Johnson stated, “Under pressure from
franchisee Subway raised prices,
shifted it brand messaging, and went adrift with once loyal customers. Then in an effort to reclaim some loyal
customers they returned to brand messaging with the ‘halo’ of better for you.”
Well guess what it worked.
While Subway
did not provide the exact number of its average unit sales. Technomic
went to work and calculated that Subway’s “average unit volumes in 2014 were
$446,000. They would fall to $425,000 the next year. That suggests the 2021
figure was somewhere in between.”
Technomic continued saying “For the
system, same-store sales were flat for the full year 2021. But for the top 75%
of its locations, about 16,000 locations in all, same-store sales were up 7.5%
over 2019 levels.”
Subway did say that sales improved
throughout the year for that group. By December, same-store sales were up 8.7%
on a two-year basis. Subway also said that same-store sales for the entire
system were positive the last three quarters of the year.
In a Battle for Share of Stomach
You Can Win
Subway’s CEO John Chidsey, stated, that the
results “indicate we have the right team and strategy to bring our multi-year
transformation journey to life,”.
But the data also suggests that about
5,000 locations are still well under what they were before the pandemic. Many
are believed to be in urban areas, business districts and in retail shops such
as Walmart.
Technomic suggest that much of that
recent improvement in sales at Subway can be chalked up to store closures. The
brand has closed about 4,900 locations since 2017. That includes about 1,000
locations in 2021, based on an unofficial count of its online store directory.
So, let us be clear for Subway, the 2021
sales results represent the first real green shoots in what has been a long and
difficult decade for the brand. The chain has seen thousands of closures since
that 2012 peak. It also lost its founder, its spokesman and went through
multiple changes in management and executives.
We must note that, Chidsey took over the
brand in 2019 as part of the latest management overhaul. The brand last year
made a massive change to its menu, upgrading its bread and other ingredients,
in what it called the “Eat Fresh Refresh.” Getting back to the basic messaging
of the brand.
Success does leave clues. One clue that time and time again continues to resurface is “the consumer is dynamic not static”. Regular readers of this blog know that is the common refrain of Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®. Our Grocerant Guru® can help your company edify your brand with relevance. Call 253-759-7869 for more information.
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