Dick Smith Foods
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Australian English Dick Smith Foods was a food brand created by Australian entrepreneur Dick Smith to provide Australian owned and produced alternatives to products from foreign-owned food companies.<ref name="HS1">Template:Citation</ref> Generally, the brand focused on producing local alternatives to products with large market shares like Kraft peanut butter and Vegemite. However, Dick Smith Foods did not manufacture its own food products; instead, it sourced products from other Australian-owned companies, which licensed the Dick Smith Foods brand label. Dick Smith Foods also donated a portion of its profits to charitable causes.<ref>Template:Cite news, a $1 million donation</ref>
On 26 July 2018, Dick Smith announced that the business would close in 2019, blaming competition from German supermarket Aldi.<ref name="SMH-NoM"/>
History
Dick Smith Foods was formed in 1999 largely in response to the high market share of international companies such as Kraft, and the increasingly frequent take-over of previously Australian-owned companies including Arnott's and Pauls. In particular, Smith was concerned that many companies which were no longer Australian owned still marketed their products as "Australian": the iconic Australian breakfast spread Vegemite, for example, was owned by Kraft Foods.<ref name="ABC">Lewis, Peter: Dick Smith's tasty new adventure Archived copy, Landline (Australian Broadcasting Corporation), 23 April 2000.</ref> (It was later sold back to Bega Cheese by Mondelez, in a belated grocery business sale in Australia. Bega later also bought back Lion Dairy & Drinks.)
In 2004, Smith announced his intention to make Dick Smith Foods a commercial operation, and to list it on the stock market by 2009.<ref name="SA1">Template:Citation</ref> In the same year, Smith offered to purchase Vegemite from Kraft, but was unsuccessful.<ref>Media Release: Dick Smith offers to buy Vegemite to help out a battling Kraft Template:Webarchive, Dick Smith Foods, 27 October 2004.</ref> In 2006, the Herald Sun newspaper reported that Dick Smith Foods turnover had halved, due in part to the difficulty of finding local suppliers for their products.<ref name="HS2">Template:Citation</ref> <ref>Template:Citation</ref>
In 2011, Smith announced that he would be taking control of the management of the company again, after turnover dropped from $80 million to $8 million over the previous five years. He implemented a vision for the return to Australian-owned, Australian-grown produce where all the profits stay in Australia, instead of heading offshore as they do with the majority of foreign-owned food suppliers. The company had previously been managed, and some of its products produced under licence, by the Sanitarium Health and Wellbeing Company, which paid Dick Smith Foods for the rights to the company's branding.
On 26 July 2018, Dick Smith announced that the business would close in 2019 in order to avoid bankruptcy.<ref name="SMH-NoM"/> Smith blamed competition with German supermarket Aldi's products for the demise of the brand.<ref name="SMH-NoM">Template:Cite news</ref>
Dickheads
Dickheads were Dick Smith Foods' brand of matches (1999–2002). The name is a parody of the Redheads brand of matches, replacing "Red" with Dick Smith's first name.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=Guardian>Template:Cite news</ref> The matchboxes were originally printed and made in North Richmond, New South Wales, Australia by Hanna Match, from local and imported materials. The brand's graphic designer was Craig Gregory. Later,Template:When they were distributed by Steric Trading Pty Ltd in Villawood NSW. Although the matchsticks and matchheads were made overseas, local packaging allowed the product to be labelled "Australian made".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> They were first sold in boxes of 25, "DICKHEADS 25", then 22,"DICKHEADS 22" and finally 20 "DICKHEADS 20".Template:Fact
The back of the box reads:<ref name=Guardian/> Template:Cquote
Legal issues
Dick Smith Foods ran into legal difficulties in 2003, when Arnott's Biscuits took the company to court. The issue was a trademark dispute over Dick Smith Foods' "Temptin'" brand of chocolate biscuits, which Arnott's alleged had diluted their trademark for their similar Tim Tam biscuits, in similarly designed packaging.<ref>Went, Sheree: Smith and fans tempt Tim Tams, The Age, 7 May 2003.</ref> The case was settled out of court with an agreement to modify package font,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and Smith responded by casting Greg Arnott, a member of the Arnott family, in a commercial for the biscuits.<ref>An Arnott is latest weapon for cheeky Dick Template:Webarchive, B&T, 26 September 2003.</ref>