At the intersection of what’s for dinner
and what will it cost is a battle between restaurants and grocery stores for
the hearts and minds of the consumer.
According to Steven
Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® menu price hikes
and grocery stores CPG prices increases are making consumers think twice before
spending anything on dinner.
According to U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
data released on May 11, the Consumer
Price Index (CPI) came in 8.3% higher in April compared to the previous April.
The food-at-home CPI is now 10.8% higher
than this time in 2021, the biggest year-over-year hike since November 1980. In
comparison, prices for food consumed away from home have gone up 7.2% since
April of last year.
Wendy’s is battling to garner a larger
share of stomach with a price, value, service equilibrium according to Johnson. When Wendy's first
has noticed inflation impacting consumer behavior it began thinking how it could
highlight its value offerings in response.
Todd Penegor, The Wendy’s Co. CEO and
president, said his company has seen consumer segmentation generally seen
across all of the quick-service market, stating “What we've seen in the first
quarter and the bucketing under $75,000 cohort of customers,” … “we have seen
some of those folks start to slow on the traffic within the category, but
that's been made up for by the folks making over $75,000.”
Working hard Wendy’s has to make sure its
menu offers appeal to consumers who notice a tighter pocketbook. Penegor continued,
“We're working so hard on our calendar to make sure that we've got digital
offers in our app, continue to work to make sure that we have the ‘4 for
$4’ offering out there,”. The company has also highlighted its $5 Biggie Bags
and Buck Biscuit at breakfast.
In a Battle for Share of Stomach
You Can Win
While Wendy’s expanded its breakfast menu
to Canada restaurants this month; it saw some softness in the U.S. daypart in
the first quarter.
“As we looked at the breakfast business
in Q1, the category was a little bit softer than we had anticipated,” Penegor
said. “Clearly weather in January and February had an impact on the breakfast
business. Omicron earlier in the quarter had an impact on the breakfast
business. And what we didn't see is the category soften a bit on the breakfast
daypart. With that said we gained dollar, and traffic share in the QSR burger
category in Q1 at the breakfast daypart.”
Breakfast is an ongoing project and Wendy’s is confident it can grow breakfast
sales by 10% to 20% for the full year and “really be squarely in that $3,000 to
$3,500 per week per restaurant by the end of the year. Penegor continued.
Regular readers of this blog with like to
know that Wendy’s March Madness promotions drove customers to smartphone app
purchases, he said, and in the U.S. the brand reached about 10% digital sales
mix, he noted.
Wendy’s same-store sales were up 2.4%
systemwide with a 1.1% increase at U.S. restaurants and a 14.1% increase at
international units. Growth is still on the table, “We're expecting by the end
of this year between 50 and 60 restaurants in the U.K., the combination of
company restaurants and to delivery kitchens service,” noted Penegor. The
company expects a growth rate of about 20% in international units this year,
focused mainly on India, the Philippines and the United Kingdom.
Foodservice
Solutions® team is here to help you drive top line sales and bottom-line
profits. Are you looking a customer ahead? Does your messaging look more like
yesterday that tomorrow? Visit GrocerantGuru.com for more information
or contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Remember success
does leave clues and we just may the clue you need to propel your continued
success.
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