
Ole & Steen posts stronger profits after efforts to ‘win back more customers'
Bakery and coffee chain Ole & Steen has revealed stronger profits for the past year after focusing on winning back customers.
Bosses at the Danish-owned chain said it had focused on 'value for quality' to boost sales over the past year after pausing recent expansion efforts.
Graham Hollinshead, UK managing director of the business, told the PA news agency that the company hoped to return to opening new sites and expanding into new markets in the coming years but said investment plans were focused on its current stores, customers and operations.
Ole & Steen reported that underlying profits grew by 25% to £4.89 million for 2024, supported by efficiency measures and a strong second half.
Meanwhile, turnover grew by 5% to £36.7 million for the year, compared with a year earlier.
The chain said it was particularly buoyed by an 'outstanding' performance over the final quarter, with like-for-like sales growth at 17%.
It added that this 'positive momentum' continued into 2025 despite pressure on consumer finances.
Mr Hollinshead said the company's main strategy was working to 'win back more customers' by focusing on the core offer its customers expected.
'I see it as focusing on value for quality rather than just value for money,' he said.
'I think some do view us as perhaps a more premium brand than some competitors, but as others have lifted their prices towards us I think it has put us in a good position because customers recognise the quality.'
Last year, parent group Lagkagehuset said it would focus on organic growth in its international businesses, including the UK, rather than expanding with more sites.
Mr Hollinshead said the business had become stronger over the past year as a result but that it still had growth ambitions in the longer term.
Nevertheless, he stressed that the current operating environment had 'never been tougher', amid intense competition and soaring costs.
The chain is among high street firms to have been impacted by increases in national insurance contributions and the rise in the national minimum wage.
The update came as the hospitality business launched an updated summer menu in collaboration with Danish chef and cookbook author Trine Hahnemann.
Ole & Steen will celebrate Midsummer by launching the new open rye sandwich range with the chef.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
University of Leicester hotel and conference centre to be sold
A hotel and conference centre in Leicester has gone up for sale after a university announced it would be closing the University of Leicester announced in April it would be shutting College Court in Knighton, saying it had "reviewed all options carefully" regarding the future of the concluded the former halls of residence were "no longer viable" to keep open in the "current financial climate."No information was given at the time over what the future of the site would be, with the university ceasing to take customer bookings for it in mid-April, the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) said. Estate agents Savills is in charge of the sale of the Grade II listed conference centre and to the LDRS, the complex consists of five detached buildings, which contain a total of 123 en-suite bedrooms, as well as a conference centre and a reception building.


BBC News
30 minutes ago
- BBC News
What happens now after Guernsey's general election?
The votes have been counted, the posters are coming down and we now know the 38 next members of Guernsey's new government. So what comes next? New deputies will first elect the presidents and members of States committees, deciding who is responsible for what in a series of secret bidding to lead committees will make their pitch for the job in the States chamber and respond to questions from will then write their preferred choice on a piece of paper, which will be collected and counted by parliamentary officials. What are Guernsey's committees and what do they do? Guernsey's system of government is made up of one senior committee, principal committees and several other committee boards, authorities and committees include the new Committee for Housing, which the current States voted to introduce for the next political term. It takes over the responsibility for housing which is currently divided between three different other committees include:Policy & Resources (P&R), which is responsible for public finances and co-ordinating policy across the StatesEconomic Development, which promotes business, handles regulation and air and sea linksEducation, Sport & Culture, which looks after schools, heritage and museums, arts, and sporting and civic eventsEmployment & Social Security, which administers benefits such as pensions and income supportEnvironment & Infrastructure, which manages waste policy, roads, coastal defences, renewable energy, agriculture and public transportHealth & Social Care, which delivers medical services from emergencies to welfare and support for children and adultsHome Affairs, which oversees the courts and crime, immigration and population, and emergency planningOther boards include the States Assembly and Constitution Committee, Overseas Aids & Development, Scrutiny Management, Transport Licensing and the States Trading Supervisory Board (STSB), which oversees the ports and public companies such as the dairy and the States' next meeting on 15 July, members will debate the accounts for 2024, which have not been fully published the outgoing president of P&R has announced the States spent £44m more than it brought in last year. When will the committees be chosen? On 1 July the president of P&R, the most senior committee in the States will be chosen, after members are sworn in as deputies at the same next day the four other members of P&R will be elected, with anyone able to stand from the floor of the Friday 4 July elections will take place for the presidents of each of the principal committees, alongside bodies such as the Development and Planning the weekend, the 38 deputies and two Alderney Representatives, who make up the States of Deliberation, will return to elect who sits on each of those committees. What happens to outgoing deputies? The 2025 election is the first one where deputies will receive one month's basic salary if they fail to be re-elected following a review of States members pay in eight deputies who have decided to stand down from their posts will not receive the who have not been re-elected will continue their duties until 1 July when the new deputies are sworn into office.


BBC News
31 minutes ago
- BBC News
Yorkshire Water outlines plans to reduce leakage
Yorkshire Water has outlined plans for reducing supply leaks following the recent declaration of a drought in the it continued to call on customers to reduce their usage, the firm said it was investing £16m this year to help cut the number of leaks and had recruited 100 leakage October, the Environment Agency (EA) reported that 21% of Yorkshire Water's supplies were lost due to leakage, higher than the national average of 19%.Dave Kaye, from Yorkshire Water, said: "We are carefully managing supplies, as well as finding and fixing leaks quickly, prioritising those losing the most water first." Mr Kaye, the company's director of water, also said Yorkshire Water was making a "significant investment to tackle leakage across the county"."We've already delivered a 15% reduction in leakage over the last five years, and we'll be investing a further £16m this year to further drive down leakage as part of a £38m package over the next five years," he explained."We've also recruited 100 more leakage inspectors who are on the clock 24/7 to find and fix leaks and bursts." The EA has previously called on water companies to halve the amount of water leaking from their pipes by faced a 5bn-litre public water shortage by 2055 "without urgent action", the EA 2023-24, Yorkshire Water lost 47.9ml of water per day per person through leakage, higher than the national average of 45.8ml per day per Kaye said the firm had begun plans to replace more than 620 miles (1,000km) of water mains in areas of York, Sheffield, Barnsley, Doncaster and North Yorkshire which were particularly prone to supply disruptions and the EA declared a drought in Yorkshire on 12 June following weeks of dry weather which had led to low reservoir levels, the firm called on customers to save Water said reservoir stocks had dropped 0.51% over the last week to 62.3%.The firm thanked customers for their efforts to use water wisely and asked them to continue protecting Kaye said: "Saving water is a community effort and customers can help out by making small changes to how they use water."He said those changes could include "using watering cans instead of hosepipes to water flowers and plants, letting lawns go brown as they'll bounce back following any rain, and using the eco setting on washing machines and dishwashers".All of those methods would "help protect resources further into the summer", Mr Kaye said. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.