Consumers are dynamic not static and Walmart is not an early adopter when
it comes to meals and meal components. Walmart exceled at supply chain optimization,
suburban duplication, marketing messaging, it missed the mark on consumers meal
prep simplification aka meals and meal components preference over ingredients
to cook from scratch.
According to Steven Johnson Grocerant
Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® time starved consumers are
migrating to grocerant niche Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared meals
from every retail channel not just grocery stores when it comes to What’s for
Dinner.
Let’s Look at some recent numbers:
- Recent
Grocerant ScoreCards found 82.3% of consumers don’t know what’s for
dinner at Noon, and 61.8 %don’t
know what’ s for dinner at 4PM.
- Roughly 63.7% of
consumers purchase prepared food items from a retail location at least
three times a month.
- 79.6% all dinners have at least 1 grocerant niche
Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat meal component and 66.6% have two meal
components per day.
- When asked if they wanted to cook dinner from
scratch or assemble dinner from fresh meal components 91.3 % of Gen Z
chose assemble from Fresh Prepared Meal Components and Millennials 83.4%
chose meal components.
- Seventy-three percent
of retail prepared food purchases are taken to go
- 88.2 % of consumers
prefer hand held food over sit down meals with a knife and fork
So,
last week Walmart
in a press release stated that its hot rotisserie chicken is now available
for same-day delivery. Previously, shoppers could only order cold chicken for
delivery.
Walmart
was quoted saying, “We’ve optimized our operations to add more delivery slots
and availability, which allows Walmart to deliver our hot rotisserie chicken
the same day for its customers,”
In
case you did not know, Walmart,
the country’s largest food retailer, said it sells 103 rotisserie chickens
every minute, with shoppers in the Southern U.S. buying the most birds.
A
hot rotisserie chicken from a Chicago Walmart was selling for $6.97 last
Wednesday. Delivery is free for Walmart+ participants, who pay a membership fee
of $98 a year, on orders of at least $35. Non-members pay $7.95 per order.
Walmart
also last week launched a new digital recipe hub where shoppers can select a
recipe and add all the ingredients to their online cart. Paprika Chicken &
Rice Bake, for example, has 10 ingredients (including salt and pepper) and
costs $21.35 to prepare for five servings, according to the recipe site.
Regular
readers of this blog know that Walmart
is stuck in the middle of the grocery channel after the success of companies the
ilk of Aldi, WinCo, and Lidl have found success with competitive pricing and
fresh food discovery.
Walmart
has lowered prices on popular items, through October 15, along with offering
meal solutions and curated shopping lists to “feed the whole family for less
than $6.”
Recipes include Salsa Poached Eggs and Grilled Avocado Salad, both for under $6, and dishes such as Gardein Chick’n Wraps (less than $12) or Pork & Mango Salad (less than $16).
Walmart
is the world’s largest retailer, with more than 10,500 stores and 2.1 million
employees in 19 countries. The question readers of this blog will be asking who
will win in the middle Walmart or Kroger/Albertsons? Or could it be that Aldi
and Lidl will outlast even Walmart.
Invite Foodservice Solutions® to complete a Grocerant ScoreCard, or for product positioning or placement assistance, or call our Grocerant Guru®. Since 1991 Foodservice Solutions® of Tacoma, WA.
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