Revision as of 04:16, 5 September 2011 editPhuzion (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers22,712 editsm clean up using AWB← Previous edit | Revision as of 02:52, 6 September 2011 edit undo112.198.79.1 (talk)No edit summaryNext edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{refimprove|date=January 2010}} | {{refimprove|date=January 2010}} | ||
{{Infobox company | {{Infobox company | ||
| company_name = Mister |
| company_name = Mister co | ||
| company_logo = | | company_logo = | ||
| company_type = ] | | company_type = ] |
Revision as of 02:52, 6 September 2011
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Mister Donut" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Company type | Wholly owned subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Food and Beverage |
Founded | 1956 |
Founder | Harry Winokur |
Headquarters | U.S. |
Area served | U.S., Canada, Middle East, Taiwan, South Korea, China, Philippines, Thailand and El Salvador |
Products | Doughnuts • Coffee • Bagels |
Parent | Independent (1956-1970) International Multifoods Corporation (1970-1990) Allied Lyons (1990-present) |
Website | mister-donut.com |
Mister Donut is a fast food franchise founded in the United States in 1956. The primary offerings include donuts, coffee, muffins and pastries. After being acquired by Allied Lyons in 1990, most North American locations became Dunkin' Donuts. Today its main market is in Japan, where it has more than 1,300 locations. It also maintains a presence in Taiwan, South Korea, China, Philippines, Thailand and El Salvador.
Corporate history
North America
Harry Winokur worked with William Rosenberg in Dunkin' Donuts. After Winokur broke his partnership with Rosenberg, he went on to create Mister Donut in 1956 and had locations across most of North America.
The Mister Donut business became so popular that Mr. Winouker decided to go into franchising. As a result, Mister Donut began a rapid expansion that resulted in the opening of 275 stores in the United States and Canada.
In 1970, Minneapolis-based International Multifoods Corporation, one of the world’s largest and most successful food companies, acquired Mister Donut and its franchising concept from Mr. Winouker. This served to elevate Mister Donut to even greater heights.
It was the largest competitor to Dunkin' Donuts, which was founded in 1950, before being acquired by Dunkin' Donuts' then-parent company, Allied-Lyons, in February 1990.
After the acquisition of Mister Donut by Allied-Lyons, all Mister Donut locations within North America were offered the chance to change their name to Dunkin' Donuts. Now only a scattered few locations still hold the name Mister Donut.
Japan and Asia
In 1983, Duskin Co., Ltd. of Osaka, Japan acquired the rights to franchise Mister Donut throughout Japan and Asia. Mister Donut is the largest donut chain operating in Japan.
Marketing presence
Mister Donut has a distinctive orange and white logo in the likeness of a moustachioed chef. More recently, the chain developed a set of mascot characters based on its donuts. One character in particular, "Pon de Lion" (a lion with a mane shaped like its "pon de ring" donut line) has become equally recognizable (if not more so) to customers in Japan.
One popular Mister Donut advertising jingle featured a song sung by two people in various settings:
- Hey, Mister, that's a doughnut!
- Hey, Mister, that's a Mister Donut doughnut!
Global locations
Asian market
Today, the Mister Donut brand survives in Japan, Thailand, China, and the Philippines, and the company is expanding into other areas of Asia such as Taiwan, and South Korea. In Taiwan, the chain is owned by a joint venture between Duskin and the Uni-President Enterprises Corporation, which also operates 7-11 and Starbucks stores in Taiwan.
Japan
In Japan, Mister Donut is owned by Duskin Co., Ltd. Mister Donut is the largest Donut franchise chain in Japan. Many Mister Donut stores in Japan house Yamucha sub-stores that serve a small variety of dim sum. These sub-stores are usually advertised with the phrase "San Francisco Chinatown," reinforcing the chain's American image even while selling Chinese food.
Philippines
In the Philippines, Mister Donut is the second largest donut chain. Its toughest competitor is Dunkin Donuts. While most donut outlets in the country are located in storefronts, on the streets or in malls, Mister Donut outlets are mostly stands, sometimes located in high-end shopping malls in Manila. Donuts from Mister Donut are also sold in 7-Eleven stores and KFC restaruants.
Thailand
In Thailand, Mister Donut has been a leader in the Thai donut market for more than 33 years(since 1978). It is known for its concept "Donut for Fun". Mister Donut currently has more than 250 branches across Thailand with more opening every year. They include stand-alone stores as well as branches at shopping malls and supermarkets.
Central America
El Salvador
There are also numerous Mister Donut locations throughout El Salvador in Central America. Mister Donut locations also offer various typical dishes such as El Salvador's traditional pupusas.
North America
Canada
Mister Donut operations downsized in the late 1990s with its stores located mostly in Toronto, Ontario. Of the five stores, only three survive today with the name.
United States
There were many stores in the Pennsylvania and Ohio region that did not convert to Dunkin' Donuts, mostly due to being too close to existing Dunkin' Donuts locations at the time. Nine Mister Donut owners formed a cooperative to continue to receive bulk pricing on materials. These stores are now known as Donut Connection and serve the same menu and recipes as Mister Donut once did. There are hundreds of Donut Connection franchises in the eastern United States. A handful of businesses retained the Mister Donut name. Between 8-10 locations remain listed under this name on various business directories online. Several are completely out of business, and others now have Dunkin' Donuts at the former Mister Donut locations. Only one location can be verified to remain in business under the Mister Donut name. It is located in Godfrey, Illinois.
References
- "Mr. Donut History". misterdonut.jp. Retrieved 21 March 2011.
- "J. Lyons & Co". Retrieved 21 March 2011.
- "Donut Connection Store Locations". Retrieved June 23, 2008.
External links
- Official Mister Donut website
- Official Mister Donut Japan website Template:Ja icon
- Official Mister Donut Korea website Template:Ko icon
- Official Mister Donut Taiwan website Template:Zh icon
- Official Mister Donut China website Template:Zh icon
- Official Mister Donut Philippines website Template:En icon
- Official Mister Donut Thailand website Template:Th icon
- Official Mister Donut El Salvador website Template:Es icon
- Brief history of Dunkin' Donuts and Mister Donut Template:En icon
- A Tale of 2 Donuts Template:En icon