the demand dried up pretty quickly and we went into some major contractions.โ
Grantley set up a glazed fruit business and began making fruit-based confectionary such as Apricot Delight in the late 1970s before acquiring some chocolate-making equipment.
Robernโs first brush with Violet Crumble came in 1985 when Grantley bought the honeycomb line out of the Rowntree Hoadley factory in Adelaide, when the company decided to consolidate all production in Melbourne.
โWe bought most of the Violet Crumble line and we started producing honeycomb and we started supplying the bulk market and private labels,โ Sims said.
โThrough the โ90s and 2000s Violet Crumble started becoming less of a priority for Nestle and they just focused on the bars. After theyโd exited from the cube product in bags in the 2000s we launched our own product in that format.
โWe got into the honeycomb manufacturing through buying their equipment and then when the Violet Crumble opportunity came up from Nestle they approached us.โ
Sims has been CEO since 2001 and joined the family business in 1992 when Robern bought Menz. Richard, the companyโs chief operating officer, came on board a couple of years later.
Robern Menz moved from Stepney to its current 2-hectare location on Glynburn Road, Glynde โ the former Gibbs Pies factory โ in 1995.
The 1990s and 2000s were a period of organic growth for the company, building sales of its much-loved FruChocs and Crown Mints brand.
While the Violet Crumble 50-gram bar has become the companyโs biggest-selling item, FruChocs are still its biggest money spinner within South Australia.
โWhen you look back at milestones in the business, the purchase of Menz from Arnottโs was really important because it gave us the iconic FruChocs and Crown Mint brands in South Australia that weโve continued to invest in and develop over the past 25 years,โ Sims said.
โI think Violet Crumble will be the same. Itโs only three years down the track but our pay-back is there already and thereโs a lot more growth and opportunity for the brand in Australia and overseas.โ
Despite some previous attempts, Robern Menz have not been able to find success for FruChocs beyond South Australiaโs borders.
Sims said there would be a new opportunity for the chocolate fruit balls nationally because of the distribution channels opened up by Violet Crumble.
โOur focus has really been on Violet Crumble and now the buyers want to talk about Polly Waffle so maybe it happens after Polly Waffle,โ he said.
โFruChocs and Crown Mints are iconic but just in South Australia so the opportunity now for the business is to take that same strategy Australia wide with the iconic national brands of Violet Crumble and Polly Waffle.
โWe know with Polly Waffle there is enormous interest from all of our major accounts and itโs an iconic brand, thereโs strong consumer interest and we have to model what those expectations are and we are starting to have those conversations now.
โWill it be as big as Violet Crumble? I think in Australia it can be โ but Polly Waffle was never exported as far as we know, so it will have a fair bit of catching up to do internationally.โ
This article was first published by The Lead.
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