Wednesday, June 3, 2026

What many legacy retailers still fail to recognize in 2026

 


Foodservice industry icon and longtime industry strategist Bill Bishop often reminded retailers that “the rate of change is increasing.” In 2026, that observation has become less of a warning and more of a survival metric. The food industry is no longer competing store versus store, or restaurant versus supermarket. Today, the competition is meal versus meal, occasion versus occasion, and convenience versus inconvenience.

What many legacy retailers still fail to recognize is this: consumers no longer organize their lives around channels. They organize them around immediate food needs. That is precisely why the Grocerant niche has become the epicenter of food retail growth.

Why Retailers Need to Focus on the Grocerant Niche Before It Is Too Late

By 2026, the battle for food retail dominance has fundamentally shifted. For decades grocery retailers obsessed over basket size, square footage growth, and weekly traffic counts. Restaurants focused on guest counts and table turns. Convenience stores concentrated on fuel margins and impulse purchases.

Today, all three sectors are colliding around one core metric: meals sold.

That shift changes everything.

The modern consumer is no longer simply shopping for groceries. They are outsourcing meal preparation, time management, and food decision-making. The winners in food retail are increasingly the companies that can provide fresh, fast, affordable, portable, and trusted meal solutions regardless of channel.

That reality is exactly what my old friend Bill Bishop of Brick Meets Click had been forecasting for years when he said, “the rate of change is increasing.” Bill understood earlier than most that the future of food retail would not belong to companies operating within old industry silos. It would belong to companies adapting to changing consumer behavior faster than competitors.

Today, his words resonate louder than ever.


Meals Sold Are Becoming More Important Than Basket Size

For decades, supermarkets chased larger baskets. The assumption was simple: more items per transaction equaled stronger profitability.

That formula is eroding rapidly.

Consumers now make more frequent trips, buy fewer items per visit, and increasingly seek immediate consumption solutions. According to multiple food industry tracking studies in 2025 and early 2026:

·       More than 57% of consumers purchase at least one prepared food item weekly from a grocery store

·       Convenience store prepared food sales continue to outpace center-store packaged goods growth

·       Restaurant off-premise sales now represent over 70% of transactions for many quick-service brands

·       Digital ordering and frictionless pickup have permanently altered shopping behavior

·       Gen Z consumers increasingly prioritize “speed-to-meal” over brand loyalty

The result is clear: retailers that solve “What’s for dinner tonight?” fastest and easiest are winning.

That is the Grocerant niche.


The Grocerant Niche Is No Longer Emerging—It Is Mainstream

The Grocerant niche sits at the intersection of grocery, foodservice, convenience, and technology. It combines Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh foods with convenience-driven retail strategies.

Consumers already migrated there years ago.

The retailers succeeding today are those delivering restaurant-quality meals with grocery-level accessibility and convenience-store speed.

Companies like Walmart, Amazon, HEB, Publix, Wawa, Sheetz, and Aldi are no longer merely retailers. They are competing foodservice platforms.

Even convenience stores have evolved from “gas stations with snacks” into aggressive fresh-food competitors. Fresh sandwiches, made-to-order bowls, pizza, sushi, chicken programs, smoothies, premium coffee, and grab-and-go meal kits now drive repeat traffic.

Meanwhile, traditional grocers continue building larger stores while many consumers increasingly want smaller, faster, more mission-driven shopping experiences.

That disconnect is dangerous.



The Middle Market Is Shrinking Fast

Retail history repeatedly teaches the same lesson: companies stuck in the middle rarely survive long term.

Sears once dominated retail.
A&P once defined grocery leadership.
Burger Chef once rivaled McDonald’s.

Each failed to recognize changing consumer expectations quickly enough.

Today, many legacy food retailers face similar risks if they continue operating with outdated assumptions. Several warning signs continue to emerge:

1. Complacency

Retailers that rely too heavily on past success often fail to innovate aggressively enough. Consumers evolve faster than internal corporate cultures.

2. Being Stuck in the Middle

Retailers without clear value leadership or differentiated service become vulnerable from both ends of the market. Discount operators pressure pricing while premium fresh-food operators attract quality-focused shoppers.

3. Lack of Differentiation

Consumers increasingly ask:
“Why should I choose you?”

If the answer is unclear, competitors win.

4. Failure to Recognize New Competitors

Today’s competitors include:

·       Meal kit companies

·       Delivery aggregators

·       Dollar stores

·       Club stores

·       Drug stores

·       Food trucks

·       Ghost kitchens

·       Quick-commerce operators

·       Convenience stores

·       Subscription food services

The food battlefield expanded dramatically.

5. Failure to Adapt to Evolving Food Preferences

Consumers increasingly demand:

·       Fresh prepared meals

·       Protein-rich foods

·       Health-forward options

·       Portable eating solutions

·       Value-priced indulgence

·       Customization

·       Speed

·       Digital convenience

Retailers slow to adapt lose relevance meal by meal.



Grocery, Convenience Stores, and Restaurants Are Converging

The lines separating grocery stores, restaurants, and convenience stores continue disappearing.

Grocery Stores

Supermarkets are rapidly expanding:

·       Prepared meal programs

·       Restaurant-style seating

·       Meal subscriptions

·       Chef-inspired private brands

·       Fresh meal kits

·       Grab-and-go merchandising

The most progressive grocers understand they are now competing for immediate consumption occasions, not just pantry replenishment.

Convenience Stores

Convenience stores may be the biggest surprise winners of the decade.

Modern c-stores increasingly generate strong margins through:

·       Fresh foodservice

·       Dispensed beverages

·       Made-to-order meals

·       Loyalty ecosystems

·       Digital ordering

·       Delivery partnerships

Consumers no longer view top-tier c-stores as secondary food destinations.

Restaurants

Restaurants increasingly resemble retailers:

·       Branded sauces

·       Retail grocery partnerships

·       Subscription meal bundles

·       Virtual brands

·       Heat-at-home offerings

·       Grab-and-go refrigeration

The channels are converging into one unified food ecosystem.


Amazon Changed the Game Before Most Retailers Realized It

Years ago, many dismissed Amazon’s food ambitions.

That was a mistake.

Amazon recognized early that food purchasing would become deeply connected to logistics, data, automation, and convenience. While traditional grocers were still training labor to manually pick online grocery orders, Amazon invested heavily in robotics, fulfillment technology, and predictive delivery systems.

Today, consumers increasingly expect:

·       Same-day grocery delivery

·       Frictionless ordering

·       Personalized meal recommendations

·       Subscription convenience

·       Seamless omnichannel experiences

Amazon helped normalize those expectations.

The lesson is simple:
Consumers compare every food experience against the easiest experience they have ever had.


Bigger Stores Alone Will Not Guarantee Future Success

Some retailers continue building massive stores as if consumer behavior has not fundamentally changed.

But square footage alone no longer creates competitive advantage.

In many cases:

·       Smaller formats produce faster turns

·       Fresh prepared foods outperform center store growth

·       Immediate-consumption occasions drive higher frequency

·       Convenience increasingly outweighs assortment

The future belongs to retailers maximizing food relevance, not merely store size.

The Future Belongs to Retailers That Win the Meal

The next decade of food retail growth will increasingly belong to companies that:

·       Solve immediate meal needs

·       Simplify consumer decision-making

·       Deliver trusted fresh food quickly

·       Blend physical and digital seamlessly

·       Create emotional food connections

·       Provide affordable indulgence

·       Adapt rapidly to changing consumer behavior

The battle is no longer about selling products.

It is about owning food occasions.

Bill Bishop understood that before many in the industry did. His ability to identify changing retail undercurrents helped shape how countless industry professionals viewed grocery evolution, digital commerce, and consumer migration patterns.

More importantly, Bill challenged people to think differently.

That legacy continues.



Remembering Bill Bishop

Bill Bishop was more than an analyst. He was one of the retail industry’s great observers and interpreters of change. He had a remarkable ability to simplify complex market shifts into ideas retailers could actually understand and act upon.

Many in food retail owe part of their strategic thinking to Bill’s insights, guidance, and willingness to challenge conventional wisdom. His work at Brick Meets Click helped retailers understand that disruption was not coming someday—it was already underway.

The industry lost an important voice when Bill passed, but his influence continues every time retailers ask:
“What is changing, and are we changing fast enough?”

That question may be more important today than ever before.


Three Insights From the Grocerant Guru®

1. The Most Valuable Customer in 2026 Is the “Multiple Occasion Buyer”

Consumers who purchase breakfast, snacks, lunch, dinner, and beverages across multiple dayparts from the same retailer generate significantly higher annual value than traditional weekly stock-up shoppers.

2. Fresh Prepared Foods Are Becoming the Traffic Driver of Modern Retail

In grocery, convenience stores, and restaurants alike, fresh prepared foods increasingly generate repeat visits, stronger loyalty, and higher-margin purchases than many traditional packaged goods categories.

3. The Retailers That Simplify Dinner Will Win the Next Decade

Consumers are exhausted by decision overload. Retailers that make dinner easy, affordable, fast, and trustworthy will continue gaining market share across every retail channel.

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, June 2, 2026

Once Again the Grocerant Guru® Is Looking a Customer Ahead

 


For more than three decades the retail food industry has been chasing one core reality: consumers no longer eat according to traditional retail segments. They eat according to time, convenience, value, relevance, portability, affordability, and emotional connection. Long before “omnichannel food retailing,” “food discovery,” and “digital ordering ecosystems” became industry buzzwords, Tacoma, Washington-based Foodservice Solutions® and the Grocerant Guru® identified the seismic shift taking place in consumer food behavior.

Back in 2016 many industry insiders viewed grocery stores, convenience stores, restaurants, and foodservice operators as separate competitive silos. Consumers never did. Consumers simply wanted fresh food fast, when and where they wanted it. Today in 2026, that prediction has become the foundation of modern food retailing.

The undercurrents that were once emerging are now transforming the global food industry at full speed.

The Evolution of Communal Dining: Alone Together

In 2016 the Grocerant Guru® pointed to a dramatic shift in consumer behavior: more Americans were eating alone, yet simultaneously seeking social food experiences. That trend has accelerated.

Today the U.S. Census Bureau estimates that nearly 30% of all U.S. households are single-person households, while Gen Z and Millennials continue reshaping social interaction around food occasions. Research from Circana, Technomic, and The Hartman Group in 2024 and 2025 indicates that solo dining, snack-meals, and fragmented eating occasions now dominate traditional breakfast, lunch, and dinner patterns.

Consumers may physically eat alone, but digitally and socially they increasingly seek connection. That is why retailers across grocery, convenience, and restaurant channels continue investing in:

·       Community seating

·       Outdoor dining

·       Beverage-centric social hubs

·       Digital loyalty ecosystems

·       Wi-Fi enabled dining areas

·       Entertainment integrated foodservice

·       Hybrid coffee-bar-workspace concepts

Retail foodservice operators learned an important lesson over the past decade: consumers no longer distinguish between “destination dining” and “daily utility.” A grocery store café can now compete with a restaurant. A convenience store with premium seating and fresh sushi can become a neighborhood gathering spot.

Communal dining did not disappear. It evolved into flexible social engagement driven by convenience and emotional comfort.


Delivery Became Infrastructure, Not Innovation

In 2016 restaurant delivery was viewed as a disruptive experiment. By 2026 it has become core operating infrastructure.

What began with pizza delivery expanded into:

·       Meal kits

·       Ghost kitchens

·       Third-party aggregators

·       Grocery delivery

·       Alcohol delivery

·       Micro-fulfillment

·       Subscription meal ecosystems

·       AI-driven ordering

·       Autonomous delivery pilots

During the pandemic years consumers permanently rewired expectations around convenience. According to industry research from 2024 and 2025, off-premise dining now represents a significant percentage of restaurant transactions across many quick-service and fast-casual brands.

Retailers learned that delivery is not simply transportation. It is a marketing platform, data platform, and customer retention engine.

Today:

·       Grocery stores bundle ready-to-eat meals with household staples

·       Convenience stores deliver late-night meal solutions

·       Restaurants sell family meal bundles and subscription offerings

·       Retailers use app-exclusive discounts to drive frequency

·       AI recommendation engines influence meal selection in real time

The most successful operators understand that consumers are not ordering “food.” They are purchasing saved time.


Fresh Prepared Foods Became the New Authenticity

Ten years ago “fresh prepared” was a differentiator. In 2026 it is an expectation.

Consumers increasingly associate freshness with:

·       Transparency

·       Local sourcing

·       Seasonal relevance

·       Visual authenticity

·       Culinary craftsmanship

·       Minimal processing

The rise of open kitchens, chef-driven grocery prepared foods, scratch-made claims, and visible food preparation reflects consumers’ growing desire to trust what they eat.

Even imperfect produce once dismissed by retailers has become mainstream merchandising. “Ugly produce” programs helped normalize sustainability messaging while reducing food waste and increasing value perception.

Consumers now define authenticity differently than previous generations:

·       Real ingredients matter more than polished perfection

·       Transparency matters more than advertising

·       Storytelling matters more than slogans

·       Functional wellness matters more than dieting

Fresh prepared food also became central to grocery store traffic generation. In many supermarkets today, perimeter departments drive more differentiation than center-store packaged goods.

Prepared foods are no longer an add-on. They are often the primary trip driver.


Value Became the Ultimate Form of Transparency

In 2016 the Grocerant Guru® highlighted the growing importance of value-oriented retailers such as Aldi and the changing strategy at Whole Foods Market. That insight proved remarkably accurate.

Over the past decade inflation fundamentally reshaped food purchasing behavior. Consumers today carefully evaluate:

·       Portion value

·       Meal utility

·       Price transparency

·       Ingredient quality

·       Convenience versus cost

·       Private label credibility

Discount grocery chains expanded aggressively while premium retailers were forced to recalibrate pricing strategies.

Private brands evolved from “cheap alternatives” into trusted quality platforms. Retailers including grocery chains, club stores, and convenience operators dramatically improved private label innovation in:

·       Fresh prepared meals

·       Snacks

·       Better-for-you beverages

·       Protein-centric products

·       International flavors

Consumers in 2025 and 2026 increasingly define value as the intersection of:

·       Affordability

·       Convenience

·       Consistency

·       Quality

·       Emotional satisfaction

Price alone no longer wins. Consumers want confidence that every food dollar solves a need.


Digital First Became the Consumer Default

The Grocerant Guru® recognized early that mobile behavior would fundamentally reshape food retailing. That prediction accelerated faster than almost anyone expected.

Today consumers discover food through:

·       TikTok

·       Instagram

·       AI search tools

·       Influencer recommendations

·       Retail apps

·       Voice assistants

·       Loyalty ecosystems

The path-to-purchase is now digital-first even when the final transaction happens in-store.

According to multiple industry reports released throughout 2024 and 2025:

·       Mobile ordering continues to grow across all retail food channels

·       Loyalty app participation expanded significantly

·       Digital coupon usage accelerated

·       Personalized promotions outperform mass advertising

·       Younger consumers increasingly expect frictionless checkout experiences

Consumers no longer separate digital engagement from physical food purchasing. The smartphone became the primary front door to food retail.

Operators that fail to create seamless digital ecosystems increasingly struggle with relevance.


Share of Stomach Finally Defeated Share of Segment

Perhaps the Grocerant Guru’s® most important long-term insight was this:

Consumers do not care about retail channels.

Industry executives still talk about:

·       Grocery

·       Convenience

·       Restaurant

·       Fast casual

·       QSR

·       Club store

·       Meal delivery

Consumers simply ask:
“What food solution works for me right now?”

That mindset reshaped the entire industry.

Today:

·       Grocery stores operate restaurants

·       Convenience stores operate premium kitchens

·       Restaurants sell groceries

·       Club stores offer restaurant-quality prepared foods

·       Drug stores sell fresh meal solutions

·       Dollar stores expand refrigerated foods

·       Airports and hospitals offer chef-driven prepared meals

The walls between channels collapsed.

The real competition is no longer store versus store. It is relevance versus irrelevance.

The winners in 2026 are operators that:

·       Solve immediate consumer needs

·       Reduce friction

·       Deliver consistent quality

·       Maintain affordability

·       Create emotional engagement

·       Offer discovery and excitement

The Grocerant niche continues to grow because it aligns with how consumers actually live.

For over 30 years Foodservice Solutions® has tracked the evolution of Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat fresh prepared foods across every retail channel. What began as an emerging niche is now central to modern food retail strategy.

The future belongs to operators willing to think beyond legacy industry definitions and focus instead on real-time consumer behavior.

Three Grocery Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Grocery stores that treat prepared foods as a side department will continue losing younger consumers to convenience-driven competitors.

2.       Retailers that combine AI-driven personalization with fresh prepared meal solutions will dramatically outperform traditional weekly-ad merchandising strategies.

3.       The perimeter of the store is now the emotional center of the brand experience while center-store increasingly becomes fulfillment and replenishment space.

Three Convenience Store Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Convenience stores are no longer competing for gasoline customers; they are competing for meal occasions across every daypart.

2.       Fresh food credibility, not fuel pricing, is increasingly determining traffic growth at modern convenience retailers.

3.       The next generation of successful convenience stores will resemble small-format foodservice hubs with frictionless digital engagement and restaurant-quality prepared foods.


Three Restaurant Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Restaurants that fail to integrate digital ordering, loyalty, and off-premise optimization into core operations risk becoming invisible to younger consumers.

2.       Consumers increasingly value consistency, speed, and emotional comfort over formal dining occasions.

3.       Restaurant brands that expand beyond four walls through retail products, subscriptions, and hybrid distribution channels will gain larger “share of stomach” than operators focused solely on dine-in traffic.

Since 1991, Foodservice Solutions® of Tacoma, Washington has remained a global leader in identifying, documenting, and forecasting the evolution of the Grocerant niche and consumer food behavior.

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