Clearly it makes
sense to sell a mediocre brand that has become lost in a sea of sameness,
driven by investor groups looking for a return rather than a customer according
to Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA
based Foodservice Solutions®.
The question is Why? The fact is Gerry Kingen did a great job creating
a brand with a clear point of differentiation, it was to be “the poor man’s Trader Vic’s. So, what happened?
Kingen sold the company he founded and slowly the investors ideas
on what Red Robin should be, from ‘like
a TGI Friday’s, eventually a’ fast casual’ burger chain. Clearly that journey has not worked out well
and investors. Now some investors want
Red Robin to become something else? Obviously, they do not want Red Robin to be
mediocre any longer.
Last
week Private equity firm Vintage Capital Management LLC offered to buy Red
Robin Gourmet Burgers Inc. for $40 per share, according to regulatory filings. Vintage, stated they
were the third largest shareholder in Red Robbin. They want a ‘transparent
review of strategic alternatives.
Restaurant
brands the ilk of Red Robin, that at one time not only had ‘cachet’ and
customer relevance, they had the pulse of the consumer an understanding of how
to drive brand value, top-line sales and bottom-line profits. When brans
stall or start running flat, investment groups rush in to ‘save investors. What
they don’t do is focus on the consumer, they talk return on investment,
profits, growth, not about the consumer or customer relevance?
Why?
Well, our Grocerant Guru® believes because they don’t understand
the basics of the foodservice business.
Red Robin did not have mediocre leadership. Red Robin had good leadership doing what the
investors wanted, the way they wanted them to do it. How did that work out for investors?
Battle for Share of Stomach
Regular
readers of this blog know it is not just Red Robin they know that Sun Capital
closed more Boston Markets than they opened,
and have reduced Friendly’s from 500 units to 174. How can that be? We ask Why
buy a chain restaurant that has lost its ‘mojo’ without a clear path drive top
line sales and bottom-line profits? How
many mediocre restaurant brands have been stifled by investor groups looking at
spread sheets while not being focused on the customer?
When
MTY Group said it has agreed to buy the struggling take-and-bake pizza chain Papa
Murphy’s for $6.45 per share, giving the deal a valuation of $190 million
Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® wondered out loud
how many franchisee’s, store managers and employees will lose their jobs in the
next four years? We ask what is the value of a mediocre portfolio of brands
that continue to decline? Leadership needs to step-up to stand-out.
The value of a product or brand at times diminishes in
consumer relevance as consumer evolve. The team at Foodservice Solutions®
understands that the consumer is dynamic not static. If you are spending more
time looking at spread sheets than customer’s path to purchase, you might be
seeing more red than bread.
Foodservice Solutions® specializes in
outsourced business development. We can help you identify, quantify and qualify
additional food retail segment opportunities or a new menu product segment and
brand and menu integration strategy. Foodservice Solutions® of Tacoma WA is the global leader in the Grocerant niche
visit Facebook.com/Steven Johnson, www.Linkedin.com/in/grocerant/ or www.twitter.com/grocerant/
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