Sunday, June 21, 2026

Fresh is the New Front Door: Why Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat Foods Are Defining Grocery Success

 


Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® for decades, has maintained that consumers do not wake up thinking about retail channels—they wake up thinking about meals. Today's consumer is asking a simple question: "What's for breakfast, lunch, dinner, or a snack?" The retailer that answers that question most effectively wins the transaction, the loyalty, and increasingly the long-term customer relationship.

The newly released Logile 2026 State of Fresh Grocery Shopping Report reinforces what the Grocerant Guru® has documented for over 30 years: fresh food is no longer simply a department—it is a strategic growth platform.

According to Logilehttps://www.logile.com, 91% of consumers say fresh departments strongly influence whether they trust a grocery store. That finding should not surprise anyone paying attention to evolving food consumption patterns. Fresh produce, deli, bakery, and prepared foods now serve as a visual representation of the entire brand experience.

Consumers increasingly judge a retailer within seconds of entering a store. A vibrant produce department, a well-stocked service deli, freshly prepared meals, and appetizing bakery displays communicate operational excellence, quality, and value. Conversely, empty shelves, bruised produce, or poorly maintained displays signal neglect and drive shoppers elsewhere.


Fresh Departments Drive Store Switching

Perhaps most notable is that 78% of consumers reported shopping at a different grocery store because another retailer's fresh departments looked better.

That statistic highlights a profound shift in consumer behavior. Loyalty today is increasingly earned transaction by transaction rather than inherited from habit.

Consumers have become highly mobile shoppers. Between grocery stores, convenience stores, warehouse clubs, restaurants, meal delivery platforms, and digital ordering options, food shoppers have more choices than at any time in history.

Fresh food has become one of the strongest competitive differentiators.

The report found that when convenience was equal, 46% of shoppers selected the retailer with better fresh offerings while only 40% selected the lower-priced option. This finding underscores the continuing evolution of the Grocerant Guru® Price-Value-Service Equilibrium.

Consumers still seek value, but value today extends beyond price. Quality, freshness, convenience, portability, meal solutions, and time savings increasingly influence purchase decisions.


The Real Battleground: Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat Foods

The most revealing statistic in the report may be that 68% of shoppers said hot prepared meals would encourage purchases from a store's deli or prepared foods section.

That finding aligns with broader industry trends.

Research from FMI and Circana has consistently shown that approximately 80% or more of evening meals are sourced and consumed at home. Yet consumers simultaneously report having less time to cook and less interest in extensive meal preparation or cleanup than previous generations.

The result is a powerful opportunity for retailers that provide meal solutions rather than ingredients alone.

Consumers increasingly seek:

·       Ready-2-Eat meals requiring no preparation

·       Heat-N-Eat meals requiring minimal preparation

·       Mix-and-match meal components

·       Grab-and-go snacks and mini-meals

·       Portable meal bundles

·       Family meal solutions

·       Restaurant-quality meals at retail prices

The modern consumer wants the experience of eating at home without the labor associated with cooking from scratch.

That means fewer pots and pans.

Fewer dishes.

Less meal planning.

Less food waste.

Less time in the kitchen.

More time with family.

The retailers that deliver those outcomes consistently are winning market share.


Why Consumers Still Want to Shop Fresh In-Store

The report found that 74% of consumers continue shopping in physical stores because of fresh food offerings.

This represents one of grocery retail's strongest defenses against digital disruption.

Fresh food engages all the senses. Consumers want to see the produce, smell fresh bakery items, evaluate prepared meals, and visually assess quality before purchasing.

While digital ordering continues to grow, fresh departments remain a key traffic generator that online platforms struggle to fully replicate.

Consumers continue to rely on visual cues when purchasing food. Logile found that 85% of respondents say produce appearance significantly impacts buying decisions.

Freshness communicates confidence.

Confidence drives purchases.

Purchases build loyalty.


Fresh Food Is the Ultimate Brand Signal

The report also found that 84% of consumers believe a poorly maintained produce or fresh section negatively affects their perception of the entire store.

That reinforces a critical reality.

Consumers often use fresh departments as a proxy for operational competence.

If produce appears neglected, shoppers frequently assume similar problems exist throughout the store.

Conversely, retailers that execute fresh effectively create a halo effect across all categories.

This is particularly important as grocers compete not only with traditional supermarkets but also convenience stores, warehouse clubs, dollar stores, quick-service restaurants, fast-casual chains, and delivery platforms.

The competition is no longer store versus store.

It is meal versus meal.


Channel Blurring Continues to Accelerate

The Grocerant Guru® has long argued that consumers think in terms of meals and meal occasions, not retail channels.

Today, prepared foods from supermarkets compete directly against restaurant takeout.

Convenience stores compete against quick-service restaurants.

Warehouse clubs compete against family meal bundles.

Meal kits compete against deli prepared foods.

Consumers simply choose the solution that best balances quality, convenience, value, and speed.

As a result, fresh prepared foods have become one of the most important tools for maintaining customer relevance and driving repeat visits.

Retailers that excel in fresh execution are no longer merely selling groceries.

They are selling time.

They are selling convenience.

They are selling meal solutions.

And increasingly, they are selling restaurant-quality food consumed at home.


Four Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Fresh Prepared Foods Are Becoming the New Anchor Department
Prepared foods, Ready-2-Eat meals, and Heat-N-Eat solutions are increasingly driving store visits in the same way produce once did. The retailers that invest in prepared foods will capture more meal occasions and larger baskets.

2. Consumers Want Home Dining Without Home Cooking
Consumers continue to prefer eating at home, but they increasingly reject the time commitment associated with meal preparation and cleanup. Retailers that reduce both cooking time and dishwashing time create measurable value.

3. Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling Drives Incremental Sales
Customers increasingly assemble meals from multiple departments—deli entrees, fresh sides, bakery items, beverages, and desserts. Retailers that merchandise complete meal solutions rather than individual items will outperform competitors.

4. Freshness Is the New Trust Metric
Price remains important, but freshness has become a primary indicator of retailer credibility. Consumers increasingly judge the entire brand experience based on the appearance, availability, and quality of fresh food offerings.

The retailers that understand fresh food is no longer a department—but a complete meal solutions platform—will be the ones that remain relevant as consumer expectations continue to evolve.


Elevate Your Brand with Expert Insights

For corporate presentations, regional chain strategies, educational forums, or keynote speaking, Steven Johnson, the Grocerant Guru®, delivers actionable insights that fuel success.

With deep experience in restaurant operations, brand positioning, and strategic consulting, Steven provides valuable takeaways that inspire and drive results.

Visit GrocerantGuru.com or FoodserviceSolutions.US Call 1-253-759-7869



Saturday, June 20, 2026

Grocerant Guru®: Gopuff and AI Signal the Next Evolution of Food Retail Relevance

 


Gopuff's New AI Shopping Assistant Isn't About Technology—It's About Relevance

For more than 30 years, I have maintained that consumers do not shop channels—they shop solutions. Today, the line between convenience stores, grocery stores, restaurants, delivery companies, and digital commerce platforms has blurred beyond recognition. What matters now is relevance at the precise intersection of speed, price, personalization, and meal satisfaction.

Gopuff's launch of "Go," an AI-powered shopping assistant developed with SpaceXAI, is another example of how food retailers are adapting to consumers who increasingly expect frictionless solutions for meals, snacks, and household needs.

What Gopuff understands is that the consumer's biggest challenge is no longer access to food. The challenge is deciding what to eat, what to buy, and how to assemble meals that fit their budget, lifestyle, dietary preferences, and available time.


According to Circana, more than 80% of evening meals continue to originate from home. Yet consumers increasingly rely on outside sources for meal components, snacks, beverages, prepared foods, and ready-to-heat solutions. Simultaneously, FMI research has consistently shown that convenience and value remain among the top drivers of food purchasing decisions, while Deloitte studies indicate consumers are becoming increasingly selective with discretionary spending due to persistent inflationary pressures.

That creates a powerful equation:

Speed + Personalization + Price + Meal Relevance = Consumer Value

Gopuff's AI assistant attempts to solve precisely that equation.

The New Battlefront: Decision-Making

For years, retailers competed on location.

Then they competed on price.

Then they competed on delivery speed.

Today, they are competing on helping consumers decide.

The integration of AI-generated recommendations, voice ordering, personalized cart creation, and visual meal inspiration reflects a broader industry shift toward predictive commerce. Consumers increasingly want retailers to reduce the cognitive burden associated with meal planning.

This is where Gopuff's extensive transaction database becomes valuable. By leveraging hundreds of millions of transactions alongside real-time behavioral signals, the company seeks to anticipate needs before consumers begin searching.

The result is a shopping experience that increasingly resembles having a personal food concierge available 24 hours a day.


Why Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling Continues to Win

The most important aspect of Gopuff's AI strategy may not be the technology itself. It may be its ability to accelerate consumer adoption of mix-and-match meal bundling.

Long before AI entered the discussion, the Grocerant Guru® identified and quantified the power of combining multiple food components into customized meal solutions. Consumers increasingly reject rigid meal formats in favor of personalized combinations that fit their tastes, budgets, and lifestyles.

AI dramatically enhances that capability.

Instead of presenting individual products, Go presents contextual solutions:

·       Wings, beverages, and snacks for game day.

·       Healthy dinner combinations for busy families.

·       Low-calorie snack bundles.

·       Seasonal comfort food collections.

·       Gluten-free meal and dessert pairings.

These are not products.

These are meal solutions.

That distinction matters because consumers think in terms of occasions, not categories.


The Intersection of AI, Speed, and Value

The food industry has entered a period where consumers increasingly evaluate value differently than they did just five years ago.

In 2020, consumers prioritized safety and availability.

In 2024, consumers prioritized affordability amid inflation.

In 2025, consumers prioritized convenience and flexibility.

In 2026, consumers increasingly prioritize personalized value.

That means two consumers may purchase entirely different baskets and both believe they received exceptional value.

AI helps retailers create individualized value propositions at scale.

When paired with Gopuff's ability to deliver within approximately 15 minutes through its network of micro-fulfillment centers, the company is effectively combining three of the most powerful consumer drivers:

1.       Immediate gratification.

2.       Personalized recommendations.

3.       Customized meal assembly.

The result is a consumer experience that becomes increasingly difficult for traditional retailers operating with static merchandising strategies to replicate.


Dynamic Brands Win. Static Brands Lose.

The lesson here extends well beyond Gopuff.

Too many legacy food retailers continue operating with outdated merchandising structures, fixed promotions, and category-centric thinking. They continue organizing around departments while consumers organize around meal occasions.

Consumers are dynamic.

Their food needs change by daypart, weather, social activity, health goals, sporting events, family schedules, and budget constraints.

Retailers that remain static risk becoming irrelevant.

AI provides retailers with an opportunity to become more responsive, more personalized, and more relevant. However, technology alone is not the answer.

The winners will be those who use technology to create better food solutions.

The losers will be those who simply automate outdated merchandising practices.


Three Things Every Food Retailer Should Be Doing Now to Maintain Consumer Relevance

1. Build AI-Driven Meal Solution Platforms
Move beyond product recommendations and create personalized meal bundles that combine prepared foods, beverages, snacks, and grocery items around specific occasions and consumer needs.

2. Optimize the Price-Value-Service Equilibrium
Consumers continue evaluating purchases through the lens of price, value, and service. Retailers must constantly adjust promotions, assortment, and convenience offerings to maintain balance as economic conditions change.

3. Accelerate Frictionless Discovery
Whether through AI, voice ordering, mobile apps, digital loyalty programs, or personalized merchandising, retailers must reduce the effort required for consumers to find, select, and purchase meal solutions.

As the Grocerant Guru® has consistently stated, the future belongs to retailers that understand consumers are buying solutions, not products; meals, not channels; and relevance, not tradition.

The companies that successfully combine AI, speed, value, and mix-and-match meal bundling will be the ones that earn a larger share of consumers' food dollars in the years ahead.

Gain a Competitive Edge with a Grocerant ScoreCard

Unlock new opportunities with a Grocerant ScoreCard, designed to optimize product positioning, placement, and consumer engagement.

Since 1991, Foodservice Solutions® has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche—helping brands identify high-growth strategies that resonate with modern consumers.

Call 253-759-7869 or Email Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us






Friday, June 19, 2026

The Price-Value-Service Equation Is Broken—And Dynamic Brands Will Win the Next Food War

 


Bain & Company recently released research highlighting a growing challenge facing restaurant operators across America: consumers are pulling back. According to Bain, restaurant prices increased 13.5% between January 2023 and March 2026, while grocery prices rose just 5.5% during the same period. As a result, restaurant traffic declined 2.5% at quick-service restaurants and 1.7% at fast-casual chains.

Those numbers are important.

What's even more important is understanding why according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

For more than 30 years, the Grocerant Guru® has maintained that consumers do not buy food based solely on price. They purchase based on an ever-changing equilibrium balancing Price, Value, and Service. Over time that equation expanded to include convenience, portability, customization, social discovery, digital engagement, and trust.

Today that equation looks something like this:

Price + Quality + Service + Convenience + Portability + Personalization = Consumer Value

When any one component moves too far out of balance, consumers respond immediately.

That is exactly what Bain's research demonstrates.


Consumers Think Meals, Not Channels

One of the biggest mistakes still being made by legacy food industry analysts and brand managers is viewing competition through outdated retail channel definitions.

Consumers don't wake up deciding whether they will visit a convenience store, quick-service restaurant, grocery deli, meal kit provider, warehouse club, or fast-casual restaurant.

Consumers simply ask:

"What's for breakfast?"

"What's for lunch?"

"What's for dinner?"

The competition is for the meal occasion—not the channel.

The Grocerant Guru® has been calling this phenomenon "Channel Blurring" for decades. Today Channel Blurring is no longer emerging—it is the dominant force shaping food retail.

Consumers seamlessly migrate between restaurants, grocery prepared foods, convenience stores, warehouse clubs, meal bundles, delivery services, and digital ordering platforms depending on which option offers the best combination of value, convenience, quality, and experience.


Why Taco Bell's Strategy Works

Bain highlighted the success of Taco Bell's Luxe Cravings Boxes, offering bundled meal options at multiple price points.

The Grocerant Guru® views this as a textbook example of successful Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling.

Why does it work?

First, consumers perceive greater value because multiple menu components are bundled together in an easy-to-understand package.

Second, the offering creates repeat visitation because customers feel they are receiving a complete meal solution rather than purchasing individual products.

According to Bain, customers purchasing the boxes spent less per visit but returned 2.3 times more frequently, ultimately generating substantially higher annual spending.

That is exactly what successful meal bundling is designed to accomplish.


Why Chili's Reconnected With Consumers

Chili's 3-for-Me platform represents another powerful example of restoring the Price-Value-Service Equilibrium.

The offer combines:

• An entrée

• A beverage

• An appetizer

• Clear and understandable pricing

At a time when many consumers felt menu pricing had become unpredictable, Chili's simplified the buying decision.

The result was impressive growth despite no meaningful unit expansion.

More importantly, Chili's reminded consumers that value is not always about being the cheapest option.

Value is about feeling confident that what you receive is worth what you paid.


Domino's and the Power of Disruptive Value

Bain also highlighted Domino's "Best Deal Ever" promotion.

This is an example of what the Grocerant Guru® calls "Traffic Trigger Marketing."

These offers create social conversation, digital engagement, media coverage, and consumer urgency simultaneously.

The promotion worked because:

1.       It generated immediate attention among value-seeking consumers.

2.       It reactivated lapsed customers who had stopped considering the brand.

In today's marketplace, occasional disruptive value promotions can create substantial traffic gains when integrated with loyalty platforms and digital ordering systems.


The Next Competitive Battleground: Personalization

Bain correctly identifies personalization as the next major opportunity.

Artificial intelligence, loyalty programs, predictive analytics, and digital engagement tools are enabling brands to communicate with consumers individually rather than collectively.

The Grocerant Guru® believes that the winners over the next five years will not necessarily be the brands with the lowest prices.

They will be the brands that make each consumer feel understood.

Personalized offers, personalized meal recommendations, personalized bundles, and personalized value messaging will increasingly drive traffic and frequency.


Dynamic Brands Win. Static Brands Decline.

The most important lesson from Bain's findings may be the simplest.

Brands must be dynamic.

Not static.

Far too many Neanderthal brand managers remain obsessed with protecting yesterday's business model, yesterday's pricing structure, yesterday's customer, and yesterday's definition of success.

Those managers seek stability.

Consumers seek relevance.

When leadership prioritizes maintaining the status quo over meeting evolving consumer needs, customers eventually capitulate and migrate elsewhere.

At the same time, the brand slowly devalues its own marketplace relevance.

History repeatedly shows that consumers reward innovation, transparency, value, convenience, personalization, and meal-based solutions.

They punish complacency.


Think About This

Bain's research validates what the Grocerant Guru® has been documenting for decades.

Consumers are not abandoning restaurants.

Consumers are abandoning value propositions that no longer work.

The brands winning today are restoring balance to the Price-Value-Service Equilibrium through strategic meal bundling, personalized engagement, innovative menu development, disruptive promotions, and operational excellence.

The future belongs to companies that recognize a simple truth:

Consumers are dynamic.

Therefore, brands must be dynamic as well.

In a world defined by Channel Blur, Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling, and evolving meal occasions, relevance is no longer protected by legacy. It is earned every day through value delivered and expectations exceeded.

Tap into the Foodservice Solutions® team for greater understanding of New Electricity or for a Grocerant Program Assessment, Grocerant ScoreCard, or for product positioning or placement assistance, or call our Grocerant Guru®.  Since 1991 www.FoodserviceSolutions.us  of Tacoma, WA has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche. Contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or 253-759-7869