Calise & Sons stands out amid competition
“There are a lot of bakeries out there just like us, and
we’re all making similar products,” Bob Calise, Calise
& Sons Bakery Inc.’s vice president, says. “Our
goal is to differentiate ourselves from everyone else.”
Easier said than done. The Northeast and New England regions are
flooded with intermediate sized bakeries that produce specialty
breads and rolls. This situation begs the question, “How is
one bakery different from its rival?”
The easy answer: quality, consistency and service—all areas
that Mike Calise, Calise & Sons Bakery’s president, says
the company excels at. The hard to find answer, though, is hidden
in the walls of the Lincoln, R.I.-based bakery and out on its
distribution routes. Simply put, Calise & Sons Bakery is
flexible, smart and innovative enough to stay ahead of rival
bakeries with similar product lines.
The grandfather of the current owners, Bob and Mike Calise, founded
Calise & Sons Bakery in 1908. The bakery started as a retail
operation, making door-to-door sales of Italian bakery foods. In
the early 1970s, the current ownership took over and changed the
strategy of the bakery, focusing on wholesale distribution to
restaurants. This business boomed, and the company went through a
series of expansions and moves that brought the company to its
Lincoln location, and a 67,000-sq.-ft. plant that houses four
production lines for the manufacturing of specialty rolls and
breads.
The company’s history, like its products, is rather common
for the Northeast and New England markets. However, the
company’s operations are atypical, relying on a combination
of flexibility and redundancy—two attributes that rarely go
together. Calise & Sons Bakery possesses these attributes, and
uses them to excel in four distinct areas: business diversity,
manufacturing, innovation and distribution. These areas
differentiate Calise & Sons Bakery in a crowded
marketplace.
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| Calise & Sons Bakery bought a new horizontal mixer to
accommodate increased business. |
Business diversity
Calise & Sons
Bakery’s sales are mixed between many large accounts in
multiple channels. Although this sometimes creates complexities on
the distribution dock, this diversity allows the company to succeed
despite twists and turns in the industry and with the
bakery’s clients. For example, the company recently lost a
significant piece of business due to a client’s consolidation
of vendors. “We were doing about
$2.5 million in sales with the company,” Bob Calise says,
“and our sales went down for the three weeks after we lost
that business.”
However, Calise & Sons Bakery’s diversified client list
allowed the company to rebound almost immediately, and after the
initial three weeks, the company never recorded another sales loss
due to the lost client. The company’s quick rebound is
attributed to its diverse customer base, which allows the company
to become a category leader in multiple channels.
The company’s client portfolio is divided between direct
store delivery (DSD) accounts, private label, partnerships with
wholesale bakeries and distributor-based deliveries of frozen and
par-baked products. The company’s unique relationship with
two of the largest wholesale bakeries in the country has boosted
the company’s sales and reach. Each of these relationships
offers ample benefits to Calise & Sons Bakery and its partners.
These two partnerships, combined with the company’s 35 DSD
routes and a growing frozen and parbaked business, provide ample
breathing room when certain segments of the market stagnate or fall
off completely.
Manufacturing flexibility
Although Calise & Sons Bakery’s diversified client
portfolio allows the company to weather stormy conditions, the
company’s varied client roster has the potential to create
manufacturing, packaging and storage challenges. The bakery
overcomes these challenges through a manufacturing facility that
stresses flexibility and redundancy.
![]() |
| Calise & Sons Bakery produces stamped and sheeted
rolls. |
Ed Fraschetti of The Perfect Score Co. served as project manager
when Calise & Sons Bakery moved into the new facility.
“The goal was to be very flexible,” Mike Calise says.
“If we need to change over, or if we have a breakdown, we can
switch our production lines’ flows through conveyor
transfers.”
The company’s 67,000-sq.-ft. facility contains four
production lines: three roll lines and one bread line. The company
stores its white flour in two KB Systems 120,000-lb. flour silos,
and buys bagged wheat and whole wheat flour for the company’s
growing whole wheat business.
The company’s roll line No. 1 is a picture of flexibility
and redundancy. The line was installed in 2000 and its makeup
section contains machinery to make both stamped and sheeted rolls,
and panned and hearth products. More importantly, the line handles
these tasks with minimal changeover times.
A Peerless horizontal mixer feeds dough to the Adamatic roll line,
where an 8-pocket divider forms dough balls, which traverse through
an intermediate proofer before stamping or sheeting. After makeup,
products are either panned or automatically placed on peel boards.
The company changes its makeup and panning on the fly, between
production runs.
After final proofing, products on roll line No. 1 are scored by
either a water splitter for diagonal cuts, or a Perfect Score
scorer for straight cuts. The line’s tunnel oven is 13 ft.
wide by 100 ft. long and contains a combination loader that
automatically loads panned and hearth rolls. Exiting the oven,
products pass through a multi-tiered conveyor system that includes
a depanner for panned rolls and a bypass conveyor for hearth
rolls.
Line No. 2 is similar to line No. 1, except line No. 2 only
produces sheeted rolls. After makeup, the line feeds either line
No. 1’s proofer and oven, or manual roll-in proof boxes. The
company has the ability to run both lines simultaneously or
independently.
![]() |
| Calise & Sons Bakery distributes its branded products
on 35 DSD routes. |
Line No. 3 was installed this year, and is an exact duplicate of
line No. 1. The line accommodates both sheeted and stamped rolls,
but only features a makeup line. After products are formed, they
are manually transferred to a roll-in proof box, and then baked in
a 13 ft. wide by 80 ft. long tunnel oven. Calise & Sons Bakery
also operates a small specialty bread line that contains a makeup
line and a 40-ft. triple deck oven.
The company packages its products on two UBE packaging lines and a
Formost packaging line. The company installed its second UBE line
this year to accommodate a sales increase of sliced products. A
specially designed conveyor system provides a flexible packaging
solution for the company’s varied production. The conveyor
allows the packaging operator to dictate which lines feed which
packaging line or the blast freezer.
From makeup to packaging, Calise & Sons Bakery has constructed
a plant that changes products, speeds and flow at the push of a
button. This flexibility allows the company to participate in
multiple channels with a broad product roster.
Besides manufacturing flexibility, Calise & Sons Bakery also
places an intense focus on sanitation. “We pride ourselves on
having one of the cleanest facilities of any bakery in the United
States,” Mike Calise says. “If you want to be in the
food business, you have to start with a clean
facility.”
For the last three years, Calise & Sons Bakery has been rated
Superior in biannual American Institute of Baking inspections. The
company’s sanitation program calls for around the clock
sanitation, with heavy-duty cleaning reserved for Tuesdays and
Saturdays, which are off days for the bakery.
Innovation
Calise & Sons Bakery is modest about its ability to create and
launch new products. The company fully recognizes that it cannot
compete with big bakeries in terms of massive launches backed with
massive marketing programs, but the company can compete on a
smaller scale with competing regional bakeries.
For example, the company records strong numbers on a line of whole
wheat Kaiser and sub rolls. “Nobody else was putting these
types of products on the market from a bakery our size in our
region,” Bob Calise says. The company launched a whole wheat
Kaiser roll five years ago, and although initial sales were soft,
changing bread trends have turned the product, and subsequent whole
wheat line extensions, into big business for the bakery.
Although whole wheat products are turning in great sales numbers,
the company’s main seller is a Kaiser roll it calls a Bulkie
Roll under the Calise & Sons brand name. In recent years, the
company has focused on building its brand name in the New England
and Northeast markets. The company also participates in the
par-baked channel, but does so cautiously. “A lot of the
par-baked business is cheap business, and unless you have volume,
it’s tough to make a profit,” Bob Calise says.
“Our focus is on specialty products that have decent volumes
and profitable price points.”
Distribution
Calise & Sons Bakery’s final area of distinction surfaces
in the distribution of products through its 35 DSD routes. Similar
to most bakeries its size, the company delivers products five days
a week, with off days on Wednesday and Sunday. Two years ago, some
of the company’s senior executives visited stores on the off
days for several weeks and were less than satisfied with the level
of stock at the delis and in bread aisles. After this exercise, the
company enacted an off day pull-out program. Although not unique in
the baking industry, Bob Calise says that they are the only
regional bakery of comparable size that services stores seven days
a week.
On Wednesday and Sunday, the company’s route supervisors
visit each store on its 35 distribution routes and put up back
stock to assure the Calise & Sons brand is always in business.
The large wholesale bakery distributor that carries the Calise
& Sons brand also uses this pull-out strategy on off days. The
company attributes significant sales increases to this strategy,
and credits the plan for making the Calise & Sons brand a major
player in Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Connecticut and other
markets in the Northeast.
This practice, as well as the company’s diverse portfolio,
manufacturing flexibility and innovation, distinguish Calise &
Sons Bakery from a sea of competition in the Northeast and New
England markets. The company says it will continue to focus on
these four core areas while building its sales through branded
opportunities. To accommodate planned future growth, the company
already has started thinking about expanding its facility. Coming
up on the company’s centennial anniversary, Calise & Sons
Bakery has exhibited a knack for standing out in almost every
aspect of its operations.
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© 2008 Penton Media Inc.
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