Recognition by INC MAGAZINE

"Create authentic testimonials. Mikey Moran, founder and CEO of Thai food brand Curry Simple, uses his Flip to ask customers what they think of his products, which include sauces made in Thailand and sold in the United States in stores such as Whole Foods. "The Flip works great for testimonials because of its small size,'' he says. "The smaller video cameras seem to be less intimidating for customers. People tend to freeze up with larger cameras but not with the cute, hand-sized Flip." Moran has abandoned his two "prosumer" video cameras that cost $2,000 each. His Flip Mino HD was $200."

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Featured in Food Entreprenuer Series

A few months back I had the opportunity to be featured in an Entrepreneur Series on the blog of Sramana Mitra who is a writer for Forbes.ย 

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Atlanta Finest Dining

This was an article I was featured in about 1 year ago. It was actually one of my favorite articles because the writer did such an excellent job of capturing my personality. The photo was by my BFF Tom Park. Always a special thanks for the recognition to Atlanta's Finest Dining magazine.

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Chart of the Week: Facebook Fans Page Usage by Merchants | Practical eCommerce

Chart of the Week: Facebook Fans Page Usage by Merchants

This week’s “Chart of the Week” is a snapshot of the Facebook Fans page usage of five ecommerce merchants previously profiled by Practical eCommerce.

These five merchants, who were randomly selected, are: WineChateau.com, CuddleWorks, CurrySimple, BlairCandy.com, and Bicyclinghub.com. Each company has created a Facebook Fans page. However, the degree to which each page is utilized and its number of fans varies greatly.

There could be a variety of reasons for the difference in size of each page’s fan base. The length of time since the page was created would be one example. But it bears noting that the two pages with the largest number of fans—CurrySimple and BlairCandy.com—utilized some of the principles discussed in Monday’s eCommerce Know-How: Four Keys to Twitter, Facebook Success. The less popular pages did not adhere to the four keys. CurrySimple’s Facebook fans page promotes the company brand via pictures, questions for customers, and ongoing dialogue. In contrast, posts on CuddleWorks' Fans page are, in essence, advertisements, such as “Shop for Teddy Bears and Stuffed Animals.”

 

The CurrySimple Facebook page rocks!

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CurrySimple Founder Tastes Success with Specialty Sauces | Practical eCommerce

CurrySimple Founder Tastes Success with Specialty Sauces

Michael Moran was working in a Thai restaurant when he realized that customers frequently complained about the difficulty of preparing Thai food at home. This was in 2004, in Atlanta. He went to work developing the concept of ready-to-heat Thai sauces that became, by 2006, CurrySimple, a supplier of ready-to-heat Thai sauces. Fast forward to 2009 and CurrySimple offers 16 different Thai sauces on its ecommerce site, CurrySimple.com, and through a wholesale network of over 150 third-party retail stores.

Sales are roughly split between the online, retail orders and the wholesale shipments to companies such as Whole Foods Markets. "We ship about 400 orders a month from the website," says Moran, "But that varies, too, from month to month. Some months are much higher."

Moran was just 29 when he launched the business, and he brings much enthusiasm to his job. "I don't really worry about sales or revenue," he says. "I try to satisfy our customers and show enthusiasm for this business. Every day is a good day as far as I'm concerned."

Moran runs CurrySimple with two other employees. The sauces are made in Thailand to Moran's exact specifications and he then imports them to his headquarters in Atlanta, where he fulfills all retail and wholesale orders directly.

Practical eCommerce: Tell us about CurrySimple’s beginnings.

 

Michael Moran: “Customers came into the Thai restaurant I worked at and said something like, 'I really enjoy your cuisine. Cooking Thai food at home is so extremely difficult.' Their problem stemmed from getting the sauce taste-profiles right. I went to work developing CurrySimple.com’s inventory. My business partner, who comes from one of Bangkok's best-known restaurant families, helped, too. It took months, but we refined the process and were accepted by the Food and Drug Administration in December 2005. This acceptance is necessary to sell imported food products in the U.S."

 

PeC: Describe your core product offering.

Moran: “It’s restaurant-quality Thai sauces that are really simple to prepare.”

PeC: Did you have previous ecommerce experience?

Moran: “I had been interested in producing websites and ecommerce for the past 10 years, which was initially sparked during the dot com boom. At one point a friend and I thought we would run a web design business on our laptops while sitting on the beach in Hawaii. Then reality struck and the dot com boom went bust I went back to the drawing board (or really the keyboard) looking for my first real venture, which was years later. Since the launch of CurrySimple.com I have opened another online retail store, SnazzyGourmet.com, offering hundreds of gourmet food items. An online gift business is in the works and will be launched before the holidays.”

PeC: What shopping cart do you use?

Moran: “I chose ProStores because it was owned by eBay and I felt it would be a strong ecommerce platform. It was easy to launch my first online store. I really like that they are constantly updating the features of the cart as well as working with third party companies that integrate more powerful add-on tools. I recently integrated the services [of two third-party add-ons], Power Reviews Express, [for customer reviews] and imn’s Sales in a Click [an automated email marketing service].

“A recent ProStores update included more features including setting up multiple buyer groups and an affiliate program at a low price. The only caveats I have are sometimes I see features other carts have that ProStores does not offer yet, and I expect will be available in a future update. It’s hard being a techie and I don't like to wait, though.”

PeC: Can you describe your business operations?

Moran: “I try to outsource as much work as possible. My accountant handles finances and my distributor handles providing the product to retail stores. I have an assistant that helps with smaller tasks and picking and packing online orders. I personally focus mostly on marketing and product development. I also handle all aspects of the website including updating and design.”

PeC: How do you market your online retail store?

Moran: “Marketing is everything. I have especially embraced social media with Facebook, Twitter and even created a "social rewards" website using the Ning platform that awards customers for creating recipes and cooking videos for CurrySimple, at iLoveCurrySimple.com.

“I use Constant Contact for email marketing and I have worked hard to make CurrySimple.com keyword-rich for SEO purposes. I contact blogs and develop link partnerships. I post our latest news on our blog.

“I recently launched our first sweepstakes using WildFireApp.com's solution. I do product sampling at local farmers markets as well as in some of our retail locations, such as Whole Foods Markets. We sell and sample our product at large consumer food events as well. The most effective sources of marketing have been sampling the product at food events. Our [email] newsletter of over 10,000 opt-ins has been a great generator for sales.”

PeC: Tell us more about your email marketing.

Moran:
“The CurrySimple newsletter is a huge revenue generator. We do our best to get new subscribers online and at food events. We offer a free PDF cookbook that has really helped increase the signup rate. It costs us virtually nothing but gives the consumer a valuable resource to use CurrySimple products. In the newsletter we focus on new recipes, cooking videos and coupons but never really a hard sell, which helps keep the unsubscribe rate low. Also sending out a coupon to over 10,000 people can really generate some great sales!”

PeC:
Any advice on pay-per-click advertising?

Moran:
“Using PPC is a major part of CurrySimple.com’s online advertising. We currently use Google and Yahoo!, and there are some great opportunities with the new popularity of Bing by Microsoft. I gained experience running PPC campaigns while working at a mortgage company about 4 years ago. Due to the saturation, there was a very high cost per click (CPC) of around $1. Luckily keywords related to “Thai food” are a much less competitive field and most keywords have prominent exposure for less than 15 cents CPC. This was very attractive and was the first avenue of marketing for CurrySimple.”

PeC:
We've noticed you offer free shipping on orders over $100. How has this worked for you?

Moran:
"It's amazing. When we first started that promotion, we had more $100 orders in a single day than we had all year. So, yes, it's worked out well."

PeC: What advice do you have for other e-merchants?

Moran: “You only have so much time in a day. Embrace technologies that will save you time and money in the long run. Take good care of your customers. It is much easier to generate repeat business from your current customers and get referrals from them.”

 

It was excellent to be recognized by a source that I frequently use to research the latest in web technologies and services.

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Entrepreneur Magazine - A dream come true!

Entrepreneur Magazine

A Place to Call Your Own

Once you've learned the Ropes of selling on ebay, it may be time to open an ebay store or your very own prostores site. By Laura Tiffany | August 01, 2008

 

Michael Moran photo in Entrepreneur Magazine Michael Moran started selling his Thai food products on eBay and through a ProStores site simultaneously in 2006. But after two years, he decided to close his sales on eBay and focus on his ProStores website full time. "With ProStores, I can focus on directing customers to my own brand that I'm working so hard on developing and making successful," says Moran, 31, of his Atlanta-based company, CurrySimple (currysimple.com), which also sells products in specialty grocery stores like Whole Foods.

Moran designed his website himself, which took several long days of shooting product photos, writing content, creating the design, setting up a credit card system and establishing shipping rates. Moran credits ProStores' 24/7 support with helping him through any issues he encountered along the way.

Now Moran focuses on drawing more traffic and increasing conversion rates through Google CPC advertising, newsletters, SEO and PR, which all help CurrySimple bring in $150,000 to $200,000 each year from its retail site alone.

Every entrepreneur has had a subscription to Entrepreneur Magazine at one point or another. I would always read it looking for ideas and inspiration for my big idea. Never did I think I would have the opportunity of actually being in it. I had my BFF Tom take the photo which was really cool because it made him a part of the article.

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The Washington Post - My First Article

The New Entrepreneurs

The Washington Post
March 15, 2006
By Michaele Weissman

Mike Moran, 29, grew up in Bethesda in a house with his mother, grandmother, sister and few frills. Moran was energetic, entrepreneurial and not very interested in school. By the time he was 17, he was more or less managing a restaurant, he says.

During the next 10 years, Moran got to know the food business inside out, working as waiter and bartender in Washington and later in Atlanta, where he lives now. He kept dreaming up ideas for new businesses that somehow never jelled. While working at Surin, one of Atlanta's most successful Thai restaurants, he fell in love with the food and the people. He'd listen as customers complained that it was impossible to make Thai food, especially the curries, at home. Then he met Nimitr Harimtepathip, known as Lim, a Thai national living in Atlanta who is a member of one of Bangkok's best known restaurant families.

Together, the two created CurrySimple, a line that includes curry sauces and other products made in Thailand with fresh, authentic ingredients that are adapted to American tastes. Red, green, yellow and masaman curry sauces have gone into production in Thailand, as well as syrup for making Thai tea and sauce for pad Thai, the popular noodle dish. In December, the Food and Drug Administration approved the sale of the ready-to-heat products, which are sold in sealed packets.

Moran, who owns the American end of the business -- his business partner, Lim, owns the Thai operation -- is doing a slow launch and for now, CurrySimple products are available only on the Internet, where they have started to generate some buzz. "I told my cousins on Christmas Day that I was going to revolutionize Thai food in America," says Moran. "They thought their crazy cousin was sounding off again, until I cooked them up a batch."

I will have to admit... getting in The Washington Post was really cool...! The article focused mostly on local (DC Metro) entrepreneurs but since I lived in Bethesda until 21 and had a great story I was in. The day of the photo shoot at The Washington Post headquarters was so exciting. Growing up I could be seen in our little dining room reading the business & sports section of the Post while eating breakfast. It was a great way to launch CurrySimple..!

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