Thursday, February 26, 2026

Is Your Restaurant Pricing for Customers or Franchisees?

 


When a legacy brand like KFC pilots two distinct value platforms in Cleveland and Tampa at the same time, it signals more than a tactical promotion. It signals strategic tension according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®. The question every restaurant executive and franchisee must confront in 2026 is simple:

Are you pricing for customers — or are you pricing to protect franchisee margins?

That distinction is now determining market share winners and losers.

 


KFC’s Two-Test Strategy: A Case Study in Pricing Psychology

In the Cleveland-Akron-Canton market, KFC is offering seven days of consistent $8 value options:

·       7 tenders + 3 sauces

·       8 wings + 2 sauces

·       20 nuggets + 4 sauces

In Tampa Bay-St. Pete, the strategy shifts to $10 rotating weekday offers designed to build routine:

·       Monday: 24 nuggets

·       Tuesday: 8-piece bone-in

·       Wednesday: 10 wings

·       Thursday: 8 tenders

·       Friday: 24 nuggets

Two markets. Two theories:

1.       Everyday flexible value.

2.       Structured weekday traffic building.

The subtext? Consumers are trading down, frequency is soft, and value architecture must evolve.

 


The Value Environment: Consumers Are in Control

Since mid-2024, restaurant traffic has softened across quick-service and fast casual. Industry data shows:

·       Nearly 60% of consumers now say price is the #1 driver of restaurant choice.

·       Over 40% report reducing restaurant frequency in favor of grocery prepared foods.

·       Digital coupon redemption has increased double digits year-over-year.

·       Third-party delivery remains pressured due to fee fatigue.

Consumers are not rejecting restaurants.
They are rejecting perceived overpricing.

Brands that understand this are leaning into transparent value platforms. Those that don’t are quietly capitulating market share.

 


Proof That Pricing for Customers Wins

Consider McDonald's.

Its Extra Value Meal architecture helped drive a 6.8% same-store sales increase in Q4. That growth did not come from premium burgers. It came from price certainty and bundled value perception.

Contrast that with brands that resisted value resets in 2024–2025, citing franchisee margin protection. Many experienced:

·       Negative traffic comps.

·       Shrinking market share among Gen Z.

·       Increased trade-down to grocery deli and C-store hot bars.

When value perception erodes, elasticity disappears.

 


Market Share Capitulation: The Pattern

In food retail and foodservice history, the pattern is clear:

1. Premium-Only Stance During Economic Pressure

Brands that insist on premium positioning during consumer contraction lose traffic first.

2. Late-to-Value Reaction

Once traffic drops, promotions become reactive and margin-destructive rather than strategic.

3. Franchisee-First Pricing

When operators resist national value platforms to protect short-term margin, customers defect to competitors offering consistency.

The result?
Permanent share transfer.

Quick-service chicken is now one of the most promotional categories in foodservice. If a brand does not defend its entry price points, competitors will.

 


The Franchisee Margin Myth

Let’s be precise.

Franchisees need profitability.
But customers determine revenue.

If pricing is engineered solely to maintain food-cost percentages and labor coverage without regard to perceived value:

·       Frequency declines.

·       Fixed costs are spread over fewer transactions.

·       Margins compress anyway.

Volume is margin’s best friend.

The most successful QSR systems understand that disciplined value platforms can:

·       Drive attachment (beverages, sides).

·       Increase digital app engagement.

·       Improve loyalty enrollment.

·       Boost lifetime customer value.

Why Structured Value Works

There is a reason the Tampa test uses weekday structure.

Behavioral economics shows that routine creates habit loops. If Tuesday becomes “Chicken Night,” you are not competing on price alone — you are competing on ritual.

Meanwhile, the Cleveland test explores variety within fixed price ceilings. That reduces cognitive friction and increases order confidence.

Both models recognize one truth:
Consumers want predictability.

 


Lessons from Outside Chicken

Look at pizza.

Domino's recently posted 3.7% Q4 same-store sales growth during an industry slowdown. Domino’s long ago mastered everyday value through mix-and-match deals and digital ordering ease.

Domino’s does not apologize for value.
It engineers it.

Grocery and C-Store Pressure Is Real

Restaurants are no longer competing only against restaurants.

·       Grocery prepared meals now offer family bundles under $20.

·       Convenience stores have upgraded fresh food programs.

·       Private-label meal kits are growing.

When a family of four can buy a deli rotisserie chicken, two sides, and rolls for less than a fast-food combo bundle, pricing strategy becomes existential.

 


Customers Come First — Always

The food industry is not a cost-plus business.
It is a perception-plus business.

If customers believe:

·       Portions are shrinking.

·       Prices are climbing.

·       Promotions are confusing.

They disengage.

But if customers believe:

·       Pricing is fair.

·       Portions are generous.

·       Value is consistent.

They reward brands with frequency and advocacy.

KFC’s test is important not because of the $8 or $10 price point.

It is important because it signals willingness to ask:
How do consumers want to buy right now?

That question must precede all margin modeling.

 


The Strategic Imperative

Brands must:

1.       Protect entry price points.

2.       Simplify value messaging.

3.       Use data to understand elasticity by market.

4.       Align franchisees around long-term traffic growth rather than short-term price resistance.

History shows that when brands price for operators instead of customers, the market corrects them.

And it corrects them harshly.

 


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Volume cures most margin problems — irrelevance cures none.
If customers stop coming, cost controls will not save you.

2.       Everyday value beats episodic discounting.
Consistency builds trust. Surprise promotions build dependency.

3.       Price architecture is brand architecture.
When value erodes, brand equity erodes with it. Protect the customer first — franchisee profitability follows frequency.

The restaurant industry’s value war is not about discounts.
It is about discipline.

The brands that remember who pays the bill — the customer — will own the next cycle of growth.

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



Wednesday, February 25, 2026

AI Is the New Line Cook, Category Manager, and CMO: A Grocerant Guru® Perspective on the Future of Food Sales

 


Circana recently reported in The Evolving Ecosystem that 86% of U.S. adults are aware of AI in their devices, yet 35% are not interested in AI features. Nearly two-thirds of detractors say their devices already do what they need. 59% cite privacy concerns. 43% don’t want to pay more. Only 15% think AI sounds complicated.

Among those aware of AI, 65% are interested in AI features in at least one device, climbing to 82% among ages 18–24. AI today is a “nice-to-have,” not yet a core purchase driver.

For food retail, restaurants, and convenience stores, that is the opportunity.

AI should not be sold as technology. It must be positioned as better food, better availability, better pricing, better personalization.

 


The New Role of AI in Food Sales

AI is not theoretical in food retail. It is operational.

1. Restaurants: AI as Revenue Optimizer

Applications

·       Dynamic digital menu boards that shift pricing and promotion by daypart and demand.

·       Predictive prep systems that reduce out-of-stocks and food waste.

·       Personalized offers within mobile apps.

·       Voice ordering in drive-thru lanes.

Food Marketing Data Points

·       Digital ordering now represents 30%–40% of sales for many quick-service chains.

·       AI-driven upsell prompts can lift check averages 8%–15%.

·       Predictive labor scheduling reduces labor cost variance by 3%–5%.

Example
A fast-casual brand uses AI to analyze POS data and weather forecasts. On a 92-degree day, the system pushes cold beverage bundles and salad add-ons via app notifications between 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. Result: beverage attachment rates rise double digits.

AI here drives:

·       Higher average check

·       Fewer stockouts of high-velocity items

·       Better throughput at peak

 


2. Convenience Stores (C-Stores): AI as Basket Builder

C-stores operate on speed and immediacy. AI enhances both.

Applications

·       Real-time inventory alerts to avoid out-of-stocks on high-margin grab-and-go items.

·       Micro-targeted promotions (energy drink + roller grill combo).

·       Planogram optimization based on local buying behavior.

Food Marketing Data Points

·       Fresh food now accounts for 20%–25% of in-store sales at leading chains.

·       60%+ of transactions include a beverage.

·       AI-based replenishment can reduce out-of-stock incidents by 20%–30%.

Example
An AI system detects that 7:00–9:00 a.m. traffic includes commuters who frequently purchase breakfast sandwiches and coffee. When breakfast sandwich inventory dips below forecast, automatic replenishment triggers before peak. Simultaneously, loyalty members receive a $1 coffee add-on offer.

Result:

·       Fewer missed sales

·       Improved perception of reliability

·       Increased attachment rates

 


3. Grocery Stores: AI as Margin Protector

Grocery operates on razor-thin margins. AI is transformative here.

Applications

·       Predictive ordering for perishable categories.

·       AI-driven markdown optimization to reduce shrink.

·       Recipe personalization on e-commerce platforms.

·       Substitution logic for out-of-stock items.

Food Marketing Data Points

·       Grocery shrink averages 1.4%–2.5% of sales; fresh categories are higher.

·       Online grocery penetration remains in the mid-teens percentage of total grocery sales.

·       Personalized digital coupons can drive 2x–4x higher redemption than mass offers.

Example
When strawberries are forecasted to oversupply, AI triggers:

1.       Digital coupon for loyalty members.

2.       Homepage banner recipe featuring strawberry shortcake.

3.       Cross-promotion with whipped cream.

Net effect:

·       Shrink reduction

·       Increased basket size

·       Improved seasonal storytelling

 


AI in Food Websites: The New Digital Shelf

Food websites must move from static brochures to dynamic ecosystems.

AI-driven improvements include:

·       Real-time stock visibility.

·       Personalized landing pages.

·       Smart recipe engines based on past purchases.

·       Dietary filters (keto, gluten-free, low sodium).

Consumers do not want AI.
They want “in stock,” “on sale,” and “fits my lifestyle.”

The winning websites:

·       Reduce friction.

·       Increase transparency.

·       Provide intelligent substitutions when items are unavailable.

 


AI and Food Ingredients: Transparency as Trust Builder

AI enables traceability and smarter sourcing.

Applications

·       Ingredient origin mapping.

·       Allergen detection.

·       Nutritional optimization in menu development.

·       Predictive demand planning for specialty ingredients.

With 59% of AI detractors citing privacy concerns, transparency must extend beyond data to food integrity.

Restaurants and retailers should communicate:

·       How AI improves food safety.

·       How it reduces waste.

·       How it ensures consistent quality.

 


Price Optimization Without Consumer Alienation

43% of consumers do not want to pay more for AI.

Therefore:

·       AI must reduce price volatility.

·       It should minimize out-of-stocks.

·       It should deliver relevant discounts.

Dynamic pricing must be handled carefully. In grocery and C-store, frequent visible price fluctuations can erode trust. Instead, use AI to:

·       Target promotions discreetly.

·       Optimize margin behind the scenes.

·       Improve procurement forecasting.

 


Out-of-Stock: The Silent Brand Killer

Nothing erodes loyalty like “Out of Stock.”

AI reduces:

·       Forecasting errors.

·       Distribution inefficiencies.

·       On-shelf availability gaps.

Each 1% improvement in on-shelf availability can translate into measurable sales lift and improved brand perception.

AI should be marketed internally as an availability engine, not a tech initiative.

 


Loyalty Programs + AI: Where It Works Best

AI without loyalty data is blunt. AI with loyalty data is surgical.

Best Practices Across Sectors

Restaurants

·       Predict churn and trigger bounce-back offers.

·       Personalize menu recommendations.

·       Time offers to habitual purchase windows.

C-Stores

·       Segment by trip mission (fuel-only, snack-only, combo buyer).

·       Offer AI-driven meal bundles.

·       Reward frequency in high-margin categories.

Grocery

·       Use predictive replenishment to anticipate pantry depletion.

·       Provide AI-powered meal planning.

·       Offer digital coupons tied to dietary preferences.

Why Loyalty + AI Works

·       Higher redemption rates.

·       Lower promotional waste.

·       Better customer lifetime value forecasting.

·       Reduced blanket discounting.

The key: AI must feel like a perk, not surveillance.

 


Consumer Education: Sector-Specific Strategy

Given consumer skepticism, each sector must educate differently.

Restaurants

Message:
“AI helps us reduce wait times, improve accuracy, and keep your favorites in stock.”

Use in-app transparency and in-store signage.

C-Stores

Message:
“AI helps us keep fresh food available when you need it.”

Focus on speed and reliability.

Grocery

Message:
“AI helps reduce waste, improve freshness, and personalize savings.”

Highlight sustainability and savings benefits.

In all sectors:

·       Avoid technical jargon.

·       Emphasize outcomes.

·       Reinforce privacy safeguards.

 


The Strategic Reality

AI is transitioning from cloud abstraction to embedded infrastructure. Just as voice control became normalized, AI will become invisible.

The brands that win:

·       Use AI to improve food availability.

·       Reduce friction.

·       Personalize intelligently.

·       Maintain price trust.

Those that position AI as a feature rather than a benefit will struggle.

Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       AI must be operational before it is promotional.
If it doesn’t reduce shrink, improve availability, or lift basket size, it’s overhead.

2.       Personalization without trust equals attrition.
Privacy transparency and clear value exchange are non-negotiable.

3.       The future of AI in food is invisible intelligence.
Consumers do not want artificial intelligence. They want smarter food experiences.

In food retail, AI is not the story.
Better food outcomes are.

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