Friday, May 8, 2026

WIC Authorization at CVS Isn’t Adoption: Why CVS Health, Walgreens, and Drug Chains Still Face a Long Road to Relevance

 


The headline sounds like progress—but let’s not confuse authorization with adoption. What CVS Health has accomplished in Rhode Island is operational alignment, not behavioral change. And in the WIC ecosystem, behavior—where and how benefits are actually redeemed—is everything.

Meanwhile, competitors like Walgreens and other drug store operators face the same structural friction: WIC shoppers are highly rational, value-maximizing, and habit-driven. Simply “accepting WIC” does not make a retailer a preferred destination.

The Reality Check: WIC Is Massive—but Highly Selective in Where It Flows

WIC isn’t niche—it’s foundational. According to the USDA Economic Research Service, the program serves ~6.7 million participants monthly, including roughly 41% of all U.S. infants. That’s not just traffic—that’s repeat, high-frequency, basket-building traffic.

Yet historically, that traffic consolidates in grocery, mass, and dollar channels, not drug stores. Why? Because WIC redemption is less about availability and more about optimization.

 


Six Reasons WIC Adoption Will Be Slow at CVS, Walgreens, and Drug Chains

1. Limited Basket Eligibility = Limited Trip Value

CVS in Rhode Island currently accepts WIC for infant formula only. That creates a single-SKU trip mission, not a full basket. WIC shoppers prefer retailers where they can complete the entire benefit package—milk, cereal, juice, eggs, peanut butter—in one trip.

2. Price Perception Gap

Drug stores carry a long-standing price premium perception versus grocers and dollar stores. Even if WIC covers specific items, shoppers still evaluate out-of-pocket add-ons, and drug stores routinely lose that comparison.

3. Assortment Misalignment

WIC is highly prescriptive. Approved SKUs must match exact sizes, brands, and formulations. Drug stores historically curate for convenience, not compliance. That mismatch leads to out-of-stocks or non-qualifying items on shelf.

4. In-Store Friction and Confusion

WIC transactions are not simple. Labeling, shelf tags, and POS clarity matter. Grocery chains have spent decades refining this. Drug stores are still early in execution, increasing transaction anxiety and abandoned baskets.

5. Lack of Habitual Trip Anchors

WIC shoppers build routines. Grocery stores anchor trips with fresh foods and weekly stock-ups. Drug stores lack that habitual cadence, making them secondary or emergency-use channels.

6. No Integrated Value Narrative

WIC households are among the most promotion-sensitive segments in retail. Drug chains underutilize cross-category bundling, meal solutions, and incentive stacking that drive repeat visits.

 


Six Strategic Fixes to Accelerate WIC Adoption at CVS and Walgreens

1. Expand Beyond Infant Formula Immediately

Authorization must evolve into full WIC basket participation. Without it, drug stores remain a “fill-in” channel.

2. Engineer Price Trust

Introduce WIC-adjacent price locks or “basket parity guarantees” on key complementary items. Perception matters as much as reality.

3. Rebuild Assortment Around Compliance

Use planogram science to ensure 100% WIC SKU coverage with consistent in-stock levels. This is a data discipline problem, not a merchandising guess.

4. Radically Simplify the Experience

·       Clear shelf tags (“WIC Approved”)

·       App-based scanning for eligibility

·       Staff training for frictionless checkout

Execution at shelf > marketing headlines.

5. Create Trip Missions, Not Transactions

Bundle WIC items with adjacent essentials (diapers, wipes, OTC health). The goal: increase trip productivity per visit.

6. Localize and Community-Integrate

Partner with clinics, pediatricians, and WIC offices to position stores as trusted access points, not just authorized retailers.

 


The Strategic Gap: Authorization vs. Preference

Rhode Island is a milestone—but it’s a supply-side win. Demand-side conversion is still wide open. Until CVS and peers solve for basket completeness, price trust, and trip efficiency, WIC redemption will continue to concentrate in traditional food retail.

 


Grocerant Guru® Insights: How Drug Stores Can Win with Mix-and-Match Meal Bundling

The real unlock isn’t just WIC—it’s what you do around WIC. Drug stores have an underleveraged opportunity to create “grocerant-style” relevance.

1. Bundle for Behavior, Not Just Price

Create mix-and-match meal solutions adjacent to WIC items:

·       Infant formula + parent meal kit (ready-to-eat or heat-and-eat)

·       Breakfast bundles (WIC cereal + milk + discounted add-on fruit cup)

This drives dual-need fulfillment in one trip.

2. Leverage Daypart Economics

WIC households shop with purpose—but also with time constraints. Offer:

·       $5–$10 bundled meal deals

·       Evening “family fill-in” packs

Drug stores can win in convenience-driven dayparts where grocers are less agile.

3. Turn Healthcare Access into Food Access

With clinics embedded in many locations, CVS Health and Walgreens can uniquely connect:

·       Nutrition guidance

·       WIC redemption

·       Ready-to-eat meal solutions

That’s not retail—that’s an ecosystem play.

 


Bottom Line

CVS’s Rhode Island expansion is a noteworthy operational step—but without fixing assortment, pricing optics, and trip economics, WIC adoption will remain slow and fragmented. The winners in this space won’t be those who accept WIC—they’ll be those who design around how WIC customers actually shop, eat, and live.

Success Leaves Clues—Are You Ready to Find Yours?

One key insight that continues to drive success is this: "The consumer is dynamic, not static." This principle is the foundation of our work at Foodservice Solutions®, where Steven Johnson, the Grocerant Guru®, has been helping brands stay relevant in an ever-evolving market.

Want to strengthen your brand’s connection with today’s consumers? Let’s talk. Call 253-759-7869 for more information.

Stay Ahead of the Competition with Fresh Ideas

Is your food marketing keeping up with tomorrow’s trends—or stuck in yesterday’s playbook? If you're ready for fresh ideations that set your brand apart, we’re here to help.

At Foodservice Solutions®, we specialize in consumer-driven retail food strategies that enhance convenience, differentiation, and individualization—key factors in driving growth.

Email us at Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us Connect with us on social media: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter




Thursday, May 7, 2026

When “Cultural Relevance” Becomes Costly Noise — KFC, the Met Gala, and the Misallocation of Marketing Capital

 


The latest KFC Met Gala activation—built on rumors of celebrity chicken cravings and executed through real-time discount triggers tied to red carpet fashion—reads less like a strategic brand move and more like a textbook case of bandwagon marketing drift. It’s attention-seeking, yes. But attention is not the same as transactional conversion, nor does it build durable brand equity in the mind’s eye of Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

Let’s break this down through the lens of marketing efficiency, franchisee ROI, and historical precedent.

 


1. The Core Problem: Misalignment Between Audience, Occasion, and Purchase Intent

The Met Gala is an ultra-premium, invitation-only cultural event with fewer than 1,000 attendees and a global digital audience skewing toward fashion, luxury, and celebrity voyeurism—not QSR purchase intent.

From a funnel perspective:

·       Top-of-funnel impressions: High (social chatter, earned media)

·       Mid-funnel consideration: Weak (no contextual link to hunger occasions)

·       Bottom-funnel conversion: Minimal (discount tied to abstract fashion cues)

This creates what I call “disconnected demand signaling”—you’re talking to millions, but almost none are in a buying mindset for fried chicken at that moment.

Food marketing data point:
Industry benchmarks show that occasion-based promotions tied to core dayparts (lunch/dinner) outperform event-based novelty campaigns by 2.3x in conversion rate (QSR internal studies, 2022–2024 aggregated benchmarks).

 


2. Bandwagon Branding: The Illusion of Cultural Relevance

KFC is not alone. Brands routinely chase cultural moments under the assumption that visibility equals relevance. Historically, that assumption fails more often than it succeeds.

Historical Pattern #1: Super Bowl “Real-Time” Social Hijacks

·       Hundreds of brands attempt reactive content during the Super Bowl annually.

·       Only ~3–5% generate measurable sales lift.

·       The rest create engagement without elasticity—likes without transactions.

Historical Pattern #2: “Luxury Mashups” (Caviar + Fast Food)

·       Viral spikes (e.g., $100 nugget + caviar concepts) generate short-lived curiosity

·       No sustained menu adoption at scale

·       Consumers revert to value-driven ordering behavior within 7–10 days

Historical Pattern #3: Hashtag-Driven Promotions

·       Campaigns tied to trending hashtags typically see:

o   High impressions

o   Low redemption rates (<1.5%)

o   Minimal repeat purchase impact

This KFC activation sits squarely in that pattern: borrowed relevance, not owned relevance.

 


3. Franchisee Economics: Who Actually Pays for This?

Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Campaigns like this are often funded—directly or indirectly—by franchisee marketing contributions.

That raises a critical question:

What is the measurable return on this spend at the unit level?

Let’s examine:

·       50% off a 12-piece bucket

o   Deep discounting compresses margins

o   Likely attracts deal-seekers, not loyalists

·       Short activation window (same-day, event-triggered)

o   Limits operational planning

o   Creates inconsistent traffic spikes, not sustained throughput

Foodservice financial reality:

·       Average QSR franchise operates on 10–15% EBITDA margins

·       Deep discount promotions can reduce item-level profitability by 30–50%

So, unless this campaign drives incremental traffic beyond cannibalization, it is effectively trading margin for noise.

 


4. The “Playful High-Low” Fallacy

The CMO’s statement about “playful, high-low food moments” reflects a broader industry narrative—but the data doesn’t fully support it at scale.

Consumers consistently demonstrate:

·       Value sensitivity > novelty interest

·       Convenience > cultural alignment

·       Taste consistency > experiential gimmicks

Key insight:
“High-low” works as PR theater, not as a repeatable revenue model.

 


5. Category Context: Chicken Segment Softening

The timing is particularly problematic.

·       The chicken QSR category has experienced traffic deceleration

·        competitive pressure from:

o   Grocery prepared foods (grocerants)

o   Convenience stores upgrading hot food programs

o   Fast-casual entrants

In a softening category, the strategic priority should be:

·       Frequency building

·       Menu clarity

·       Operational consistency

·       Value perception stability

Not episodic stunt marketing.

 


6. What Actually Works (and Has Historically Worked)

Let’s contrast this with proven growth levers:

A. Occasion Ownership

Brands that win dominate specific use cases:

·       “Game day”

·       “Family dinner”

·       “Late-night craving”

B. Menu Innovation with Repeatability

·       Limited-time offers that convert to permanent items

·       Flavor extensions tied to existing demand curves

C. Local Store Marketing (LSM)

·       Hyper-targeted promotions

·       Community integration

·       Measurable traffic lift

D. Digital Loyalty Ecosystems

·       Personalized offers outperform mass promotions by 3–5x in redemption

 


7. The Strategic Verdict

From the Grocerant Guru® standpoint:

This campaign is not inherently “bad”—it generates awareness—but it is strategically inefficient given:

·       Weak alignment with purchase occasions

·       Poor conversion mechanics

·       Margin-eroding promotional structure

·       Limited franchisee-level ROI

It is marketing theater, not marketing performance.

 


8. Four Grocerant Guru® Insights

1.       Relevance without context is wasted spend.
Cultural moments must connect to when and why people eat, not just what they watch.

2.       Discounting is not a strategy—it’s a symptom.
Heavy price cuts signal brand weakness when not tied to clear demand drivers.

3.       Viral is not viable.
If it doesn’t repeat at scale, it doesn’t build a business.

4.       Franchisee dollars demand accountability.
Every campaign should answer one question: Does this drive incremental, profitable traffic at the unit level?

If the objective is a “Kentucky Fried Comeback,” the path forward isn’t chasing red carpets—it’s owning the dinner table again.

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