Tuesday, May 26, 2026

How Inflation Is Reshaping Competition Between Grocery Stores, Restaurants, and C-Stores

 


As grocery prices continue climbing across the United States, consumers are no longer simply asking, “What’s for dinner?” Instead, millions of households are asking a more urgent question: “Where can I get the best value meal today?”

That shift is redefining competition at the intersection of grocery retail, restaurants, and convenience stores in 2026.

According to the latest Consumer Price Index (CPI) data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, food-at-home prices increased 2.9% year-over-year in April, marking the highest grocery inflation rate since 2023. Fresh produce prices surged 6.1%, nonalcoholic beverages climbed 5.1%, cereals and bakery products rose 2.6%, and meat, poultry, fish, and eggs increased 1.5%.

At the same time, diesel fuel spikes and global shipping disruptions are intensifying supply chain costs, particularly for fresh and perishable products. Since diesel powers much of America’s agricultural transportation network, rising fuel prices are now directly influencing the retail cost of fruits, vegetables, proteins, and prepared foods.

The result is a profound transformation in consumer food behavior.


Consumers Are Trading Traditional Grocery Trips for Immediate Meal Solutions according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

In 2026, consumers increasingly blur the lines between grocery stores, restaurants, and convenience stores. Shoppers are no longer loyal to a single food channel. Instead, they are assembling meals from wherever they perceive the strongest combination of price, convenience, freshness, portability, and immediacy.

That means:

·       Grocery stores are expanding prepared foods and grab-and-go meal solutions.

·       Restaurants are emphasizing value bundles, meal deals, and limited-time promotions.

·       Convenience stores are upgrading foodservice programs to compete directly with quick-service restaurants and supermarkets.

Today’s consumer might purchase breakfast from a c-store, lunch from a fast-casual restaurant, and dinner ingredients from a grocery retailer — all within the same day.

This convergence is accelerating because inflation and gasoline prices are forcing households to rethink both food budgets and driving patterns. Consumers increasingly seek fewer shopping trips, faster meal access, and more affordable food solutions closer to home or work.


Gas Prices Are Quietly Driving Food Channel Disruption

Higher fuel costs impact consumers twice.

First, fuel increases the cost of transporting food through the supply chain. Second, it changes where and how consumers shop.

When gasoline prices rise, consumers often:

·       Consolidate shopping trips

·       Avoid multiple-store visits

·       Seek meal options closer to commuting routes

·       Purchase more immediate-consumption foods

·       Prioritize convenience and perceived value

That dynamic is creating new opportunities for convenience stores, particularly those investing heavily in upgraded foodservice programs, fresh sandwiches, roller grill innovation, bakery offerings, pizza, chicken programs, and premium beverages.

In many markets, convenience retailers are becoming “micro meal destinations,” competing directly against both supermarkets and quick-service restaurants.

Restaurants Are Fighting Back With Aggressive Value Messaging

Restaurants are also adapting rapidly to inflationary pressure.

Throughout 2026, restaurant operators have intensified focus on:

·       Combo meals

·       Subscription loyalty programs

·       App-based discounts

·       Family meal bundles

·       Smaller portion value offerings

·       Late-night promotions

·       Cross-channel delivery partnerships

Quick-service restaurants understand consumers are increasingly price sensitive yet still seeking indulgence, convenience, and emotional comfort through food.

At the same time, many restaurants continue facing elevated labor, packaging, insurance, and commodity costs. That means operators must balance affordability with profitability more carefully than ever before.



Grocery Stores Are Becoming More Restaurant-Like

Meanwhile, supermarkets continue evolving into hybrid foodservice destinations.

Prepared foods, meal kits, rotisserie chicken programs, sushi stations, hot bars, and ready-to-heat entrees are increasingly central to grocery growth strategies.

Consumers facing sticker shock in center-store aisles often compare the cost of cooking at home against:

·       Restaurant value meals

·       Convenience-store combo deals

·       Grocery prepared foods

·       Delivery bundles

In some cases, consumers conclude that prepared meals offer better perceived value once labor, time, fuel, and food waste are considered.

That is fundamentally changing how retailers define “competition.”

Inflation Is Expanding the Battle for the Consumer Food Dollar

Andy Harig, vice president of tax, trade, sustainability, and policy development at FMI – The Food Industry Association, noted that food production remains highly energy intensive from “the field to the shelf to the table.”

Meanwhile, National Consumers League CEO Sally Greenberg emphasized that many American families now experience grocery shopping as financially stressful rather than routine.

Those realities are fueling a larger competitive shift across the food industry.

Consumers are increasingly searching for:

·       Affordable indulgence

·       Portable meals

·       Immediate satisfaction

·       Multi-use meal solutions

·       Fewer shopping trips

·       Personalized promotions

·       Digital coupons and loyalty rewards

Retailers and restaurants that best combine value, convenience, and food relevance are likely to capture disproportionate market share in the months ahead.


The New Food Economy Is About Meal Relevance

The modern food industry is no longer segmented neatly into grocery, restaurant, or convenience categories.

Instead, all three sectors are competing simultaneously for the same “meal occasion.”

Breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks, late night, workplace meals, road-trip meals, and family meal replacement occasions are now battlegrounds where price perception, convenience, and customer relevance determine success.

As inflation pressures continue and fuel costs remain volatile, consumers are expected to remain highly adaptive, opportunistic, and promotion-driven in their food purchasing behavior throughout 2026.


Four Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1.       Consumers No Longer Shop Channels — They Shop Meal Solutions
The consumer does not care whether the food comes from a grocery store, restaurant, or convenience store. They care about value, speed, portability, freshness, and ease of access.

2.       Gas Prices Are Becoming a Food Retail Strategy Variable
Rising fuel costs influence not only supply chains but also consumer driving behavior, shopping frequency, and meal decision-making. Proximity now matters more than many retailers realize.

3.       Prepared Foods Are the New Competitive Weapon
Grocery retailers, restaurants, and c-stores are all investing heavily in ready-to-eat and ready-to-heat foods because consumers increasingly value time savings as much as price savings.

4.       Digital Loyalty and Personalized Promotions Will Separate Winners From Losers
In a price-sensitive economy, retailers and restaurants that leverage apps, digital coupons, AI-driven personalization, and loyalty rewards to deliver relevant meal offers will build stronger long-term customer frequency and trust.

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



Monday, May 25, 2026

From “Fresh, Flavorful, and Friendly” to Frictionless Relevance: Why Restaurants Must Edify Their Brand with Technology

 


For decades, the restaurant business was built on three foundational pillars: fresh food, flavorful experiences, and friendly service. Those fundamentals still matter. In fact, they matter more than ever. But in today’s omnichannel economy, they are no longer enough on their own to sustain long-term customer relevance.

According to a new 2026 Restaurant Industry Trends report from DoorDash, conducted with research support from Dynata, restaurants are operating in a marketplace where discovery, engagement, ordering, and loyalty are increasingly shaped by technology-enabled convenience. The modern consumer journey now moves fluidly between digital and physical touchpoints, and brands that fail to edify their value proposition with technology risk becoming invisible.

The report surveyed 3,001 consumers and 509 restaurant operators and revealed a critical reality: customer expectations have fundamentally changed.


Word-of-Mouth Still Wins — But Digital Discovery is Expanding

The research found that 62% of consumers still trust recommendations from friends and family most when discovering a new restaurant. That finding reinforces an old Grocerant Guru® truth: trust remains the most valuable currency in foodservice.

However, the path to earning that trust is changing rapidly.

DoorDash found that:

·       51% of consumers use Google Search to discover restaurants

·       37% rely on delivery apps

·       22% now use AI tools like ChatGPT or Google Gemini to find places to eat

That last number should serve as a wake-up call for operators. Artificial intelligence is no longer an emerging trend — it is becoming a front door to restaurant discovery.

Importantly, AI systems pull recommendations from digital signals including reviews, menu accuracy, online listings, photos, and website quality. A separate study by Yext, referenced in the report, found that online listings and customer reviews heavily influence AI-generated restaurant recommendations.

That means restaurants are no longer simply managing a storefront; they are managing a digital identity ecosystem.


Menus Have Become Marketing Engines

DoorDash’s findings make one thing abundantly clear: the menu itself has become one of the most powerful conversion tools in the customer journey.

Sixty percent of consumers said menu offerings are the primary factor influencing where they order from. Yet consumers increasingly expect menus to function more like interactive digital sales tools than static lists.

Among the findings:

·       93% want detailed and appealing descriptions

·       52% want clarity on sides, sauces, and add-ons

·       47% expect photos to accurately match menu items

·       31% value identification of top-selling items

·       28% appreciate bundles and combo suggestions

·       27% want portion-size guidance

DoorDash reported that simply adding descriptions to half a menu can increase sales by more than 6%, while adding photos to half of menu items can increase sales another 13%.

Those numbers underscore a larger strategic shift: digital merchandising is now as important as culinary execution.

Restaurants that fail to optimize menus for mobile engagement, visual storytelling, and personalization are effectively leaving sales on the table.


Mobile is No Longer Optional — It is the Primary Storefront

DoorDash reported that:

·       64% of consumers always order delivery on their phones

·       95% of DoorDash orders over the past six months were placed on mobile devices

The smartphone is now the restaurant industry’s primary storefront.

That reality changes everything from menu design to loyalty integration to customer communication strategies. Restaurants must now think like digital retailers, not just food operators.

Consumers expect:

·       Seamless navigation

·       Fast-loading menus

·       Personalized offers

·       Accurate photos

·       Real-time updates

·       Integrated loyalty

·       Frictionless ordering

Brands that create digital friction lose customers before the first bite is ever taken.


Omnichannel Dining is Redefining Loyalty

One of the report’s most significant findings is the growing connection between off-premise and on-premise dining behavior.

According to DoorDash:

·       62% of consumers later visited a restaurant in person after ordering delivery

·       74% later ordered delivery after dining in

The consumer no longer sees dine-in, pickup, delivery, and digital ordering as separate channels. To customers, it is one brand experience.

Yet many operators continue managing these channels independently.

DoorDash found that 90% of consumers would use a loyalty program spanning dine-in, pickup, and delivery, but only half of operators currently offer that capability.

That gap represents one of the largest missed opportunities in foodservice today.

The future belongs to brands that unify customer data, personalize engagement, and reward customers consistently across every touchpoint.


Personalization Has Become Hospitality

Perhaps the most revealing insight in the report is that consumers increasingly define hospitality through recognition and personalization.

According to the research:

·       65% said restaurants remembering preferences would influence visit frequency

·       63% said personalized menu recommendations from staff encouraged repeat visits

Consumers want to feel known.

Technology now enables restaurants to scale personalized hospitality in ways that were previously impossible. AI-driven CRM systems, integrated loyalty platforms, predictive ordering, and behavioral marketing are transforming how brands connect with customers.

Yet DoorDash noted that only 30% of restaurants currently target promotions based on customer behavior or segmentation.

That means most restaurants are still marketing like it is 2010 while customers are behaving like it is 2030.


The New Competitive Advantage

The next generation of restaurant leaders will not simply serve great food. They will operationalize relevance.

Fresh, flavorful, and friendly service remain essential brand foundations. But the brands winning tomorrow will also be:

·       Digitally discoverable

·       Mobile optimized

·       AI visible

·       Data informed

·       Operationally connected

·       Personally relevant

Technology is no longer separate from hospitality. Technology is now part of hospitality.

Restaurants that understand this shift are not replacing human connection — they are amplifying it.


Three Insights from the Grocerant Guru® on Edifying Your Brand with Technology

1.       Technology Should Enhance Trust, Not Replace It
Consumers still trust people most when deciding where to eat. The role of technology is to amplify credibility, visibility, and convenience around that trust relationship.

2.       The Smartphone Has Become the New Front Door
If your mobile experience is confusing, slow, outdated, or inconsistent, customers increasingly perceive your brand as outdated before ever tasting the food.

3.       Personalization is the New Loyalty Currency
Discounts alone no longer create emotional loyalty. Consumers return to brands that remember them, anticipate needs, and reduce friction across every engagement channel.

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