Once
upon a time, Eastman Kodak owned memory-making. In the 1960s and ’70s,
birthdays, vacations, Little League games—if it mattered, it went through a
yellow box. Even Paul Simon immortalized the ritual in a song.
Kodak
believed image quality would protect the franchise. Consumers, they insisted,
would never trade glossy prints for digital convenience.
They
were right about quality.
They
were wrong about behavior.
Today
most photos live on phones, get shared instantly, and are rarely printed. Being
technically correct did not save the company.
Foodservice
is walking that same tightrope.
Legacy thinking vs. today’s consumer reality
Operators
still repeat versions of the same refrains:
·
“Our leadership has decades of
experience.”
·
“We don’t discount.”
·
“We don’t deliver.”
·
“Our food doesn’t travel.”
·
“We don’t need digital ordering.”
·
“We can’t raise prices.”
·
“Guests come for the brand promise.”
Experience
matters. But market velocity now outpaces institutional memory.
Food fact:
More
than 70% of restaurant traffic now involves an off-premise component
(pickup, drive-thru, or delivery). Convenience is not an add-on; it is the
product.
Food fact:
Digital
ordering is no longer experimental. For many fast-casual brands, app/web
orders generate higher average checks because of modifiers, upsells, and
frictionless payment.
Food fact:
Consumers
continue to trade between price tiers. Value leaders are winning frequency;
premium players are winning on experience and differentiation. The squeezed
middle is where unit counts are shrinking.
What “we don’t” really means in 2026
“We don’t deliver.”
Your
guest already decided they want delivery. The only question is who gets
the order. If it isn’t you, it is a competitor.
Look
at Domino's. They are as much a logistics and data enterprise as a pizza
company. Ordering ease, GPS tracking, saved favorites—these are brand
attributes now.
“We don’t need online ordering.”
Friction
kills intent. Brands like Chipotle Mexican Grill built a second make-line and
re-engineered kitchens because digital demand justified operational redesign.
“We don’t discount.”
Perhaps.
But your guests are members of ecosystems that reward them anyway. Starbucks
drives frequency with loyalty mechanics, personalization, and stored value.
That is targeted economics, not blanket discounting.
“We can’t raise prices.”
Everyone
else in your supply chain has. The winners communicate value, bundle smartly,
and provide tiered options so the guest chooses their spend.
“Our brand is our promise.”
Correct.
But the consumer now co-authors that promise through ratings, social proof, and
digital discovery. Your brand lives where your customer scrolls.
The utilization question
You
pay occupancy costs all day. If peak demand is narrower while fixed costs rise,
idle capacity becomes the enemy.
Dayparts
are blurring. Snacks replace meals. Retail grocery steals restaurant occasions;
restaurants steal retail trips. Hybridization is accelerating.
That
is the grocerant economy.
Measurement is oxygen
If
you cannot attribute sales lift to a tactic, you are funding hope.
Modern
marketing demands closed-loop accountability:
·
traffic source
·
conversion
·
ticket
·
repeat rate
Without instrumentation, opinion wins. With data, strategy wins.
Technology is not the strategy—removing friction is
Self-order,
AI suggestive selling, digital menu boards, kitchen automation: these matter
only if they increase throughput, consistency, and satisfaction.
Guests
reward ease.
The competitive truth
Some
chains are growing traffic, units, and margins in the same macro environment
others cite as impossible.
What
is different?
They adapt faster than their nostalgia.
The modern Kodak test
Ask
yourself:
If
you opened today, would you design the business exactly as it operates now?
If
the honest answer is no, evolution is overdue.
Insights from the Grocerant Guru®
1. Convenience
has become cuisine. Access, speed, and certainty
influence choice as much as flavor.
2. Data
beats tradition. The guest you remember is not the
guest who is arriving.
3. Relevance
compounds. Small, continuous adjustments
outperform heroic, late reinventions.
If
change feels uncomfortable, remember: comfort rarely creates growth.
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






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