Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Why Foodservice Retailers Must Embrace the Grocerant Era

 


The latest NielsenIQ report confirms what  Steven Johnson the Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® has been signaling for years: the convenience channel is losing trips because it is still merchandising for yesterday’s consumer. The data is unambiguous—33% of shoppers say they’re visiting less often, and trips per buyer are down 2.2% .

The era of “fast is enough” is over. Consumers are no longer rewarding speed alone—they’re rewarding value, wellness, credibility, and time well spent. As the report states, “Speed is no longer enough. C-stores must deliver experiences that feel worth the stop, not just fast.”

This is the moment for the convenience channel to evolve from impulse-driven merchandising to intention-driven meal solutions—the core of the grocerant model.

 


The Trip Decline Is Real—and Predictable

NIQ’s data shows a channel contracting on multiple fronts:

·       Trips per buyer: –2.2%

·       Units per trip: –1.4%

·       Penetration: –0.2%

·       Dollars per buyer: +0.4% (inflation‑driven, not demand‑driven)

·       Price per unit: +2.4%

Consumers are telling us exactly why they’re pulling back:

·       50%: High prices

·       41%: Avoiding impulse

·       22%: On the go less

·       17%: Buying less alcohol

·       16%: Health goals

·       13%: Limited selection

The No. 1 trip killer is price. But the deeper issue is value mismatch. As NIQ’s Chris Costagli puts it:

“Convenience is shedding its vice-based past: as price fatigue bites, label literacy surges, EVs curb pump trips and GLP-1 reshapes appetites, shoppers now define value as wellness, credibility and time well spent.”

This is the clearest signal yet that the convenience channel must pivot from vice-based merchandising to wellness-led, meal‑centric retailing—the foundation of the grocerant movement.

 


Wellness Is the New Impulse

NIQ reports that “better for you is outperforming in c-stores, with double-digit growth and above-average gains in claims such as protein, gluten-free, and no artificial colors.”

This is not a fad. It’s a structural shift driven by:

·       GLP‑1 appetite suppression

·       EV adoption reducing fuel‑related trips

·       Label literacy among Gen Z and Millennials

·       A cultural pivot toward functional foods

The Grocerant Guru® has long argued that the consumer is migrating toward fresh, fast, and frictionless. Today’s data proves it.

 


The Grocerant Model Solves the Convenience Channel’s Demand Problem

For 25+ years, Foodservice Solutions® has documented the rise of Ready‑2‑Eat and Heat‑N‑Eat fresh prepared meals as the most powerful driver of retail food traffic.

The NIQ findings align perfectly with the 5P’s of Food Marketing:

1. Product

Consumers want fresh prepared meals, not just packaged snacks.

2. Packaging

Portability is now a value multiplier, not a feature.

3. Placement

Mission‑based merchandising beats category‑based merchandising.

4. Portability

The #1 driver of incremental trips across all retail food channels.

5. Price

Consumers accept premium pricing—when value is visible.

 


Incremental Industry Data That Strengthens the Case

To contextualize NIQ’s findings, consider the broader food landscape:

Segment

Key Data Point

Why It Matters

C‑store foodservice

7th consecutive year of growth

Consumers trust c‑stores for meals—if quality is high

Costco Deli

$3.8B+ in annual sales

Outsells most restaurant chains

Grocery fresh prepared

12–14% of total sales; up to 22% of profit

Fresh prepared drives margin and trips

Restaurant takeout

51% of consumers order weekly

Portability is now a national habit

Gen Z

63% prefer meals they can eat “on the move”

Portability = relevance

The convenience channel is perfectly positioned to win—if it stops acting like a snack shop and starts acting like a grocerant.

 


What C‑Stores Must Do Now

The NIQ report makes one thing clear: the channel must engineer new reasons to visit.

That means:

·       Curating meal‑centric missions (breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacking)

·       Expanding better‑for‑you assortments

·       Rebalancing price architecture to restore trust

·       Investing in fresh prepared, not just packaged goods

·       Designing stores around intentional trips, not impulse racks

The grocerant model is not a trend—it is the operating system for the next decade of retail food growth.

 


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. The New Value Equation Is Time + Wellness + Credibility

Price matters, but perceived value matters more. Consumers reward retailers who save them time and support their health goals.

2. Fresh Prepared Food Is the Only Category That Rebuilds Trip Frequency

Snacks don’t drive trips anymore. Meals do. Retailers who lead with fresh prepared win the daypart battle.

3. Portability Is the Most Undervalued Growth Lever in C‑stores

Portable meals, snacks, and beverages create multi‑occasion relevance, the key to reversing declining trips.

Are you ready for some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing ideas look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested in learning how our Grocerant Guru® can edify your retail food brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient meal participationdifferentiation and individualization?  Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: us on our social media sites by clicking one of the following links: Facebook,  LinkedIn, or Twitter



Tuesday, March 31, 2026

McDonald’s Has Lost the Plot — and Consumers Are Walking Away

 


For decades, McDonald’s has been the gravitational center of American fast food — a brand so large, so omnipresent, that it seemed immune to the pressures reshaping the rest of the restaurant industry. But in 2024–2026, the Golden Arches have begun to flicker. Not because of a single scandal or a fleeting trend, but because of a deeper, structural erosion of consumer trust, affordability, and operational consistency.

The data tells a story the industry can no longer ignore: McDonald’s is on the wrong path, and consumers are voting with their wallets.

 


The Price of Fast Food Has Outpaced the Price of Reality

Fast food was built on a simple promise — quick, consistent, affordable. Today, only two of those remain.

Between 2019 and 2024, McDonald’s menu prices rose roughly 40%, according to company fact sheets. A Quarter Pounder with Cheese meal that cost $5.39 in 2014 now runs $11.99, a doubling that outpaced both wages and grocery inflation.

Consumers noticed. And they adjusted.

Cooking at home is no longer a lifestyle choice — it’s a financial necessity. When a family of four can buy a full grocery meal for the price of two McDonald’s combos, the value equation collapses.

 


Sales Declines Reveal a Brand in Retreat

McDonald’s recently posted its worst quarterly performance since 2020, with U.S. same‑store sales falling 3.6% and global sales down 1.5%.

For a company of this scale, a one‑percent dip is a tremor. A three‑percent drop is a structural crack.

Executives blamed “consumer pressures.” But consumers didn’t change — McDonald’s did. The brand raised prices faster than it raised value, and the market is responding accordingly.

 


The $5 Meal Deal: A Band‑Aid, Not a Strategy

In a scramble to win back budget‑conscious diners, McDonald’s launched the $5 Meal Deal, a defensive move that acknowledges what consumers have been saying for two years:

McDonald’s is no longer affordable.

But value isn’t a promotion — it’s a philosophy. A temporary discount cannot repair a long‑term trust deficit.

 

Food Safety Incidents Undermine the Last Pillar of Trust

Late‑2024 listeria and E. coli disruptions further damaged consumer confidence. Food safety failures are uniquely corrosive because they strike at the core of the brand promise.

When trust erodes, loyalty evaporates.

 


Competitors Are Winning the Value War

While McDonald’s stumbled, others surged:

·       Taco Bell: +7% same‑store sales

·       KFC: +1%

·       Domino’s and Chili’s: strong value‑driven growth

Consumers aren’t rejecting fast food. They’re rejecting bad value.

 

The Grocerant Effect: Retail Prepared Foods Are Eating QSR’s Lunch

The National Restaurant Association’s 2025 State of the Industry report confirms what grocerants have known for years:

Consumers want restaurant-quality meals at grocery pricing, with portability and convenience baked in.

Fresh prepared retail — Ready‑2‑Eat and Heat‑N‑Eat — is outperforming traditional QSR because it delivers value, flavor, and flexibility without the sticker shock.

McDonald’s once owned that space. Today, it’s losing ground to supermarkets, convenience stores, and meal‑solution retailers who understand the modern consumer better than the world’s largest restaurant chain.

 


McDonald’s Isn’t Just Having a Bad Year — It’s Facing a Strategic Reckoning

The brand’s challenges are not cyclical. They are structural.

Consumers are telling McDonald’s exactly what they want:
Fair prices, consistent quality, and a return to the value‑driven identity that built the brand.

Until McDonald’s listens, the declines will continue — and the headlines will keep coming.

 


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Price without value is a broken promise.

Consumers will pay more when the meal delivers more. McDonald’s raised prices without raising value, creating a widening trust gap.

2. Portability is the new battleground.

Grocerant‑style Ready‑2‑Eat and Heat‑N‑Eat meals outperform because they deliver restaurant flavor at grocery pricing — the sweet spot McDonald’s abandoned.

3. The 5 P’s of Food Marketing must work together.

Product, Packaging, Placement, Portability, and Price are a system. McDonald’s currently excels at only two. The imbalance is costing them customers.

For international corporate presentations, educational forums, or keynotes contact: Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions.  His extensive experience as a multi-unit restaurant operator, consultant, brand / product positioning expert and public speaking will leave success clues for all. For more information visit www.GrocerantGuru.com , www.FoodserviceSolutions.us or call    1-253-759-7869



Monday, March 30, 2026

Panda Express: A 40-Year Case Study in Scalable Grocerant Strategy

 


From a single mall-based concept in 1983 to a $6+ billion powerhouse, Panda Express has quietly engineered one of the most disciplined growth stories in foodservice. For restaurant operators, c-stores, and grocers, Panda is not just a brand—it is a blueprint for how the “Grocerant” model (prepared foods + convenience + bundling) scales profitably over decades.

 


Historical Foundation: From Mall Food Court to National Platform

Founded in 1983 by Andrew Cherng and Peggy Cherng, Panda Express pioneered American Chinese cuisine at scale, initially anchored in high-traffic mall locations.

The early operating model was simple but powerful:

·       Limited SKUs with high flavor consistency

·       Visual merchandising via steam tables

·       Fast throughput + perceived freshness

That combination became the foundation for what is now recognized as food-forward convenience retailing.

 


Unit Growth: Controlled, Disciplined Expansion

Panda Express has grown from a single unit to more than 2,500 locations globally by 2025.

Key Growth Milestones

·       2007: 1,052 units

·       2015: 1,790 units

·       2020: 2,263 units

·       2025: ~2,500+ units

The brand’s expansion strategy is notable for consistency over volatility:

·       Adds ~50–100 units annually

·       Majority corporate-owned (tight operational control)

·       Expansion into suburban, drive-thru, and international markets

This is not hyper-growth—it is precision scaling, which preserves unit economics.

 


Sales Growth: The Power of Average Unit Volume (AUV)

Panda Express is not just growing units—it is growing productivity per box.

Estimated AUV Progression (20-Year View)

Year

Units

System Sales

Est. AUV

2005 (est.)

~900

~$1.5B

~$1.6M

2015

1,790

$2.55B

~$1.4M

2021

~2,300

$4.4B

~$1.95M

2022

~2,374

$5.1B

~$2.18M

2024

~2,505

$6.2B

~$2.4M+

Key takeaway:
Over 20 years, Panda Express has increased AUV by roughly 50%–70%, while also expanding its footprint—an uncommon dual achievement in foodservice.

 


The Grocerant Intersection: Why Panda Express Wins

Panda Express sits squarely at the intersection of four converging consumer behaviors:

1. Mix & Match Meal Component Bundling

The Panda model is fundamentally a modular meal assembly system:

·       Bowl (1 entrée + base)

·       Plate (2 entrées + base)

·       Bigger Plate (3 entrées)

This is classic Grocerant logic:

·       Consumer controls value perception

·       Incremental upsell is frictionless

·       Margin expands with each added protein

2. Takeout-First Architecture

Unlike legacy QSR, Panda was built for off-premise consumption before it was a trend:

·       Clamshell packaging

·       High hold-quality menu items (sauced proteins, fried rice)

·       Limited dependence on dine-in experience

3. Drive-Thru Acceleration

Recent growth is heavily tied to drive-thru expansion, aligning Panda with:

·       QSR convenience

·       Suburban migration patterns

·       Time-starved consumers

4. Retail + Restaurant Convergence

Panda Express effectively operates as:

·       A restaurant

·       A prepared foods retailer

·       A bundled meal solution provider

That is the definition of a Grocerant hybrid model.

Why It Works: Operational Economics

Panda Express has engineered a system where:

·       Throughput is high (assembly-line service)

·       Labor is semi-specialized (wok + steam table execution)

·       Menu complexity is controlled

·       Food cost is optimized via batch cooking

This enables:

·       High AUV

·       Strong margins

·       Scalable replication across formats (mall, inline, drive-thru, travel plaza)

 


Grocerant Guru® Insights: The Strategic Takeaways

From the perspective of Steven Johnson, Grocerant Guru®, Panda Express offers four forward-looking lessons for restaurants, c-stores, and grocery operators:

1. Bundle Architecture Drives Margin Expansion

Consumers don’t buy items—they buy configurations.
Operators must shift from SKU pricing to bundle-based value engineering.

2. Visual Food Merchandising Still Wins

Steam tables and visible food drive impulse purchases.
Digital ordering is rising—but see-it, crave-it, buy-it still converts best.

3. Off-Premise Is the Core, Not the Channel

Panda built its system for portability first.
Restaurants must design menus where:

·       Quality travels

·       Packaging preserves integrity

·       Speed is operationalized

4. Grocerant Convergence Is Accelerating

The lines between:

·       Restaurants

·       Grocery prepared foods

·       Convenience stores

…are disappearing.
The winners will be those who master fresh, fast, bundled, and portable meals at scale.

 


Think About This

Panda Express is not just a fast-casual success story—it is a 40-year validation of the Grocerant model.

It proves that when you align:

·       Modular menu design

·       Off-premise convenience

·       High-visibility food presentation

·       Disciplined unit economics

…you don’t just grow—you compound.

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