What
business are legacy grocery stores in?
Are they in the ‘fill the pantry’ business? Are they in the produce business? Are they in
the fresh meat and seafood business? Are they bakeries? Are they in the
grocerant niche fresh prepared food business?
We were asked last week if legacy grocery stores should be in the Meal
Kit business. So here is the team at
Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions®
thinking.
The
simple and universal answer from the team at Foodservice Solutions® was yes
they should be in the meal kit business.
After all the meal kit business today represents only $1.5 billion in
food sales while the legacy grocery store business is close to $800 billion in
sales today. Our good friend Bill
Bishop Chief Architect at Brick Meets Click says $1.5 billion in
the grocery world is like a minnow in the ocean.
Kroger’s Main and Vine brand began
experimenting with meal kits when it opened and continues to experiment, with
pricing, packaging, and portion size. At
as we write this it is our belief that that particular teat brand store
continues to do so. From what they have
learned they are now testing meal kits in four Cincinnati legacy Kroger
units.
When we went a took a look we may have
had more questions than answers. Like
does copycat positioning work better than differentiation with a twist? We think Kroger believes that
copycat positioning is best as their meal kits in the Cincinnati test are just
like Home Chef, Plated, HelloFresh, and other filled
with premeasured ingredients, cooking instructions.
Our team at Foodservice Solutions®
thinks Kroger could have done much better than copycat
positioning. Having conducted over 8,111
Grocerant
ScoreCards our team understands with value attributes resonate with
consumers in meal kits, and most all fresh prepared Ready-2-Eat and Heat-n-Eat
food.
While grocery stores
can sell meal kits for less, cheaper is not always the best option according to
our own Grocerant Guru®, Steven Johnson just
because they do not have to pay for packaging and delivering products. The problem is our Grocerant ScoreCards point
out Price
is not the issue.
Food industry
research icon and our friend Bonnie Riggs notes that a meal made from a kit
costs $10 per person, while a meal from a grocery store cost of an average $
4. Thinking about grocery stores what
business are they in? Meal Solutions, Menu Solutions, Cooking instructions, or
are they in the copycat food business?
Retail food customers
today can obtain fresh prepared meals, meal components, cook from scratch
ingredients all of which can be mixed and match then bundled into a perfect
customized family meal without going to a grocery store. Consumers can by the fresh prepared
components from Pinkies Liquor stores, furniture stores IKEA, clothing stores Ralph
Lauren, club stores like Costco, Dollar store, Walgreens,
and even restaurants the ilk of Corner Bakery, and Boston
Market. Why buy from a copycat grocery store? Not to worry the team at Foodservice
Solutions® knows why a meal kit would sell if done right. Call us.
Invite Foodservice Solutions® to complete a
Grocerant Program Assessment, Grocerant ScoreCard, or for product positioning
or placement assistance, or call our Grocerant Guru®. Since 1991 www.FoodserviceSolutions.us of Tacoma, WA has been the
global leader in the Grocerant niche. Contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or 253-759-7869
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