If one thing is clear it is that any
brand can enter the grocerant niche filled with Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat
fresh prepared food. Some entrants the ilk of IKEA, COSTCO have done
outstanding jobs selling both Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared food in
excess of $2 Billion US a year in sales according to Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at
Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions®.
Even the NBA’s Detroit Pistons, recently announced a
delivery-only concept called Pistons Dish in partnership with ghost
kitchen provider Reef Technology that
regular readers of this blog know well.. The menu features basketball-inspired
items with names like Hooper’s Honey Walnut Shrimp and Fast Break
Falafel, but also promises “select Pistons merchandise.” All of it is
available via DoorDash, Grubhub, Seamless and Uber Eats.
Regular readers of this blog are well
aware that Edible Arrangements now just Edible and Walmart, which is working
with a company called Ghost
Kitchen Brands to offer both restaurant food and packaged
goods for delivery and pickup from Walmart stores in Canada. A customer
could feasibly order a Quiznos sub along with a Red Bull and a pint
of Ben & Jerry’s from one of those locations. Walmart said the idea is
to make its products more accessible.
Sam Hamam, senior director of licensees
at Walmart Canada, stated “We’re very excited to be the first retailer to team
up with Ghost Kitchens,” … “We’re always looking at ways to improve our
customer shopping experience with greater access to affordable products,
services and brands.”
Last summer, DoorDash launched its own
chain of delivery-only hubs called DashMarts in eight cities, offering convenience and
grocery goods along with restaurant retail items such as sauces from chef
Stephanie Izard. It is interesting to note that DoorDash refers to its
DashMarts with what feels like a fitting term for this new breed of
ghost kitchens: micro-fulfillment centers much akin to what Amazon has
become.
Now here is the problem for Walmart, they
have tried over and over again to make grocerant niche Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat
fresh prepared food a CPG product. That is exactly why they continue to salter
in the grocerant area. They are not
alone just look how bad Kroger has done with fresh prepared food sales and
profitability? Albertsons and Safeway
getting better but there remains no doubt that all legacy grocery stores will
do all they can to make fresh food a CPG product. That will continue to cost
them dearly and they will capitulate incremental sales to the restaurant sector
and dollar store sector because of that.
There is a difference between the
comfortable, familiar, and doing the same thing over and over again. That
difference within the food space is where the customer has been migrating for
the past 15 years. It’s time for more companies to start looking and acting
like IKEA, COSTCO, and the Detroit Pistons.
Looking for
success clues of your own? Foodservice Solutions® specializes in
outsourced food marketing and business development ideations. We can help you
identify, quantify and qualify additional food retail segment opportunities,
technology, or a new menu product segment. Foodservice Solutions® of Tacoma WA is the global leader in the Grocerant niche
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