Did
big money do what it has always done that is drink out of the cup of
compliancy? Today food consumers are eating out at restaurants less they are
also cooking from scratch less at home than ever before. According to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru®
at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions®
consumers are migrating to Grocerant niche Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh
prepared meal components at an accelerated rate.
According
to commercial real-estate firm CoStar Group “Commercial square
footage of retail food space per capita last year set a record, with 4.15
square feet of food retail per person.” That is nearly 30 times the amount of
space allocated to groceries at major chains in 1950.
The
simple fact is consumers are buying meals and food for takeout today at
companies the ilk of IKEA, Eveytable,
EatFitGo,
Snap Kitchen, Boston Market, Wawa, Sheetz, and Dollar General. Never before in America has so much retail
square footage been devoted to selling food simply put there is just too much.
A
massive build-out by retailers has left the country piled up with grocery
shelves as consumers are shifting from big weekly shopping trips to more
snacking and to-go meals. The mismatch has flattened retail sales and leaves
the industry vulnerable to a wave of closures that some executives, bankers and
industry experts think is coming soon.
While
shopper loyalty to conventional grocery store chains lifted same-store sales
for food retailers by at least 3% annually since 2013, that metric was flat in
2016 and is projected to remain static this year as competition grows,
according to FactSet. “There’s only so much food we can buy,” said Suzanne
Mulvee, director of research for CoStar.
European
fresh food grocery retailers Aldi and Lidl are vying for U.S. market share,
investing over $4.5 Billion combined in the US market over the next three years
according to the team at Foodservice Solutions®. That will increase the retail
footprint while elevating competition for share
of stomach
in all retail channels.
Change
is in the air it is reported that Kroger, the nation’s
largest traditional supermarket chain by stores and sales, is reducing its
new-store openings this year to 55 from 100, a nearly billion-dollar drop in
capital expenditures, and its chief financial officer, Michael Schlotman. All
the while non-traditional meal and meal component grocerant niche retailers the
ilk of Snap Kitchen, EatFitGo, Everytable just keep opening new units and
expanding their reach.
Wal-Mart Stores has no other
move but reposition to the middle of the grocery price range according to the
team at Foodservice Solutions® as it plans additional cuts at will build 55
supercenters and smaller-format stores in its 2018 fiscal year, down from the
132 it opened in the 12-month period ending in January.
With
drug stores ability to drive incremental food sales one has to question if the
corner grocery store will become a drug store, as today food, beverages and
other consumables account for about a third of transactions at drug stores
nationwide.
Many
legacy chain restaurants will continue to close units as will legacy grocery
store chains and according to the team at Foodservice Solutions®. Consumers will continue to migrate to new
non-traditional points of fresh food distribution. Is your company evolving fast enough? Are you putting money into food retail that
looks more like yesterday than tomorrow?
Are you trapped doing what you
have always done and doing it the same way?
Interested
in learning how www.FoodserviceSolutions.us can edify your
retail food brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient
meal participation, differentiation and individualization? Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: www.FoodserviceSolutions.us for more
information.
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