Did you know that one in two people said they like to order
directly from the restaurant, with 44% choosing to do so as it allows them to
personalize their order better. According to the team at Foodservice Solutions®
consumers are talking digital, ordering digital, and thinking digital.
According to Steven Johnson Grocerant
Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions® recent Grocerant ScoreCards found:
1. 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.
2. 68.2 % of consumers would order
alcohol with a meal or meal components from a restaurant if available when
ordering.
3. Roughly 63.7% of consumers purchase prepared food items from a
retail location at least three times a month.
4.
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.
5. 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.
6. Seventy-three percent of retail prepared food purchases are taken
to go
7. 88.2 % of consumers prefer hand held food over sit down meals with
a knife and fork
Consider these new facts from a recent article: “Restaurants
didn’t need a global crisis to realize the parameters of word-of-mouth
marketing had changed. In truth, the premise didn’t go anywhere—customers still
want to hear what other people think before they spend their money and
time—it’s the outlets of engagement that webbed out. The pandemic forced
discovery-minded diners, even those slower to migrate than others, into new
channels of connection.
Global scale-up company Deliverect explains this across
four buckets: discover; delivery; delight; and drive. How restaurants can
understand the way in which customers today find and pick restaurants; explore
the delivery preferences and channels that redefine online ordering and dining experience;
create a digital brand that fosters loyalty beyond transactions; and leverage
data-driven insights to enhance operations and customer engagement.
The baseline, company CEO and cofounder Zhong Xu
explained, is customers are increasingly relying on digital platforms to
enhance interaction. “Integrating a perfect blend of technology, human
interaction and personalization is a must for all restaurants looking to make a
lasting impact,” he said.
Deliverect surveyed 5,000 consumers to provide a view into
how restaurants should drive sustainable growth in a digital arena. Let’s start
with the discovery phase.
Respondents revealed they’re finding new restaurants
through Google searches and third-party food delivery apps as much as
recommendations from friends and family:
·
Friends and family: 42 percent
·
Google search: 40 percent
·
Food delivery apps: 38 percent
This point in particular is driving much of Domino’s recent
call to, after many years of resisting, jump into third-party delivery. The
company is doing so but still fulfilling its own orders with uniformed drivers.
So if it’s not a play to broaden access to labor, what is it? CEO Russell Weiner shared after the
announcement Domino’s recognized aggregators
had reached scale. U.S. research and findings from 13 international markets, he
continued, showed “that taking orders using the Uber Eats marketplace provides
access for Domino’s and its franchisees to a new segment of customers and what
we believe will be a meaningful amount of incremental delivery orders once it’s
widely available.”
In other words, Domino’s wasn’t inspired as much by
fulfillment objectives as the observation we’ve reached an inevitable point in
digital maturation. Domino’s wants to court customers who use third-party apps
to discover occasions; those diners who are more platform or marketplace loyal
than brand specific. Per The Wall Street Journal, 14 percent of pizza sales
last year came through delivery apps.
When it came to researching newly discovered restaurants,
customers in Deliverect’s survey said they turn to websites, at 82 percent, for
a deeper dive.
The other options:
·
Online restaurant reviews: 78 percent
·
Food delivery apps: 71 percent
·
Social media: 64 percent
Staying within pizza, Papa Johns has spoken at length about
this dynamic in recent quarters. Like many chains, it’s worked to foster a
dichotomy where organic channels offer repeat customers better value, primarily
through loyalty and rewards. Papa Johns entered the third-party space four or
so years ago—well before much of its peer set. That’s allowed it to be where
customers are, CEO Rob Lynch told QSR earlier. But if that’s the greeting, the follow-up has been to
take top-of-funnel, incremental users and bring them in-house. The end result
generally means much of Papa Johns’ aggregator volume is add-on because its
best customers order through direct channels. As of May, the chain said 50–60
percent of its third-party marketplace business was incremental. “They love our
products. They love the innovation, the new ideas that we bring. And then, they
want to come back, because it is more economical to order Papa John’s through
our organic channel,” Lynch said. “That’s the business model.”
Today, roughly 85 percent of Papa Johns’ sales arrive via
digital channels. The chain has 30 million or so loyalty member accounts. Over
the past few years, it’s also invested in technology and organizational
infrastructure to operate an “industry leading” CRM platform designed to drive
brand engagement through relational and transactional experiences.
And it’s a high-stakes field: If Papa Johns can earn one
more transaction per year, with an average $20 ticket, Lynch said previously,
you’d be talking nearly $500 million in incremental sales on a $3 billion
baseline.
What Deliverect’s data uncovered is most customers today
are savvy enough to understand that value equation. They’ll find a brand and
then go direct to learn more. That’s why brands from Papa Johns to Shake Shack
have highlighted digital offers and rewards as hooks to turn curious guests
into loyal ones, with personalization and customization as lures. More
digital-exclusive offers and speedy paths to redemption have become common
sights in quick service for this reason.
“These results show us that digital first impressions are
super important and often the first step on a customer’s journey toward a
purchase,” Deliverect said. “So, be sure to plate up the best version of your
brand across all of these touch points to nail the discovery phase.”
Moving on to the “delivery” topic, here were the most
important elements respondents highlighted in their decision set to take the
plunge:
·
Affordable prices: 92 percent
·
Variety of menu options: 90 percent
·
High standards of health and safety:
89 percent
·
Customers and community care: 88
percent
·
Treats employees well: 86 percent
And once they make the decisions, how they like to order:
·
Direct from the restaurant: One in two
people
·
Via food delivery app: One in four
people
·
Alternates between both: One in six
people
\
Sixty-five percent of people said they prefer to order
directly from the restaurant’s website or app. Of those, 44 percent said they
choose to do so as it allows them to personalize their orders. What’s key to
note, however, is people still rely on delivery apps for reviews and
recommendations, meaning they’re critical for acquisition.
Again, it’s pulsed throughout Deliverect’s research that
guests use first- and-third-party channels in tandem.
With “delight,” results showed people valued an intuitive
and personalized experience when it came to using an app and website.
These were the five top things to consider for app and
website to capitalize on the movement:
·
Detailed menus (descriptions, photos,
etc.): 47 percent
·
Simple menu navigation: 42 percent
·
Online ordering: 39 percent
·
Loyalty programs: 24 percent
·
Location finder: 19 percent
The majority of respondents also confirmed new tech was
important for creating a positive experience when engaging with a restaurant.
The notables:
·
Online reservations: 73 percent
·
Contactless payments: 70 percent
·
Self-service kiosks: 59 percent
·
QR codes: 55 percent
If there’s one reality of the present backdrop it’s
everybody has access to data. Yet is data information or just something
collected and hoarded? In the “drive” portion of the survey, Deliverect noted
digital experiences are vital, but restaurants can’t give up on the human
touch. Warm and friendly in-person experiences “can and should complement your
digital brand,” the company said.
What makes people feel loyal?
·
Consistently good food: 48 percent
·
Friendly and attentive staff: 35
percent
·
Fast delivery: 26 percent
·
Reliable and accurate service and
ordering: 26 percent
“Use data and insights to determine where you can
strengthen your offering,” Deliverect said. “For instance, digitizing tasks can
free your staff from admin and give them more time to talk to customers and
push upsells. Do sales increase when table ordering is active. Learn and
enhance.”
There was a broader degree of hesitancy around some current
solutions. When it came to robots carrying out certain functions, 50 percent of
people said they were comfortable with them doing so for service; 46 percent
for food preparation; and 46 percent for food delivery (drones).
But the 25–34 age groups surveyed proved the most
comfortable, with most people agreeing that new technology was important to
creating a positive experience. Like all disruption, time will uncover how that
unfolds. Much of today’s hesitancy could be credited to a lack of experience or
data points—customers who haven’t formulated opinions for technology they
simply haven’t tried. This came up often in QSR’s Drive-Thru
Report this year. For something like
voice-automated ordering at the menuboard, for instance, it’s hard to gauge
acceptance until it becomes relatively ubiquitous. Users will either be
surprised or offended by what they encounter, and those scales are likely to
tilt over time. Either way, it’s difficult to measure from a survey pool going
off what they think it would be like versus how they actually experienced it.
Plainly, it’s still early.
“The findings outline the importance of restaurant brands
creating a strong digital presence, maintaining consistency, and offering
compelling experiences to stand out in a competitive market, all of which
cannot be underestimated when it comes to sustaining growth and increasing
customer retention,” Xu said.”
Foodservice Solutions® team is here to
help you drive top line sales and bottom-line profits. Are you looking
a customer ahead? Visit GrocerantGuru.com for more information or contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Remember success does leave clues and we just may the clue
you need to propel your continued success.
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