The consumer is
telling us the cost of everything can’t keep going up. Consumers are cutting back on visits to their
favorite restaurants and convenience store.
If you are a retailer that means less money, in the till, less profit in
the back at the end of the month. The
questions Steven Johnson,
Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions® continues to ask is; How are you going to get those customer
visits back? How long are you going to wait before you try to get them back?
Those lost customers
are not eating less they are simply eating somewhere else according to Johnson.
In a new survey released by NACS revealed that over the past three months, 59%
of retailers said their customer traffic has decreased in stores, likely in
large part due to high gas prices.
Regular readers of
this blog know that convenience stores, which sell an estimated 80% of the fuel
purchased in the U.S., rely on in-store sales, not fuel sales, to drive
profits. But high gas prices are hurting customer traffic in stores and basket
size: Nearly half of all retailers (49%) also say that those customers coming
inside the store are buying less compared to three months ago when gas prices
were $1.50 a gallon lower.
Retailer in that study
also expressed concerns that elevated gas prices could also depress sales over
the traditionally busy summer-drive season: 53% say they expect sales to be
lower this summer than last summer, with only 25% anticipating increased sales.
Just look at some more facts, 80% of U.S.
consumers said they are eating out less often as a result of inflation, according
to a Morning Consult survey.
And about three-quarters said they are going out to bars less often.
Now consider this, 72% said they were
purchasing less meat and 68% said they were buying less alcohol, according to
the survey. Overall, more than half of U.S. adults said they have changed their
eating and drinking habits because of inflation.
Yet there is more, According to Placer.ai, visits to full-service restaurants have fallen
dramatically in recent weeks while quick-service visits continued to grow,
which the data firm suggested could be due to a “trade down” from more
expensive restaurants to lower priced options.
The Consumer Price Index rose 1% in May
from April, and 8.6% over the past year. Retail food prices are up nearly 12%
over the past year and prices on many basics have taken off: Gas is up by 50%
over the past year while energy prices are up nearly 35%.
The higher prices are squeezing ordinary
Americans even as wages rise, raising concerns that consumers could cut back
and help throw the economy into a recession.
Restaurant menu prices are not rising
nearly as much as retail food prices, which help to backstop demand—food-away-from-home
prices were up 7.4% annually last month, though prices at full-service
restaurants rose 9%.
And 80% of economists said there is a
bigger risk of “stagflation,” a combination of economic stagnation and strong
inflation. According to Morning Consult, lower-income consumers have been more
likely to say they have made adjustments. The survey found that those with
children under 18 at home and those with household incomes less than $50,000
have been more likely to make spending adjustments than others.
Women were 13 points more likely to say
that they have adapted to rising inflation. Women were more likely to identify
themselves as the primary grocery shopper. How are you avoiding losing
customers this year? Are you tracking
your year over year customer counts?
Don’t over reach. Are
you ready for some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing ideations look more
like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested in learning how Foodservice Solutions® can edify your
retail food brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient
meal participation, differentiation and individualization? Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit us on our social media sites by clicking the
following links: Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter
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