Thursday, April 9, 2026

Fire, Flavor, and Frequency: Why Tucson’s Tito & Pep Is Goldmine in Disguise

 


A Modern Desert Dining Experience

From the vantage point of the Grocerant Guru®, what’s happening inside Tito & Pep isn’t just “fine dining”—it’s a case study in how experience-driven foodservice is outpacing traditional retail food models.

Set in Midtown Tucson, the restaurant delivers a chic mid-century modern aesthetic paired with an intimate yet energetic atmosphere. That matters more than ever: 70%+ of consumers now say ambiance influences repeat visits as much as food quality (industry composite data). Tito & Pep understands this—design is not décor, it’s strategy.

Fire-Powered Flavor Meets Menu Precision

The menu at Tito & Pep is deliberately tight—and that’s a winning move in today’s high-cost environment.

Signature dishes include:

·       Charcoal-grilled octopus (leveraging live-fire cooking—one of the fastest-growing culinary trends)

·       Jerk-rubbed pork chops (cross-cultural flavor layering drives trial)

·       Buttermilk panna cotta with passionfruit (acid-forward desserts are trending up 18% year-over-year)

Here’s the foodservice truth:
Restaurants with smaller, seasonal menus see up to 22% less food waste and 15% higher perceived value by guests.

That’s not just culinary creativity—that’s margin management.


Chef-Driven Credibility Drives Traffic

At the helm is John Martinez, a James Beard–nominated chef whose influence extends beyond the plate. Chef-driven brands now account for a growing share of independent restaurant success, with consumer trust increasing by nearly 30% when a named chef is attached to the concept.

Recognition matters—but localized credibility matters more. Being named among Tucson’s top restaurants by local diners is a stronger frequency driver than national press. Why?
Because repeat business is hyper-local.

The Grocerant Angle: What Retailers Should Learn

Let’s be clear—Tito & Pep is not trying to be a grocery store. But grocery stores should absolutely be learning from Tito & Pep.

Key Food Marketing Data Points:

·       62% of consumers want “restaurant-quality meals at home,” yet only 28% believe grocery stores deliver

·       Live-fire and “chef-crafted” claims increase purchase intent by up to 35%

·       Rotating menus drive urgency—limited-time offers outperform static menus by 20% in trial

The Real Takeaway

Tito & Pep wins because it delivers what I call “Craveable Differentiation”—a combination of flavor, fire, and feeling that cannot be commoditized.

 


Three Grocerant Guru® Insights

1. Experience is the New Product
Consumers are no longer just buying food—they’re buying a moment. Retailers stuck in transactional thinking will continue to lose share to experiential dining.

2. Small Menus, Big Impact
Less is more. Curated, seasonal, chef-driven assortments outperform bloated SKUs every time—both in restaurants and grocery prepared foods.

3. Fire Sells—Literally
Live-fire cooking signals authenticity, craftsmanship, and premium value. Expect to see more grocerants attempting to replicate this—but few will execute it at Tito & Pep’s level.

 


Think About This:
Tito & Pep isn’t just a top Tucson restaurant—it’s a blueprint for where food retail must go next if it wants to stay relevant in the age of experience-first consumption.

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



Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Grocery Stores Race for Relevance with Time-Starved Consumers

 


Today’s consumer is not just value-driven—they are time-starved, convenience-focused, and increasingly replacing restaurant visits with retail meal solutions. This behavioral shift is forcing grocery retailers to rethink their role, moving from traditional food sellers to meal solution providers competing directly for “Share of Stomach.”

Stop & Shop: Repositioning Dinner Around Convenience

Stop & Shop is accelerating its push into prepared foods with a redesigned hot bar program built specifically for dinner.

Key elements of the strategy include:

·       A dedicated dinner daypart (4 p.m. to 7 p.m.)

·       Expanded protein and side dish variety designed for mix-and-match meals

·       Globally inspired options such as Thai coconut chicken and pork burnt ends

·       A price reduction to $9.99 per pound, improving value perception

This approach reflects a critical shift: consumers are no longer planning meals—they are assembling them quickly based on immediate needs.


According to FMI – The Food Industry Association (2025):

·       28% of shoppers purchase prepared foods as a substitute for restaurant meals, up from 12% in 2017

·       Younger consumers show a strong preference for customizable, globally inspired meal options

 


Grocery Competitors Expanding Fresh Prepared Food Strategies

Kroger: Scaling Meal Solutions

Kroger continues to invest heavily in fresh prepared foods:

·       Expansion of Home Chef meal kits and ready-to-eat offerings

·       Use of centralized kitchens to improve consistency and scale

·       Integration with digital ordering and curbside pickup

2024–2025 Insight: Prepared meals and meal kits have delivered strong growth, outperforming many traditional grocery categories.

 



Whole Foods Market: Premium “Grocerant” Experience

Whole Foods continues to lead in premium prepared foods:

·       Chef-driven hot bars with rotating global menus

·       Expanded grab-and-go refrigerated meals

·       Emphasis on fresh, clean-label ingredients

Prepared foods remain one of the company’s highest-frequency and highest-margin categories, especially among urban consumers seeking convenience without sacrificing quality.

 


Walmart: Value-Driven Ready-to-Eat Meals

Walmart is focusing on affordability and scale:

·       Expansion of low-cost meal bundles ($5–$7 range)

·       Strong presence of family-sized prepared meals

·       Continued growth in deli and hot food offerings

2026 Trend: Walmart is gaining traction with consumers who want restaurant alternatives at a lower price point.

 


The Macro Shift: From Grocery Store to Meal Solution Destination

Consumers today are prioritizing:

·       Speed: Meals ready in minutes

·       Flexibility: Mix-and-match components rather than fixed meals

·       Variety: Global flavors and rotating options

·       Value: Restaurant-quality meals at grocery prices

This is driving the rise of the “grocerant” model, where grocery stores function like restaurants by offering fresh, prepared, and ready-to-eat foods.

Prepared foods are now among the fastest-growing areas in grocery retail, particularly in the perimeter of the store.

 


Why It Matters: Competing for Share of Stomach

The competition is no longer just grocery versus grocery. It is:

·       Grocery stores

·       Restaurants

·       Convenience stores

·       Meal delivery platforms

All are competing for the same meal occasions.

Winning requires:

·       Relevance at the moment of need

·       Reduced friction in meal decisions

·       Strong value combined with convenience

Stop & Shop’s strategy signals that dinner is becoming an on-demand decision, not a pre-planned event.

 


Grocerant Guru® Perspective: Three Critical Insights

1. Dinner Is the Most Undervalued Opportunity in Grocery
Retailers must aggressively target the dinner daypart with fresh, ready-to-eat solutions or risk losing customers to restaurants and quick-service operators.

2. Modular Meals Are the Future
Consumers want control. Offering protein + sides + add-ons allows shoppers to quickly build meals that fit their preferences, budgets, and time constraints.

3. Relevance Requires Execution, Not Intention
Grocery stores that fail to invest in fresh prepared food ecosystems will continue to lose Share of Stomach. The time to act is now—those who delay will fall further behind competitors who already meet consumers where they are.

 


Think About This:
The time-starved consumer is redefining food retail. Grocery stores must evolve into destination meal providers, delivering speed, quality, and flexibility—or risk becoming less relevant with every meal decision.

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



Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Reoccurring Customer Visits Drive Incremental Revenue Faster

 


The growth algorithm across all sectors of food retail—restaurants, convenience stores, and grocery service delis—has converged on one immutable truth according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®:  frequency of visits is the most reliable driver of incremental revenue and long-term profitability.

What was once a convenience-store insight is now a cross-channel mandate.

A recent study from Vontier found that just 24% of customers (“Super-Users”) account for a disproportionate share of visits and revenue, driven not by discounts, but by habit, familiarity, and emotional connection. That behavioral pattern is not isolated—it is replicating across restaurant chains and grocery foodservice operations.

 


The Cross-Sector Frequency Flywheel

Whether the platform is a convenience store, quick-service restaurant, fast casual concept, or grocery deli, the economic model is identical:

·       More visits = more occasions

·       More occasions = more attachment opportunities

·       More attachment = higher lifetime value

The question is no longer “How do we increase ticket?”
The question is “How do we earn the next visit—tomorrow?”

 


Convenience Stores: From Transactional to Habitual

The Vontier data highlights five drivers of repeat visits—familiarity, safety, food relevance, bundling, and dwell time—all of which are now baseline expectations.

Operators like 7-Eleven and Wawa have proven that digital ecosystems combined with strong food offerings drive higher visit frequency. Meanwhile, Sheetz continues to win with younger consumers by delivering customized, daypart-driven food experiences, not just fuel stops.

 


Restaurant Sector: Engineering Daily Relevance

Restaurants have been highly effective at engineering frequency into daily routines.

At Starbucks, more than half of U.S. transactions are tied to its loyalty platform, but the real driver is ritual behavior—morning coffee, afternoon recharge, and mobile order convenience. Frequency is built into the customer’s day.

McDonald's has focused on value platforms and digital ordering, increasing visit frequency through expanded dayparts such as breakfast, snacks, and late night.

Fast casual leaders like Chipotle Mexican Grill report that digital customers visit more often than non-digital users, driven by ease of use and customization.

Subscription models are also reshaping behavior. Panera Bread has shown that beverage subscriptions significantly increase visit frequency, even when individual transactions are low in value, because they create consistent habits.

 


Grocery Service Deli: A Big Battleground

The most underappreciated—and fastest evolving—frequency driver is inside the grocery store: the service deli and prepared foods department.

Retailers are shifting from selling ingredients to providing ready-to-eat meal solutions for immediate consumption.

At Kroger, prepared foods and meal solutions are designed to capture multiple visits per week, especially around dinner. The goal is to replace restaurant visits with in-store foodservice occasions.

Whole Foods Market has positioned its prepared foods section as a restaurant alternative, offering chef-driven meals and grab-and-go options that drive frequent visits, particularly in urban markets.

Regional leaders like H-E-B have gone further by integrating restaurant-quality meals and in-store dining, blurring the line between grocery and foodservice.

Even traditional operators like Albertsons are investing in upgraded deli and prepared food programs, recognizing that fresh and ready-to-eat foods drive more trips than center-store products.

 


Food as the Universal Frequency Anchor

Across all sectors, one insight stands out:

Food is the primary driver of repeat visits.

·       In convenience stores, food drives a majority of visits among younger consumers

·       In restaurants, food is the core of daily routines

·       In grocery, prepared foods create reasons to visit beyond weekly stock-up trips

The strategic implication is clear:
Retailers that fail to build compelling ready-to-eat food programs will lose visit share, regardless of pricing strategy.

 


The New Competitive Set: Everyone Competes with Everyone

The “grocerant” reality is this:

·       Grocery stores compete with restaurants for dinner

·       Restaurants compete with convenience stores for convenience

·       Convenience stores compete with grocery for value and speed

Consumers are not loyal to channels—they are loyal to solutions that meet their immediate needs.

 


Data-Driven Patterns Across Sectors

·       Starbucks: High-frequency users drive disproportionate revenue through habit-based visits

·       McDonald's: Digital engagement increases repeat visits and expands dayparts

·       Kroger: Prepared foods increase weekly trip frequency

·       7-Eleven: Loyalty and mobile ordering increase visit cadence

·       Panera Bread: Subscription programs turn occasional users into frequent visitors

 


The Grocerant Guru® Perspective: Frequency Is the Only Scalable Growth Lever

From Tacoma, Washington to markets across the country, the pattern is consistent:

You do not win by being cheaper.
You win by being chosen more often.

That requires building what I call Frequency Infrastructure:

1.       Daypart relevance – breakfast, lunch, snacks, dinner, late night

2.       Meal solutions – convenient, portable, and appealing

3.       Digital enablement – easy ordering, payment, and rewards

4.       Emotional connection – familiarity, trust, and consistency

 


Three Grocerant Guru® Insights

1. Frequency is channel-agnostic
Success is not about format. It is about becoming part of the customer’s routine.

2. The service deli is the new restaurant
Grocery growth will come from fresh, prepared, ready-to-eat foods—not packaged goods.

3. Habit beats promotion every time
Discounts may drive a single visit. Habits drive long-term behavior and higher lifetime value.

 


Think About This

The food industry is no longer segmented—it is fully converged.

And in this environment, reoccurring customer visits are the fastest way to drive incremental revenue.

Because the most valuable customer is not the one who spends the most today—

It is the one who comes back tomorrow.

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