Consumers are dynamic
not static. If you are running a
restaurant like you did in 2015, 2019, or 2022 it’s very likely that your year
over year customer counts are in decline.
According to Steven
Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma WA based Foodservice Solutions®, “Where,
when, and how consumers buy a meal and eat a meal are evolving faster than many
food retailers can keep up with.”
While technology seems to have solutions
to many legacy problems that all food retailers have been looking for, the
question remains what helps me keep up with our evolving consumer? Recently panelists
at NRF 2023:
Retail's Big Show was presented by the National
Retail Federation (NRF) had a top-of-mind question surrounding technology in the retail space is
whether automation is going to replace labor. Today technology is about more
than just labor.
Ira Gleser, director, industry advisor at
Microsoft, stated, “These are really
exciting and challenging times in the restaurant space from a technology
standpoint," Now according to Gleser, the pandemic spurred the
acceleration of digital transformation. Customers are owning the guest journey
like never before, and restaurants are pivoting to meet the guests where they
are — in fact, many have already pivoted.”
Johnson and the team at
Foodservice Solutions® has documented the increasing migration from legacy restaurants
and grocery stores to grocerant Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared food
since 1991 which is only intensifying with the popularity of mix & match
meal component bundling .
Bruce Hoffmeister, chief information
officer at Cracker Barrel Old Country
Store , thinks that while dine-in traffic has returned post-pandemic,
it's not as simple as that.
Hoffmeister noted that, "It is easy
to say traffic is back for dine-in, because it is, but it's much more
complicated than that," …. "A lot of people don’t realize that
pre-pandemic dine-in traffic across the industry was declining steadily year
over year. It was going down about 2 percent a year and of course, it fell off
the table during the pandemic. It is coming back up, but it is still not back
to pre-pandemic, and what we are seeing is the pre-pandemic trend of a slow
erosion of dine-in traffic continues because of all the off-premise
opportunities that customers have."
The question now becomes: What's ahead? Gleser
continued, "The consumer is driving the journey bus," … "They
are very clear on what they want, where they want it and how they want
it."
Hoffmeister agreed. "In today's
world, no matter what industry you are in, the guest wants more control than
ever and we need to give it them," he said, adding that the challenge is
not every guest is the same.
So, technology-wise, restaurants can offer
guests the ability to join a waitlist before they arrive, have tableside
tablets for servers to enter orders, and offer customers the ability to pay
without having to go to a cashier by scanning a QR code at their table.
Hoffmeister continued, "From my perspective, it's called
Cracker Barrel Old Country Store,
so we have to blend technology into the old country store in a way that fits
well and feels like it's not alienating to some guests while empowering other
guests," …. "That's part of the balancing act we have to look at from
a technology perspective. It's always a balance of blending high tech with high
touch."
Technology can’t fix prices when
corporate raises prices so they are out of reach for many consumers as the last
earning call reflected. However, Colin McGuire, vice president of corporate
systems at Chipotle, stated “After some testing, the chain rolled out a
contextual restaurant experience, "which essentially allows us to
anticipate the intent of the customer using the mobile app; do things like
message them if they are going to the wrong restaurant; [and] messaging as close
to possible in real time when their meal is ready, when it is going to be put
on the shelf, when they are making the meal," "We are taking it to the next level of
communication."
A little note here both Hoffmeister and
McGuire are members of Microsoft's CIO
Council.
Grocerant niche Ready-2-Eat and
Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared food continues to drive top-line sales With takeout
and delivery increasing, some quick-service and fast-casual restaurants are
looking at smaller footprints that reduce — or even eliminate — dine-in space.
How does the increase in digital orders
impact the back of the house?
This past fall, Chipotle began piloting a cook-to-needs
kitchen management system that uses camera technology to measure, among
other things, ingredients on hand and cooking temperatures. "The intent is
to always have availability of food and forecast sales that are coming so that
we can tell the person on the grill they need to drop two pans of chicken
because you are going to sell it in the next 45 minutes," McGuire said.
Now think about this, Chipotle developed the technology in
collaboration with Microsoft. "The challenge becomes, is it the AI
[artificial intelligence] and machine learning that runs the restaurant or is
it the GM [general manager] and the grill person?" he posed.
"What we are finding is when they
work well together, they work well together. But when the person on the grill
ignores the suggestions of the AI, it doesn’t like that," McGuire
explained. "There is a long way to go to get to that interaction
between the human and the technology to really be seamless, but once we do, I
think you are going to see this technology in a lot of our spaces."
"There are times when the manager
knows something that the computer didn't know," he pointed out. "The
computer does a very good job at recognizing patterns and doing things based
upon information as long as there is no glitch in the system. That glitch in
the system is what the manager needs to be aware of."
Then when asked to fill in the blank,
"In the next five years, restaurants will," Hoffmeister answered
"give more control to the guests and the customer on how they want to be
served."
He noted that this is happening now, but
said the evolution will continue.
Meanwhile, McGuire said in the next
five years, restaurants are going to be using technology to make the industry a
compelling place for people to work, especially in the quick-service restaurant
space.
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
us on our social media sites by clicking one of the following links: Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter
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