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Steeped in service, poised for growth

Tea, both iced and hot, is key to growth for DAMRON Corp., which started as McDonald’s first National Diversity Supplier and continues expanding.

Tens of thousands of tea bags are produced annually on three vintage semi-automatic bagging machines like this one.
Tens of thousands of tea bags are produced annually on three vintage semi-automatic bagging machines like this one.

About three decades ago, a gentleman named Ronald Damper left a 15-year career as a vice president with Citicorp when the growth of the fast food sector caught his imagination. After considering becoming a franchisee, he instead found a unique opportunity to become a supplier for McDonald’s. In 1985, he became Founder, President, and CEO of DAMRON Corp., the first system-wide supplier of McDonald’s-branded tea, as well as that organization’s first National Diversity Supplier.

Initially, the company solved a problem for McDonald’s by replacing nonstandard offerings with consistent McDonald’s blends of hot and iced tea system-wide, Damper says, “so if you go into McDonald’s and order a sweet tea, you know it’s the same taste and quality everywhere you go. We saw an opportunity that was ahead of the curve, and have continued to grow ever since,”.

His vision was prescient; the U.S. wholesale market value for all tea grew from $1.84 billion in 1990 to $11.5 billion in 2015, according to the Tea Association of the USA. Last December, Packaged Facts pegged annual retail sales in the foodservice sector alone at $20 billion with a five-year high annual growth of 4.3%.

Today, DAMRON is capitalizing on this trend, and is also diversified as a manufacturer, contract service provider, and marketer serving tea and much more at locations from McDonald’s to Walmart to specialty stores and, of course, online.

Steady growth
The early purchase of a tea business in Boston and 16,000 square feet of manufacturing space at a Chicago-based industry incubator got the company started, allowing it to supply McDonald’s restaurants from the Midwest to the West Coast.

The company produces teas, from mainstream to premium herbal and health-and-wellness blends, for private-label and co-pack customers. DAMRON also markets its own brands of tea and accessories under names including Amar Pyramid Tea with Nutrition, Harvest Delight, Healing Teas of the World, and Kimberly’s. DAMRON’s experience with co-packaging tea and tea-related items led the company a few years ago to further expand its co-packing operations, providing services that range from gift packs to club-store multipacks for products in a variety of categories.

DAMRON employs approximately 50 people, with additional temporary help as needed. Operations are spread between a 50,000-sq-ft headquarters facility in Chicago and its co-packaging business, DAMRON Packaging and Logistics Groups (DPLG), with a 32,000-sq-ft plant in Bensenville, IL. The company is also expanding operations with access to five additional U.S. locations through a partnership with co-packer and supply chain service provider Coregistics.

“We recognize that growing in this space requires building strong relationships and engaging in collaborative efforts—key areas that we sought to develop early,” says Tony Cort, Senior Vice President for DAMRON Packaging and Logistics Group. This strategic relationship grew from a meeting Damper and Cort had with Coregistics’ CEO Eric Wilhelm at the 2016 Annual Meeting of the Contract Packaging Association earlier this year. “We forged this relationship and subsequent partnership because we want to provide supply chain support from design and manufacturing through warehousing, logistics, and supply chain management for our customers,” says Cort. “We know what we’re good at, but we know we can be better together. We see how we can make a difference in this business, and create new and innovative opportunities for our customers through advanced solutions.”

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