Success
does leave clues and one clue Steven
Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® has been
highlighting in our blog is the positive response chain restaurants receive when
the edify their brands with sustainable messaging.
When
that branded messaging is extended into a consumer-focused interactive
participatory marketing program the positive response garners incremental
buy-in according to Johnson.
Regular
readers of this blog knew about Just Salad
last interactive participatory marketing program. Just how many of you knew
that that program saw customers rushing to get its signature blue bowls for a
fair price. Here is the point. Many restaurant companies have been shying
away from discounting amid the economic environment, Just Salad is embracing it.
So,
the New York City-based salad chain, which has managed to keep prices low
versus its competitors despite some price increases, recently launched a
discount program to increase the use of its signature blue reusable bowls. It
worked so well the chain repeated it weeks later.
Let’s
go over the program again. The program allowed consumers to buy salads for
$8.99 if they used a reusable bowl. The bowls, which sell for $1, have been in
use at the chain since it first started 17 years ago.
You
might remember that it was the only option when the brand first opened. Founder
Nick Kenner told NRN that while he didn’t want to create waste, he also didn’t
like that the garbage would be full of reusable bowls at the end of the day.
Now,
seventeen years later, reusables are all the rage with brands like
Starbucks even jumping in on the trend. However, Kenner doesn’t think this is
just a trend, it’s “momentum.”
Sustainable
reusables and the environment mean so much to Just
Salad that the company worked to become B-Corp certified — something the
brand was just named last month. The company even has a chief sustainability
officer, Sandra Noonan.
Just Salad founder Nick Kenner, stated, “[Sustainability]
is definitely intrinsic to who we are and how we think about everything we do.”
Now
then the latest promotion started out of internal conversations amongst
leadership at Just Salad about how to increase reusable bowl usage. But also,
prices for everything have gone up and the chain wanted to serve as a counter
to that.
So,
consumers who use a reusable bowl have always been able to add a free topping
to their salad — most choose avocado, according to Kenner. For the month of
February, those consumers also paid just $8.99 for their salads. Salads at the
chain normally retail for anywhere between $11.99 and $13.49, depending on the
ingredients.
Kenner
continued, “I have this dream of selling all our products for $8.99 forever
with reusable bowls,”. “And I think that would get everyone to use it and get
everyone to experience how great our product is.”
Here
is where you need to rear slowly and reread; The result of the promotion was
that returning customers with reusable bowls came “a bit” more, but “a ton” of
new customers came for the first time and bought a reusable bowl. Many of those
new customers have continued to use Just Salad after the promotion ended.
According
to Kenner, the new customers obtained during the promotion “overwhelmingly”
stayed with the brand.
“We’re
not doing it for profit, but from a longer-term to medium-longer-term
perspective, we’re doing it to increase our reusable bowl usage and get a lot
more customers into the Just Salad ecosystem,” he said.
Kenner
feels as though he just needs to get the product Just Salad is offering into
people’s hands and they will discover the chain’s salads are “best in class”
versus competitors.
“Our
mission is, ‘well, we need to just get this product in people's hands,’” he
said.
The
bowls are so well-priced during the discounting that Just Salad begins to compete
with quick-service players. Even the non-discounted bowls are cheaper than
those at other competitors in the space.
“I
feel like we compete as much against the traditional fast-food players as we do
against the traditional fast-casual players,” Kenner said. “So, we do feel like
we are creating a seat at the table for all customers in both fast-food and
fast-casual”
Are you ready for some fresh
ideations? Do your food marketing tactics look more like yesterday than
tomorrow? Visit GrocerantGuru.com for more information or contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Remember success does leave clues and we just may have the
clue you need to propel your continued success.
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