When
consumers are hungry they want to eat.
They will buy food at a gas station, train station, bridge, or along the
side of a road. Consumers are dynamic not static and chain restaurants must evolve with
consumers. Only stubbornness on the part
of c-level executives at chain restaurants can be blamed as sales fall at chain
restaurants once again or so says Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at
Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions®.
The
chain restaurant business model must evolve as there is no notion of channel
blurring in the minds-eye of the consumer. Channel
blurring only exists in the BLIND eye of Neanderthal chain
restaurant and Grocery Stores brand managers according to Johnson as he stated back in 2010
and it has never been more evident than today.
The customer has moved and legacy chain restaurants
continue to try to do what they have always done and are doing it in the same
way. It’s time for a new business model for chain restaurants according to
Johnson.
In July 2017 same-store sales dropped 2.8 percent
across the restaurant landscape, a significant 1.8 percentage point decline
from the previous month. Customer traffic at restaurants plummeted 4.7 percent
in the July and 1.7 percentage points worse than June of 2017 according to
numbers from Victor Fernandez, executive director of Insights and Knowledge for
industry tracker TDn2K.
When same store sales
are calculated on a two-year basis, July’s sales were down 4.2 percent versus
July 2015, and same-store traffic declined an eye-opening 8.7 percent. These
are the weakest two-year growth rates in more than three years.
The
line between foodservice channels exist only in the minds-eye those protecting
their own jobs not those interested in the evolving consumer, path to purchase,
retail sales growth, or brand relevance according to Johnson.
A
study shows consumers regard the service provided by Wawa (a state of the industry convenience store
retail chain), as superior to what they get at Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse. Simply put brand
protectionism is dead once again our Grocerant Guru® said that first back in 2009 but so much for
understanding the undercurrents driving our evolving foodservice sectors.
Retail
foodservice today is about Share of Stomach, and you are either
capitulating share of stomach or garnering share of stomach customer by
customer. Is your retail foodservice
brand garnering year over year customer counts or capitulating customers?
Edifying
Foodservice Solutions® findings recent research by White Box Social
Intelligence found “Wawa is more likely to meet service expectations than all
619 restaurant brands the researcher monitors on a constant basis. Closest to
the c-store chain in positive service evaluations was Papa Murphy’s, followed by Seasons 52, Fleming’s and
Wienerschnitzel.”
The consumer knows best. Is it time you
began rethinking how to integrate Foodservice Solutions® FIVE P’s of Food
Marketing?
White Box Social Intelligence also revealed
“consumers’ intentions of visiting the monitored restaurant chains have
continued to wane, by a hefty 6.4%, and that they believe the food quality of
those brands has slipped from a year ago. Yet their estimation of restaurant
service rose by 10.2% year over year. Wawa was one of the brands that
scored high in customers’ intention to return, with only Qdoba and Carvel ranking
higher.
Wawa’s
top rating on service was indeed a surprise, says Victor Fernandez, TDn2K’s executive director
of insights and knowledge. “It all depends on expectations, whatever the
expectation of what good service is,” he says. “Obviously people expect
something different from Wawa than they do from Fleming’s.” But they’re more
likely to have those expectations satisfied at the c-store chain, he indicated.
While
Victor was surprise no one on the Team at Foodservice Solutions® was after
conducting over 7,790 Grocerant ScoreCards. Again we
continue to think it is time for chain restaurant brand managers to look at
some of those persistent factors aka consumer facing grocerant niche valued
attributes that are driving change customer adoption of new fresh food avenues
of distribution.
The fact of the matter is the
consumers have moved on and channel
blurring only exists in the BLIND eye of Neanderthal chain restaurant
and Grocery Stores brand managers not in the minds-eye of the consumer. Restaurants, Grocery stores, must evolve or
risk capitulating incremental customer counts to other retailers that are
addressing the attributes that are relevant to consumers today.
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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