The grocerant niche is the result of the blurring line between restaurants, grocery stores, convenience stores, and drug stores all selling fresh prepared, portable, convenient meal solutions. Targeted at the time-starved consumer with Ready-2-Eat or Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared food components that are perceived “better for you”, and portioned for one or two. Consumers like the Convenient Meal Participation, Differentiation, Individualization / Family Customization that these retailers offer.
Restaurateurs need to
be particularly mindful of developments within grocerant niche for they are
driving the change within the price, value, service equilibrium in retail
foodservice.
It is at the intersection of the consumer,
technology and The 5 P’s of Food Marketing: Product, Packaging, Placement,
Portability, and Price that retail food sales competition is expanding. Driving
ever greater Mix and Match bundled meal options and new points of distribution
for consumers. Consumers love the
on-the-go options in fact Zaget’s 2013 NYC Restaurant Survey found that in New York at-home meals
surpassed dining out for the first time in 30 years.
Legacy Home Meal Replacement focus quickly faded away in the Restaurant side of business. However in the Grocery, C-store and Drug Store sector it continued to be studied, tested, and implemented. Today the grocerant niche is the strategic path of choice for non-traditional food retailers, targeted at restaurant customers, profitable and expanding at an ever increasing pace.
Wawa was once considered a convenience store now they view themselves
as a restaurant with a focus of serving Fast Casual Food- - To Go. At Wawa customers are now finding What’s for
Breakfast, What’s for Lunch and now what’s for Dinner. Sheetz once a convenience store now calls
themselves a restaurant that sells gas. Sheetz
Made To Order food is a hit with customers.
Sheetz is successful contemporizing legacy C-store products with
differentiation, customization and personalization. Consumer like the variety,
24 hour menu serving all day parts - all day long - a wide range of consumer
meal and snacking needs. Sounds and acts
like a restaurant doing all the right things.
Rutter’s is another convenience
store in transition. Rutter’s understands the unique balance between palate,
price, pleasure and the consumer’s drive for qualitative distinctive
differentiated new messaging and Rutter’s is meeting that need set. The food
value proposition equilibrium for the consumer today balances; better for you, flavor, and traditional
products all blended into
something with a twist. In industry
speak, differentiated does not mean different to the consumer it means
familiar. Rutter’s is an example of
brand identity extending beyond consumer expectations within the traditional
conveniences store sector. Too the consumer Rutter’s is a direct valued
competitor within the QSR space.
Food Quality Never
Takes a Step Back. The grocerant niche is driving new competitive points for
food distribution which are a step above consumer expectation in most
cases. Food quality never takes a step
back, these evolving new points of fresh food will continue to improve over
time increasing industry competitiveness. Dunkin Donuts, McDonalds, and Starbucks,
here comes The C-store sector. When
you look at the menu items offered by these legacy conveniences store operators
it is clear to see that the grocerant niche is a platform that is creating
equilibrium. In other words they are
not discouraged or intimated by competition from any sector.
During Transformational period’s legacy industries
are at times forced to expand at a pace unseen in decades. The grocerant niche
is contributing too redefining the retail foodservice experience. The
Ready-2-Eat & Heat-N-Eat fresh and prepared food niche is expanding rapidly
within the grocery sector. Whole Foods is no longer Whole Paycheck but Whole
Fresh Food Fast and consumers find that is “better for you”.
Whole Foods is
driving customer frequency while building loyalty with Fresh prepared
ready-2-eat and heat-N-eat better for you food. Whole Foods focus is on
convenient meal participation, better for you differentiation, and
individualization.
Safeway’s has
integrated Mix and Match Meal Bundling marketing into daily and weekly iphone
app’s and legacy print flyers. With a focus on Fresh Prepared Food, Safeway is
leveraging The 5 P’s of Food Marketing: Product, Packaging, Placement,
Portability and Price establishing contemporized consumer relevance. In what
was once restaurant food space alone grocery stores, C-stores and Drug stores
are now garnering consumer attention.
With powerful well Financed companies the ilk of
Walgreens entering the fresh food space that is something no food retailer
should dismiss as not my competitor.
Walgreens with over 78 Billion in sales they can try and try again.
Walgreens might just be the next Next Biggest Competitor in the retail food
space.
It must be noted that Walgreen’s all but exited
retail food service when they sold their last Wag’s restaurant. We all must remember at one time Walgreens
was a tier one fresh food retail operator / restaurant. Ready-2-Eat and
Heat-N-Eat fresh food runs deep in the legacy of Walgreens.
Walgreens Fresh with Duane Reade have 7,500+ retail outlets. Who is selling what in your back yard? With Walgreens
entering the fresh food area again with meats, wraps, soups "and other
on-the-go meal options, as well as convenient alternatives for tonight's family
meal, it is clear that the future of fresh food retail leadership may be up in
the air.
Food Retailing
Never Take a Step Backward. Consumers
are dynamic not static always looking to save both time and money. The grocerant niche is propelling new quality
points of fresh food distribution and competitors that are well financed.
www.FoodserviceSolutions.us specializes in outsourced business
development. We can help you identify, quantify and qualify additional food
retail segment opportunities or a brand leveraging integration strategy. Since
1991 Foodservice Solutions® of Tacoma WA is the global
leader in the Grocerant niche. visit Facebook.com/Steven Johnson,
Linkedin.com/in/grocerant or twitter.com/grocerant
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