Thursday, July 2, 2026

Jollibee's Chicken Nuggets: A Strategic Move to Capture America's Growing Handheld Food Market

 


When a restaurant brand introduces a new menu item, the question isn't simply, "Will consumers like it?" The more important question is, "Will it create another eating occasion and another reason for customers to come back?" according to Tacoma, WA base Grocerant Guru® at Foodservice Solutions® Steven Johnsson.

Jollibee's nationwide launch of its new Chicken Nuggets on July 2, 2026, appears designed to do exactly that.

The global restaurant brand—recognized by USA TODAY readers as serving one of the "Best Fast-Food Fried Chicken" offerings in America—is expanding beyond its signature Chickenjoy platform with a product that aligns squarely with one of the strongest consumer trends in foodservice today: portable, handheld foods designed for immediate consumption.

This isn't simply another menu extension. It is a thoughtful example of menu innovation intended to broaden Jollibee's appeal, increase visit frequency, and encourage more consumers to include the brand in their regular dining rotation.


Handheld Foods Continue to Reshape Foodservice

Consumers continue to redefine what constitutes a meal.

Industry research from Circana, Technomic and the Food Industry Association (FMI) consistently shows that convenience, portability and flexibility are driving food purchasing decisions. Traditional breakfast, lunch and dinner occasions are increasingly being supplemented—or replaced—by multiple snack and mini-meal occasions throughout the day.

At the same time, Circana projects that chicken-focused quick-service restaurants will remain among the fastest-growing segments in U.S. foodservice through at least 2028, fueled by consumers seeking affordable, high-quality protein in convenient formats.

Chicken nuggets fit squarely within these evolving consumer preferences.

They satisfy multiple eating occasions:

·       Mid-afternoon snacks

·       Family meals

·       Kids' meals

·       Late-night cravings

·       Group sharing

·       Value bundles

·       Digital delivery

·       On-the-go consumption

Rather than creating a new category, Jollibee is entering one of America's most established and consistently popular handheld food segments with a product designed to reflect the same quality standards that have helped build the company's fried chicken reputation.


Why Chicken Nuggets Remain a Category Mainstay

Few menu items enjoy the universal consumer familiarity of chicken nuggets.

For decades they have remained one of the highest-volume handheld protein products across quick-service restaurants because they appeal to virtually every demographic—from young children to adults seeking convenient snacks or meals.

Jollibee's version features:

·       100% all-white meat chicken breast

·       Crispy golden breading

·       Six dipping options, including the brand's signature gravy

·       5-piece, 8-piece, 15-piece and 30-piece bucket configurations

Packaging the nuggets in miniature versions of the company's iconic Chickenjoy buckets reinforces existing brand equity while creating immediate visual recognition.

That consistency matters.

Consumers often associate familiar packaging with consistent quality, helping reduce trial barriers for new products.


The U.S. Chicken Category Is Becoming More Competitive

The chicken category continues to attract significant investment across the restaurant industry.

Over the past decade, rapid expansion by brands including Chick-fil-A, Raising Cane's, Popeyes, Wingstop and numerous regional chicken concepts has intensified competition throughout quick-service restaurants. Legacy brands such as KFC continue competing in an increasingly crowded marketplace, while McDonald's remains a dominant player in the chicken nugget segment through its Chicken McNuggets platform.

Rather than attempting to replace those brands, Jollibee is pursuing a strategy that many successful restaurant companies now embrace: creating enough menu variety that consumers choose to include the brand in their regular dining rotation.

Today's consumers routinely visit multiple restaurant brands each month.

Winning increasingly means earning one additional visit—not necessarily replacing a competitor altogether.


Menu Innovation Drives Frequency

Restaurant growth increasingly depends on increasing guest frequency rather than relying solely on first-time visitors.

Every successful menu innovation should answer one important question:

"Will this product provide another reason for consumers to choose our brand?"

Jollibee's Chicken Nuggets help answer that question.

By combining premium ingredients, familiar comfort food, multiple dipping sauces and flexible portion sizes, the company expands its menu without straying from its core expertise in chicken.

Customization also continues influencing purchase decisions, particularly among younger consumers who increasingly expect sauces, mix-and-match combinations and personalized flavor experiences.

Digital Ordering Strengthens the Opportunity

Jollibee's new nuggets will be available through:

·       Dine-in

·       Drive-thru

·       Online ordering

·       Mobile App

·       Delivery

That omnichannel availability is increasingly important.

Industry research consistently shows that digital ordering encourages incremental purchases, allowing guests to more easily add sides, beverages, desserts or additional menu items to their orders.

Chicken nuggets naturally lend themselves to:

·       Add-on purchases

·       Family meal bundles

·       Kids' meals

·       Shareable snacks

·       Digital promotions

·       Limited-time value offers

Those incremental purchases can increase average check while strengthening customer satisfaction.


Building Brand Equity Through Disciplined Innovation

The launch follows Jollibee's recognition on both the 2026 TIME100 Most Influential Companies list and the inaugural TIME100 Industry Leaders in Food & Drink shortlist.

Awards create awareness.

Consistent execution builds lasting brand equity.

Jollibee continues demonstrating that disciplined menu innovation, combined with quality execution and a distinctive hospitality culture, can strengthen consumer relevance without abandoning the brand's core identity.

Consumers don't simply purchase food.

They purchase convenient, enjoyable eating experiences that consistently meet or exceed expectations.

The introduction of Chicken Nuggets provides another accessible entry point into the Jollibee brand while reinforcing its position within America's growing chicken category.

As I've said for years, consumers no longer think primarily in restaurant categories—they think in eating occasions.

Jollibee's newest product reflects a clear understanding of that evolution.

 


Three Grocerant Guru® Insights

1. Winning More Eating Occasions Drives Growth

The most successful restaurant brands don't rely solely on attracting first-time guests. They continuously develop menu offerings that create additional reasons for existing customers to visit more frequently and encourage new consumers to add the brand to their regular dining rotation.

2. Handheld Foods Continue to Lead Consumer Demand

Portable, ready-to-eat foods remain one of foodservice's strongest growth segments. Chicken nuggets meet consumer expectations for convenience, portability, value and quality while fitting seamlessly into today's increasingly flexible eating habits.

3. Disciplined Menu Innovation Strengthens Brand Relevance

Jollibee isn't chasing trends—it is building upon its established expertise in premium chicken. By entering one of America's most familiar handheld food categories with a product that reinforces its brand identity, the company positions itself for continued long-term growth in the U.S. market.

Steven Johnson is the Grocerant Guru® and President of Foodservice Solutions®, a Tacoma, Washington-based strategic consulting firm founded in 1991. Foodservice Solutions® helps retailers, restaurant operators and food manufacturers understand the evolving intersection of grocery retail and foodservice through Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat meal solutions, consumer behavior analysis and food marketing strategy.



 

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

FIVE Food Retail Marketing Success Steps Continue to Evolve

 


Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® believes that, the food retail industry is no longer evolving—it is accelerating. Consumer expectations continue to shift as shoppers demand more convenience, greater value, better quality, faster service, and meals that seamlessly fit into increasingly busy lifestyles. Retailers that continue operating with yesterday's business model are finding it increasingly difficult to compete against companies that have embraced innovation.

Back when I first introduced the Foodservice Solutions® Five P's of Food Marketing in 1994—Product, Packaging, Placement, Portability, and Price—many retailers viewed fresh prepared foods as simply another department. Today, those Five P's have become the foundation for successful Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat merchandising across grocery stores, convenience stores, club stores, restaurants, drug stores, and foodservice operators worldwide.

Today's winners understand that consumers are not simply buying food—they are buying convenience, confidence, personalization, and solutions.


The Consumer Has Changed

Over the past several years consumers have fundamentally changed how they purchase meals. Families continue to blend restaurant meals with grocery purchases, meal kits, prepared foods, take-home entrées, grab-and-go snacks, and digital ordering into one seamless food experience.

Today's consumer asks:

·       What's for dinner?

·       How quickly can I get it?

·       Can I customize it?

·       Is it portable?

·       Is it a good value?

·       Will my family enjoy it?

Those questions define success in today's food retail marketplace.


The Five P's Matter More Than Ever

Product

Innovation remains essential. Successful retailers continually introduce new flavors, seasonal offerings, limited-time promotions, healthier alternatives, globally inspired foods, and premium meal solutions. Consumers expect excitement every time they shop.

Packaging

Packaging has evolved from protecting food to selling food.

Consumers expect packaging that maintains freshness, travels well, photographs well for social media, reheats easily, and clearly communicates quality. Smart packaging is now part of the brand experience.

Placement

Location still drives sales.

Successful retailers merchandise meal solutions throughout the store—not just inside the deli. Fresh meals positioned near produce, bakery, beverages, front-end displays, fuel islands, and digital ordering pickup locations create additional impulse purchases while increasing average transaction size.

Portability

Portability has become one of the strongest competitive advantages in food retail.

Consumers eat in the car, at work, at youth sporting events, while traveling, and increasingly at home after a quick stop on the way home. Meals must travel well, remain fresh, and deliver restaurant-quality experiences wherever they are consumed.

Price

Consumers remain value conscious, but value no longer means lowest price.

Today's shoppers evaluate value by comparing quality, convenience, speed, portion size, customization, digital rewards, and overall experience. Retailers that consistently deliver all of those elements build stronger customer loyalty than those competing solely on discounts.


Retail Foodservice Is Becoming the New Front Door

The traditional boundaries separating grocery stores, convenience stores, restaurants, warehouse clubs, and drug stores continue to disappear.

Today's grocery store competes directly with quick-service restaurants.

Convenience stores compete for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and snacks.

Restaurants now sell take-home meal bundles.

Warehouse clubs continue expanding prepared food selections.

Consumers simply choose whoever offers the best combination of convenience, quality, and value.

That is exactly why the Grocerant niche continues expanding.

Ask Yourself These Questions

·       Does your store still look like yesterday while your competitors are building tomorrow?

·       Are your meal solutions designed for today's busy families?

·       Are your prepared foods easy to customize?

·       Can shoppers easily mix and match meal components?

·       Is your brand delivering solutions instead of simply selling products?

·       Does every merchandising decision support the Five P's?

If the answer to any of those questions is "no," your competitors are already gaining market share.


The Future Belongs to Solution Providers

Consumers no longer think in terms of grocery shopping versus restaurant dining. They think about solving today's meal occasion.

Breakfast before work.

Lunch between meetings.

Dinner after soccer practice.

Snacks while traveling.

Late-night comfort food.

The companies winning those occasions are creating complete meal solutions—not merely selling food.

The retailers that continue investing in fresh prepared foods, digital ordering, personalization, meal bundling, portability, and operational consistency will be the companies that define the next decade of food retailing.

The Five P's are no longer simply a marketing strategy—they are a roadmap for sustainable growth.

Foodservice Solutions® continues helping retailers identify, quantify, and qualify profitable opportunities within the Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat marketplace. Our expertise in brand positioning, merchandising strategy, product development, and food marketing helps companies build stronger customer relationships while driving both top-line sales and bottom-line profits.

If your goal is to build tomorrow's food retail business instead of protecting yesterday's, perhaps it's time to revisit the Five P's.

 


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Meal solutions outperform individual products. Consumers increasingly purchase complete meal occasions rather than individual menu items. The retailers that bundle complementary products create higher average tickets and stronger customer loyalty.

2. Convenience is no longer a competitive advantage—it is the price of admission. Today's consumers expect speed, portability, personalization, and digital convenience every time they purchase food.

3. The Five P's remain the foundation of profitable food retailing. Product, Packaging, Placement, Portability, and Price continue to separate industry leaders from followers because they focus on what consumers truly value: quality, convenience, and consistency.

I think this is a much stronger blog post than the original. It reads as a current 2026 article, removes references to COVID-era shutdowns that now date the piece, reinforces your Five P's intellectual property, and better reflects today's grocerant marketplace while staying true to the Grocerant Guru® voice.

Drive Sales. Boost Profits. Stay a Step Ahead.

The Foodservice Solutions® team is dedicated to helping you grow your top-line sales and bottom-line profits.

Are you looking a customer ahead? We have the strategies to get you there.

Visit GrocerantGuru.com   Contact us: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us



Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Starbucks is Brewing the Next Generation of Food Marketers—One Barista at a Time


For years, restaurant chains invested millions telling consumers what made their brands special. Today, consumers increasingly believe employees more than advertising. Starbucks has recognized that reality, and its newest partnership with TikTok may become one of the most influential employee-marketing initiatives the restaurant industry has seen.

Starbucks recently announced a pilot program that allows selected employees to create TikTok content while sharing in advertising revenue generated from that content. The initiative expands upon Starbucks' Green Apron Creators program and signals a dramatic evolution in foodservice marketing—from polished corporate messaging toward authentic storytelling from the people who serve customers every day.

From the perspective of the Grocerant Guru®, this initiative isn't simply about social media. It is about cultivating future marketers, strengthening employee engagement, improving retention, and creating thousands of local brand ambassadors who understand their own communities better than anyone at corporate headquarters ever could.


Employees Become Brand Builders

The restaurant industry has traditionally viewed frontline employees as labor.

Tomorrow's successful restaurant companies will view them as media creators.

That represents a profound cultural shift.

Starbucks reports that its employees already post nearly three times more social content than employees at similarly sized retailers. Rather than attempting to control that behavior, Starbucks has chosen to embrace it, provide structure, compensate participants, and transform authentic content into measurable marketing assets.

That is smart business.

Today's consumers increasingly reject overly polished advertising in favor of genuine experiences. Watching a favorite neighborhood barista prepare a customized beverage, introduce a seasonal menu item, or celebrate a regular customer creates emotional credibility that national advertising campaigns often struggle to duplicate.

Consumers buy relationships.

Employees create relationships.

Relationships build loyalty.


Developing Tomorrow's Food Marketing Professionals

Perhaps the most overlooked benefit of the Green Apron Creator program is talent development.

Starbucks is quietly creating a pipeline of future food marketers.

Participants will likely receive education that extends far beyond making coffee. They will need training in:

·       Brand positioning and storytelling

·       Responsible social media communication

·       Video production and editing

·       Photography and lighting

·       Consumer engagement

·       Community management

·       Digital advertising fundamentals

·       Copyright compliance

·       FTC endorsement guidelines

·       Food presentation and merchandising

·       Crisis communication

·       Customer privacy standards

·       Measuring engagement analytics

·       Personal brand development

Those skills are transferable across virtually every area of modern food marketing.

Many participants may eventually move into corporate marketing, regional operations, advertising agencies, public relations, field marketing, or franchise development.

In essence, Starbucks is creating an internal marketing academy disguised as a social media initiative.


From "Starbucks" to "My Starbucks"

The Grocerant Guru® believes Starbucks should not stop with a limited pilot.

The company should aggressively expand Green Apron Creators into every market and every region.

Why?

Because every Starbucks serves a different community.

Customers in Seattle, Miami, Dallas, Boston, Nashville, Phoenix, Chicago, Honolulu, or New York all experience Starbucks differently because local culture shapes buying behavior.

Corporate advertising builds awareness.

Local storytelling builds belonging.

Imagine every community discovering "My Starbucks."

One neighborhood might celebrate local teachers.

Another may feature firefighters grabbing coffee before sunrise.

College stores could highlight finals week.

Airport stores could celebrate travelers.

Suburban cafés could spotlight families.

Urban stores might focus on commuters.

Every market possesses unique personalities waiting to be discovered through authentic employee storytelling.

That local connection creates emotional equity that national advertising alone cannot duplicate.


Empowering Employees to Express Themselves

Success, however, depends on empowerment.

Employees cannot simply become influencers while being constrained by excessive corporate oversight.

The strongest content will emerge when Starbucks establishes clear brand guardrails while encouraging individual creativity.

Partners should be encouraged to showcase:

·       Favorite customer interactions

·       Beverage customization ideas

·       Behind-the-scenes coffee preparation

·       Community events

·       Local traditions

·       Seasonal celebrations

·       Team personalities

·       Coffee education

·       Sustainability efforts

·       Food pairings

·       Daily routines

Authenticity cannot be scripted.

It must be encouraged.

That means Starbucks will need managers who coach rather than control and marketers who facilitate rather than dictate.


A Blueprint Other Restaurant Brands Will Follow

The Starbucks initiative reflects a broader transformation occurring across foodservice.

Consumers increasingly trust people over logos.

Employee creators are rapidly becoming one of the most cost-effective forms of brand communication.

Brands including Portillo's and First Watch have already begun experimenting with employee-generated content, but Starbucks possesses the scale to establish an entirely new industry standard.

Imagine similar creator programs emerging at McDonald's, Red Lobster, TGI Fridays, Chick-fil-A, Panera Bread, Jersey Mike's, or regional grocery prepared-food departments.

The companies that empower employees to become storytellers may ultimately build stronger consumer relationships than those relying solely on traditional advertising.

The future of food marketing will not simply be created inside corporate headquarters.

It will be created behind the counter.


Grocerant Guru® Insights

1. Employee Engagement Creates Marketing Power
Well-trained employees who are empowered to tell authentic stories become trusted brand ambassadors. Investing in their education, creativity, and personal development simultaneously strengthens recruiting, retention, customer engagement, and long-term brand equity.

2. Local Storytelling Builds National Brands
Starbucks should rapidly expand Green Apron Creators across every region, allowing each community to embrace "My Starbucks." Local relevance consistently outperforms generic national messaging because consumers connect with familiar people, neighborhoods, and experiences.

3. The Next Great Food Marketers Are Already Wearing Aprons
The restaurant industry's future marketing leaders won't all come from business schools. Many will come directly from restaurant operations, where they already understand customers, hospitality, menu innovation, and community engagement. Starbucks has an opportunity to become the industry's premier developer of food marketing talent by turning frontline employees into tomorrow's marketing professionals.

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