Veteran Darrell Lea licorice maker Gary Butcher admits that after 25 years of making the treat he doesn't like licorice as much as he used to.Credit:Tamara Dean
''I wear a maintenance shirt because things are broken,''he said of Darrell Lea.''Every facet[of operations] was disconnected,marketing from sales,sales from finance,etc.''
The company will likely eliminate 600 lesser-known products to concentrate on expanding sales and distribution of 200 better known and profitable products,including its Batch 37 Soft Eating Liquorice and Rocklea Road.
Mr Quinn said he'd likely eliminate products that''you and I had never heard of''to grow local and export markets of iconic products.''It was the lesser known products that were dragging the business down,''he said,but added there wasn't one that didn't taste fantastic.''It was very hard choosing what products to keep. But when we looked at it closer,it was obvious.''
When we interviewed Mr Quinn,he'd been working,eating and smelling confectionery before retiring to sleep in a 50s-style bachelor pad on the roof of the old plant. It's where the company's original founder,Darrell Lea,once lived. Looking at a batch of liquorice being made in a newer part of the plant,he rattled off statistics. The high-tech extruder pumps 1300 kilos an hour,six days a week and 24 hours a day,making Darrell Lea the No. 1 producer of liquorice in Australia.