Actually, based on a customer viewpoint, Canada doesn't have the best damn meat in the world. Australia is the number one beef exporter in the world so it would seem that more global beef customers (e.g. Japan) view Australian beef as superior to Canadian beef.
Yes we will come out the other end but the other end will never be the same. This is not the same as the foot and mouth outbreak in the fifties where after a period of some years we started to get paid fairly for the cattle, even though the markets reopened after a few weeks. This time the Canada beef brand, I don't mean a hot iron brand, rather the "Alberta Beef" or "Canada Beef" brand perception of our product as safe and wholesome is damaged.
For instance, I was offered some elk sausage at a trade fair last fall. I tried it and it was very tasty, but no soon than I had swallowed I remembered that elk had been found with CWD. If I had remembered sooner I would have spit it out.
It will be a long time before our customers domestically and internationally forget that Canada had a mad cow. I am reminded of the Tylenol scare some years back where someone was removing the contents of theTylenol capsules and refilling the capsule with a powder, I believe cyanide. It took a huge marketing effort for Tylenol to resurrect its brand as safe. They basically redesigned their product, replacing capsules with caplets and putting safety seals on each bottle of pills. The entire over the counter pill industry was forever changed as customers insisted on safey seals on everything.
It will remain to be seen if the Canadian beef industry has equivalent marketing skills and expertise that can salvage the perception of Canadian beef as safe to eat. Rebuilding a brand image after it has been damaged globally is going to be very challenging. Honestly, I am not sure our industry has the people that can do it.
Yes we will come out the other end but the other end will never be the same. This is not the same as the foot and mouth outbreak in the fifties where after a period of some years we started to get paid fairly for the cattle, even though the markets reopened after a few weeks. This time the Canada beef brand, I don't mean a hot iron brand, rather the "Alberta Beef" or "Canada Beef" brand perception of our product as safe and wholesome is damaged.
For instance, I was offered some elk sausage at a trade fair last fall. I tried it and it was very tasty, but no soon than I had swallowed I remembered that elk had been found with CWD. If I had remembered sooner I would have spit it out.
It will be a long time before our customers domestically and internationally forget that Canada had a mad cow. I am reminded of the Tylenol scare some years back where someone was removing the contents of theTylenol capsules and refilling the capsule with a powder, I believe cyanide. It took a huge marketing effort for Tylenol to resurrect its brand as safe. They basically redesigned their product, replacing capsules with caplets and putting safety seals on each bottle of pills. The entire over the counter pill industry was forever changed as customers insisted on safey seals on everything.
It will remain to be seen if the Canadian beef industry has equivalent marketing skills and expertise that can salvage the perception of Canadian beef as safe to eat. Rebuilding a brand image after it has been damaged globally is going to be very challenging. Honestly, I am not sure our industry has the people that can do it.
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