At the intersection of just paying the bills to stay
open and keeping customers happy Lazy Dog Restaurants has found a way forward that
edifies both top-line growth and bottom-line profits. According to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru®
at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions® more restaurants should explore the options that Lazy Dog Restaurants have found beneficial
at the status quo is not what it used to be.
Johnson continued, consumers are looking for meal solutions,
and branded meals and meal components that are Ready-2-Eat or Heat-N-Eat save
time and money for the consumer in most instances. That is but one of the drivers
of the continued customer migration and adoption of the grocerant niche.
Most
of you know that Lazy Dog
added TV dinners and virtual brands during the pandemic, and was just getting
its quarterly beer subscription program off the ground. But what you may not
know is all of those channels continue to grow despite a return to ‘normalcy’.
Most
of you understand that adding new revenue streams was pretty much a necessity
during the throes of the pandemic, particularly for casual dining concepts that
couldn’t rely on drive-thru’s to maintain a steady business flow. Many of those
concepts have since pulled back on such channels, or removed them
all together,
as consumer behaviors normalized.
Do You Want A
Larger Share of Stomach?
However
not, 20-year-old Lazy Dog
Restaurants. They are leaning in
even harder to its pandemic-inspired channels, and it is reaping significantly
higher average unit volumes in the process. According to Datassential, the
California-based casual dining chain grew its AUVs by over 6%, to over $8.7
million, from 2021 to 2022.
So,
during a recent interview, Founder/CEO Chris Simms estimates that AUVs are now
about 25% higher than they were pre-pandemic and attributes this jump to a
sustained off-premises business and a wildly successful beer subscription
program, which just came out with its 19th quarterly release.
Lazy Dog Restaurants Founder/CEO Chris Simms, stated, “We had just started the beer program going
into Covid, and the timing gave us an opportunity to turbo boost it. People
wanted to share the passion of craft membership with us, so we created
partnerships with specialty breweries all over the country and our membership
has grown exponentially,”... “It’s been a fantastic program for us.”
The
team at Foodservice Solutions® likes that there are also Lazy Dog “TV dinners,”
which are meals made in-house and frozen in retro-style trays. When dining
rooms shut down during the pandemic, they were added as a lifeline and people
continue to buy them, “stacks at a time.” Much to Simms’ surprise, the TV
dinner channel continues to grow.
Success
does leave clues, so when you find success expand it. So do the Lazy Dog’s virtual
brands – Jolene’s Wings & Beer and Roadtrip Bowls. Jolene’s was also added
as a lifeline during Covid, while Roadtrip was added just last year. Simms said
both brands have helped drive more brand awareness for the core brand.
Simms
continued, “We took the time to put some thought into our virtual brands and
wanted to make sure from an authenticity perspective, people knew they weren’t
separate companies. So it’s Jolene’s Wings & Beer by Lazy Dog and we make
that ‘by Lazy Dog’ part clear,”… “We also found out these brands provide a
great entry point for people who maybe never heard of Lazy Dog before, but
they’re on their app looking for wings and they find Jolene’s and they enter
Lazy Dog through that channel. The brands have also helped us build sales at
times where we had additional capacity, like late night.”
Growth
requires more help. In order to maintain and grow these additional channels,
Lazy Dog needed to have the right staffing levels in place – no easy feat these
past few years. According to Simms, Lazy Dog has maintained “industry leading”
retention levels and has done so because the company’s top priority is
maintaining a “people-focused culture.”
“The
more we started to grow, the more we realized the importance of documenting
every piece of our culture. What we found is when people came in from other
companies, they weren’t managing the way we wanted them to. Their culture
wasn’t as strong, so we put it on paper to make sure we could communicate our
vision consistently,” Simms said. “That culture is built on trust, empowering
our teams to make decisions, writing down recipes and making sure the chef
cares about following that recipe, and not letting any egos get in the way. We
are also constantly listening to guests and teammates to improve.”
This
collection of efforts – documented processes, recipes outlined in black and
white, listening to employees through an internal email that goes directly to
Simms, listening to guests via aggregator platforms – has been the “secret
sauce” to Lazy Dog’s consistent growth throughout the past 20 years, he said.
The
second priority for Lazy Dog has been innovation, which is the impetus behind
the company’s very creation in the first place. In the early 2000s, Simms
noticed most casual dining concepts were “a little long in the tooth” and he
wanted to create something different.
“I
saw a lot of them beginning to make decisions based on the bottom line, cutting
things I felt made their concept special,” he said. “At the same time,
consumers were becoming more interested in ingredients and quality and cooking
preparations. I saw an opportunity to engage in more innovation.”
Simms
said he wanted to have items that people love and can’t get enough of, as well
as items that some people hate – as long as Lazy Dog was pushing the boundaries
on what they might be willing to try and, ideally, accept.
“Sometimes,
to be honest, we got a little over our skis,” he said, pointing to a Caparina
launch about 15 years ago that fizzled. Sometimes, however, they didn’t. Lazy
Dog began selling double IPA beer about 20 years ago, for example, and that
market has since grown by double
digits almost every year since.
“We
always want to be on the forefront of innovation so we can differentiate
ourselves,” Simms said.
Culture
and innovation will continue to be Lazy Dog’s blueprint as the company
continues to grow. That growth plan includes five new restaurants this year and
a target of seven next year, which Simms calls a “comfortable rate to make sure
we can carry our culture into each new location.”
“We
will continue to focus on culture so that our people pipeline is just as full
as our real estate pipeline. We will continue to grow and expand all of these
additional sales channels that support our core business,” Simms said. “But
without the people, you can’t do all these things. They’re why we’re able to do
what we’re doing.”
Success does leave clues. One clue that time and time
again continues to resurface is “the consumer is dynamic not static” brands
must be dynamic as well. Don’t wait for the status quo too return.
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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